Dear Friends, If you have the time take a look at today's Hannibal Courier-Post (July 29, 2002). This weekend a man fell out of a boat and is presumed dead. He had been drinking and playing on Jackson's Island. Law enforcement officers and volunteers have been dragging the river looking for his body. The riverfront has been buzzing as ten big jon boats drag back and forth. The victim's name -- no kidding -- is Ed Branch. (It is not our Ed.) The man's body is still out there with the catfish and carp and the dragging continues today. I'm waiting for the cannon. Then there was a killing Saturday just two blocks from the little house on Hill Street (and one block from Chez Dempsey!). A 17-year-old fellow from St. Louis was shot. I don't think a Bible was placed on his chest. The most interesting article is the commentary on the editorial page. The editor cited Huck Finn in response to a group of racists who plastered windshields of cars with fliers that said, "Wake up white America. Stop non-white immigration." These deep thinkers called for a government of "White People." Mary Lou Montgomery wrote of Huck: "What this fictional character had discovered - in a voice published by Sam Clemens in 1885 - was that despite cultural concepts, pre-existing notions and prejudice, at the core, human beings are the same. "This was a profound message for Clemens to pen, in a country where just a quarter century prior "niggers" were considered material possessions rather than human beings. But he had the insight to see what some others still fail to grasp: It is not the color of the skin that marks character; but rather the quality of the soul." You out-of-towners can read the entire articles at www.hannibal.net . Some things stay the same here in Hannibal. People still play in the river. Sometimes they really get themselves drowned. People still get shot. People like Pap Finn still hate non-white people and simmer with resentment. Other things change. The newspaper gets it. Several of you can take credit for the evolving attitude about Sam Clemens and race. Attaboy Shelley and Jocelyn! Now if some of the other institutions in town will come around... Terrell Dempsey