Friday, April 1, 2016

Civil Rights Attorney/Activist Julian McPhillips: "Civil Rights In My Bones" on Clayton "Wildcat" Thomason


Christal Cooper


                               Julian McPhillips at the Martin Luther King Jr Ceremony
                               January of 2015
Guest Blog by Julian McPhillips 
Excerpt from Civil Rights In My Bones
“Wildcat Versus Tamedog”
 
     Civil Rights in My Bones: More Colorful Stories from a Lawyer's Life and Work, 2005-2015 is a memoir by Julian L. McPhillips Jr. and published by New South Books.




In a career stretching over forty-plus years, the Montgomery, Alabama, attorney has earned a reputation as a determined advocate for the rights of consumers, victims of police abuse, falsely accused criminal defendants, the unborn, immigrants, and the environment.
A previous book, The People’s Lawyer The Colorful Life and Times of Julian L. McPhillips, Jr. covered his life and career up to 2005. 

Civil Rights in My Bones provides additional background about his family roots in Alabama, his parents’ political activism, his education and athletic competition as a champion amateur wrestler, his religious convictions, and his wife, children, and grandchildren.  Below is a excerpt from Civil Rights In My Bones tilted "Wildcat Versus Tamedog."
 


Wildcat Versus Tamedog by Julian McPhillips

       One of the most interesting clients I’ve ever seen represented is Steven Clayton “Wildcat” Thomason, a late 40’s African –American gentleman of many talents.

                                Clayton "Wildcat" Thomason performing.
                               Photograph attributed to Lane Ward and copyright granted by
                                Lane Ward.  

       With his straight long-black hair and an ancestry including Irish and American Indian forebears, Clayton, as he is more formally known, exudes charm and intelligence.  He is a gifted home repairs contractor, an accomplished singer with a jazz band, and a legal buff who has successfully represented himself in court.


       Clayton is also a widower raising two teenage daughters.  I frequently tell him this is his greatest and highest avocation.  That doesn’t keep his handsome fellow from spreading his charisma among a diversity of attractive women, ranging from young to middle-aged and consisting of a variety of ethnic backgrounds.

                               Clayton "Wildcat" Thomason and his two daughters.
       The “Wildcat” nickname came from Clayton’s singing routine.  More often than not he is performing on “Harriott Steamboat” cruises on the Alabama River.  His band includes guitarists Frank Gray and Atiba Dudley, and drummer Unika Newsome.  They are also members of our Christ the Redeemer church jazz band.


                                Unika Newsome, Frank Gray, Angela, Thomason, and Atiba Dudley
       Clayton first came to see me for legal advice and help.  In a humorous moment, I suggested the alternative nick-name of “Tamedog”.  If any inference were intended, perhaps it was to suggest that he tame down some of his many legal initiatives.  Since then, my relationship with Clayton has grown to include both pastor and friend.  Clayton sometimes comes to Christ the Redeemer Church, and needs to come more often.


       I remember one time with Clayton in Elmore County Circuit Court, waiting for a judge to come to the courtroom.  In that span, I was prepping him for his legal defense, while alternatively listening to him, and responding pastorally, about a deteriorating girlfriend relationship.  When the case was continued, we retreated to my car, and had a good, long prayer about his social life.

       Clayton, as I prefer to call him, sometimes struggles between the Wildcat and Tamedog sides of his personality.


       The first several cases I helped him with arose in Montgomery County.  One involved a suit by Clayton against a woman who failed to pay her bill to Clayton because she said he was not registered with the Alabama Homebuilders Licensure Board.  This was just an excuse to avoid paying a legitimate bill, because she had no complaint about the quality of Wildcat’s work.

                                              
       Clayton had initially filed the suit himself.  The ancient adage, however, that a lawyer who represents himself has a fool for a client is all the more true, when a non-lawyer is representing himself.  So I entered an appearance for Clayton, and cleared up his allegations with an amended complaint.  We pursued aggressive discovery, and in the end, I wrangled out a decent settlement for Clayton in Judge Johnny Hardwick’s courtroom. 


       I also got two sets of criminal charges dismissed against Clayton in Montgomery County District judge Troy Massey’s courtroom.  That was not without protests, however, overruled by the court, of the District Attorney’s Office and the Alabama Homebuilder’s Licensure Board, which initiated the charge in the first place.  This was no small accomplishment.

                                           Judge Troy Massey                                           

       Meanwhile, despite Clayton’s claim of exemption due to the grand-fathering provisions of a Washington County license, I convinced Clayton to go ahead and apply for his Homebuilder’s License, just to get that agency off of his back.  Clayton did just that, submitting his application in June 2014.  Meanwhile, the Homebuilders kept coming back to Clayton for more information, all of which we provided, but which delayed his approval.

       Unfortunately, before the Homebuilder’s Board could grant him a license, the Board dug up a spurious new complaint from a lady in Millbrook.  Ignoring our evidence to the contrary, the board put Clayton’s application on hold.  So there we were again, duking it out.  My letter expressing great indignation and breach of an agreement in Judge Massey’s courtroom was mild in comparison to the missile Clayton himself unloaded on them.  Clayton, who loves to draft his own lawsuits in his own name, puts together a classic, alleging all manner of bad faith, due process violation, and breach of anti-trust laws.  I was only advised by this pleading “after the fact”.  Clayton also named a defendant Montgomery County District Attorney, Darryl Bailey, as a defendant.  Bailey is a friend of mind, and has helped me, and can help me more on other clients’ cases.  Thus, I had a conflict, and could not be Clayton’s attorney on that case anyway.    

                               Darryl Bailey 

      Later, after Elmore County district court Judge Glenn Goggans ruled against Clayton, my Wildcat client, without checking with me first, added Judge Goggans as a party defendant on various constitutional grounds.  My understanding is that a judge’s immunity is absolute for anything done in court.  For that reason, and for conflict reasons, I was all the more constrained not to be Clayton’s attorney in that case.

                                     Judge Glenn Goggans    

       I am now representing Clayton in Elmore County Circuit Court on an appeal of his Elmore District Court conviction. A jury trial has been requested in the Circuit Court.  Clayton’s big lawsuit against the Homebuilder’s Board has now been removed by the Defendant’s to federal court, where Clayton continues to represent himself. 


       Clayton still comes to Christ the Redeemer occasionally, but not enough in my opinion, for his overall well-being.  Notwithstanding, our friendship remains strong, given its multi-faceted nature.


       Regardless of whether Clayton learns more toward the Wildcat or Tamedog side of his nature, this able fellow not only remains my good friend and client, but he spurs me on in my civil rights work.  After all, that’s what I’ve done for Clayton, protecting his “civil right to work without oppressive, government interference.”

Monday, March 28, 2016

Li Young Lee And His New Chapbook "A Word From His Song" . . .


Christal Rice Cooper


All excerpts from The Word from His Song given copyright privilege by Li-Young Lee and BOA Editions.



Li Young Lee And His New Chapbook
The Word from His Song:
“6 Billion Cells A Minute”


            From March 30th to April 2nd of 2016 legendary and best-selling poet Li-Young Lee is going to give a poetry reading at two events – the AWP 2016 Conference and the BOA Editions 40th Anniversary Celebration at the Los Angeles Convention Center and JW Marriot Los Angeles, respectively.     

Li Young Lee’s chapbook The Word from His Song will make its debut appearance at both events and will be a limited publication sold exclusively through the BOA’s AWP Book-fair booths 800 and 802. 


The Word From His Song will not be available to order online until after the AWP conference is concluded, and only for a limited time and at a limited press run.
Li Young Lee’s The Word From His Song features 18-pages of eight full-length poems, all new, beautifully designed in a letterpress cover.
The Word From His Song is the tenth installment in the BOA Pamphlet Series, which began in 1978.  The other nine titles are The Bridge of Change by John Logan; The Toy Bone by Donald Hall; Sunlight: A Sequence for My Daughter Poems by David Ignatow with drawings by Rose Graubart Ignatow; Survivors by Richard Eberhart; Armidale by Louis Simpson; Remains:  A Sequence of Poems by W.D. Snodgrass; Nest of Sonnets by A. Poulin, Jr.; Gratitude to Old Teachers by Robert Bly; and Holes the Crickets Have Eaten in Blankets by Robert Bly. 


 


  

       BOA Editions is also sponsoring its “Ideal Reading Experience” where one reader per month will be awarded a free, author-signed copy of The Word from His Song for the remainder year of 2016. 
BOA Editions Publisher Peter Conners described Li-Young Lee and Lee’s work as vital to American Poetry.  

"Since the publication of his debut collection, Rose (BOA Editions, 1986), Li-Young Lee has remained a singular, vital figure in American poetry. Because the publication and promotion of his works has been a focus of BOA’s efforts for the past 30 years, it feels fitting that on the 40th anniversary of the press, we share a selection of Li-Young Lee’s newest work in a beautiful, collectible chapbook. A work of art in every sense, this limited edition publication will be a must-have collectible for poetry readers everywhere.”


Lee’s other works are The City In Which I Love You; Book of My Nights; Behind My Eyes; The Winged Seed:  A Remembrance; and Breaking The Alabaster Jar:  Conversations With Li-Young Lee.














       Feature writer Christal Rice Cooper conducted an interview with Li Young Lee via email and telephone from February 29, 2016 to March 28, 2016.  Below is the scripted interview between Lee and Cooper.


The sparrow on my rooftop shouts,

"All roads be blessed!”



Excerpt from “The Word From His Song”


The last time we spoke was July of 2013.  What has changed in your personal life and poetry life since then?

Wow, the last time we spoke was 2013?  It feels so much longer ago than that.  What has changed?  You ask.  Well, I feel a lifetime older, and less in many ways, mostly physically.  But in important ways, I feel significant increase:  more joy, more mirth, more interest, more mystery, a deeper faith in poetry, in its practice and in its yogic dimensions, and a deeper connection to both time and to eternity.   


Also, all my life, I’ve struggled to keep death and impermanence in my radar, but lately it’s easier, less of a struggle to maintain awareness of my own transience, and that experience more and more instills in me a near giddiness and amazement at being alive, as well as greater focus, greater clarity and direction.  A flower is my organizing principle.  Love is my compass.  And as for my writing, it feels more introverted to me.  But you’ll have to tell me if that comes through.




I loved you before I was born.

It doesn’t make sense, I know.



Excerpt from “I Loved You Before I Was Born”

Can you choose one poem from The Word from His Song and tell us the step-by-step process of writing that specific poem from the moment the idea is birthed in your brain until final book form?

To be honest, I’m not able to give an honest and accurate account.  I have exactly no idea how any of these poems got written.  I suppose I could re-imagine the process for one of the poems, but I suspect that would not be free of fiction.  From inception, and throughout revision, each day, the whole process occurs in a state of heightened awareness and presence I barely remember when it’s over.



It’s just a needle I thread,

A sleeve I keep trying to mend, the spool diminishing



Excerpt from “At The Year’s Revolving Door”

How did the idea of the BOA pamphlet come into being?

Peter Conners and I have wanted to do a BOA project for quite some time.  When BOA’s 40th Anniversary came around, the idea of a chapbook came up.  I don’t know who thought of it, but I’m so happy we’re getting it done. 


How would you describe these eight poems?

The best I could do.

In your previous books you’ve written mostly at night, with the focus on your father and struggled with insomnia as indicated in “Folding A Five Cornered Star So The Corners Meet.”  Did you experience the same things in The Word from His Song? 

Well I seem to be working around the clock these days, and with greater glee.  I can’t wait to get to it when I wake up, and find it hard to part with when I’m exhausted and ready to take a break.  I don’t know what’s going on, but I feel something like a greater and greater surrendering to the impulse of writing, a more immediate answering to the call of the imagination.  


It must be the stars’ insomnia.

And I am their earthbound descendant



Excerpt from “Folding A Five Cornered Star So the Corners Meet”

What poem is your favorite and why?

On any day, I have a different favorite poem, but it’s never one of my own.

In “Hidden Hearing” the poem is about God.  Who is God to you now?

God is my true nature and identity, my origin and my destiny.   


Last night I dreamed of voices in a grove.

Ladders reaching from the ground into the branches.



Excerpt from “Hidden Hearing”

In “Leaving” you mention the trees outside your window.  When you look out that window today what do you see, hear, taste, smell?

Well, I’m about 500 miles away from that window at the moment, and won’t be returning to that window for a few more months.



Each day, less leaves

In the tree outside my window



Excerpt from “Leaving”

You are going to AWP in Los Angeles AND you will give a reading to celebrate BOA 40th anniversary.  What is one (and I know there are many) thing you will talk about, and how do you prepare yourself for such two great appearances?

On the one hand, I don’t prepare at all.  I never plan to say anything or do anything.  On the other hand, I’ve been preparing all of my life since I see everything, everything I do in my life as an opportunity to practice greater presence and awareness.  Whether I daily succeed or not in that practice is almost beside the point.  The point is the practice.  Giving a public talk is just one more opportunity to practice. 


I must know how to bless

And how to receive blessing.



Excerpt from “Treasure Uncovered”

Your books are all different but at the same time with the same theme.  I feel this is true of The Word from His Song.  Do you agree?  And what makes The Word from His Song different from your previous works? 

I guess each book would have to be different, since I’m not the same even from one moment to the next.  I mean, even my body is changing at something like 6 billion cells a minute.  You, as an objective reader, may be in a better position to tell me how these poems are different from my other work. I can only tell you what I wish and hope for.  I hope they are simpler, deeper, truer, more sincere, and less “literary.”  But I don’t know if, in fact, they are so.   


Of all these things,

words weigh too much, yet not enough.



Excerpt from “Why Are You Awake?”



1.

Li Young Lee in 2015



2.

Jacket cover of The Word from His Song



3.
BOA Staff.
Peter Conners is far right standing.

4, 5, and  and 15.
BOA Logo

6.
The Bridge of Change by John Logan

7.
The Toy Bone by Donald Hall

8.
Sunlight: A Sequence for My Daughter Poems by David Ignatow with drawings by Rose Graubart Ignatow;

9.
Survivors by Richard Eberhart

10.
Armidale by Louis Simpson

11.
Remains:  A Sequence of Poems by W.D. Snodgrass

12.
Nest of Sonnets by A. Poulin, Jr.

13.
Gratitude to Old Teachers by Robert Bly

14.
Holes the Crickets Have Eaten in Blankets by Robert Bly.

16.
Peter Conners
Copyright granted by Peter Conners

17.
Jacket cover of Rose

18.
Jacket cover of The City in Which I Love You

19.
Jacket cover of Book of My Nights

20.
Jacket cover of Behind My Eyes

21.
Jacket cover of The Winged Seed:  A Remembrance

22.
Jacket cover of Breaking The Alabaster Jar:  Conversations With Li Young Lee

23.
Artwork by Christal Rice Cooper

24.
Li Young Lee on November 2013.

25.
Donna Lee and Li-Young Lee.  The couple have been married since November of 1976 and have two sons ages 31 and 32.  They reside in Chicago, Illinois.

26.
Peter Connners
Copyright granted by Peter Conners

27.
Photoshop by Christal Rice Cooper 

28.
Artwork by Christal Rice Cooper

29.

30
Top Left, Melissa Hall, Director of Development and Operations
Top Right, Jenna Fisher, Director of Marketing and Production,
Sitting Peter Conners, Publisher
© CITY Newspaper © Mark Chamberlin

31.