s tarrant & texas ex-speaker wright honored...museum news release said. other posthumous...

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4B Friday, July 26, 2013 www.star-telegram.com S Tarrant & Texas FORT WORTH — Three decades after trying to right a wrong — and apol- ogize to Japanese-Ameri- cans incarcerated during World War II — former U.S. House Speaker Jim Wright will be honored for his effort on the issue. Wright, 90, will be presented with the first Gov. Ralph L. Carr Award for Courage tonight in Washington, D.C., for his work to pass what ulti- mately became the Civil Liberties Act of 1988. “I proposed legislation to acknowledge to these people, citizens of the United States who were incarcerated, that we were ready to resume our hon- or,” said Wright,a former Democratic U.S. Speaker of the House and House Majority Leader. “I think we’ve done that by ac- knowledging the wrong of it and making restitu- tion.” Wright will receive the award — designed to hon- or a person “who embod- ies the principles and sac- rifices” of Carr, a former Colorado governor who encouraged residents in his home state to welcome displaced Japanese eva- ing the war as military members moved into the area. Around 120,000 Japa- nese and Japanese-Amer- icans were affected nearly two-thirds of them American-born citizens. “We weren’t keeping with the constitutional rights and provisions of law ... in a time of severe crisis,” Wright said.“We were certainly in a period of anxiety. “But I had known all these years that it wasn’t in keeping with the pledge of liberty and justice for all.” The measure he worked on for years was ultimately signed into law in 1988 by President Ro- nald Reagan, giving for- mer detainees $20,000 and a letter of apology from the United States government. Anna Tinsley, 817-390-7610 Twitter: @annatinsley cuees — tonight during the 2013 Japanese Ameri- can Citizens League Na- tional Convention. “We recognize that Speaker Wright’s leader- ship resulted in the pas- sage of the Civil Liberties Act of 1988 ... the first presidential apology to an entire group of Ameri- cans,” said Priscilla Ou- chida, executive director of the Japanese American Citizens League, the largest and oldest Asian- American civil rights group. The group is honoring Wright for his work that began in 1983 to formally propose recommenda- tions for the Commission on Wartime Relocation and Internment of Civil- ians. The measure formally apologized to Japanese- Americans forced out of their homes and into in- ternment camps, or “war relocation centers,” dur- Ex-Speaker Wright honored 7 He worked to give restitution to Japanese- Americans put in camps. By Anna M. Tinsley [email protected] Star-Telegram/Ron T. Ennis Jim Wright will receive an award named for Colorado’s governor during World War II. FORT WORTH — Jim Aus- tin is looking forward to hearing great zydeco music this weekend. “I’m really excited about that culture because it has a rich cowboy ethnic feel to it,” said Austin, board president of the National Multicultural Western Heritage Museum. A zydeco music festival is part of a weekend-long National Day of the Amer- ican Cowboy celebration, which begins today and continues through Sunday. Eight legendary cowboys and two cowgirls will be inducted into the mu- seum’s Hall of Fame. The museum focuses on the people and practices that created the uncom- mon culture of the Amer- ican West and contributed to rodeo history. And that’s what drives the selection of Hall of Fame inductees. Unlike her better- known movie characters — Jackie Brown and Foxy Brown — Pam Grier has loved the Western lifestyle since she was a girl in Den- ver. She was the honorary host of last year’s event at the Pam Grier Community Garden and will be induct- ed into the Hall of Fame this year. Unfortunately, Grier won’t be able to accept the honor in person, event spokeswoman Vivian Ful- lerlove said. “She’ll still be inducted, but she has some issues that prevent her from at- tending,” she said. Another inductee, Walt Willey, brings Wild Bill! An Evening With James Butler Hickok to the mix. With credits that include daytime soaps, stand-up comedy and satire, Willey is being inducted “because of what he’s doing to keep the Western culture alive with this one-man show,” said Gloria Austin, the mu- seum’s executive director and co-founder. Willey said he is honor- ed to be inducted “because it’s for this show and cer- tainly not for me.” “I’ve never been a cow- boy. They’re also inducting Hickok at the same time, which is a little ironic. He didn’t much like cowboys or Texans.” That’s understandable. Cowboys and Texans would have been among Hickok’s nightmares as he went about taming the Kansas frontier towns of Hays City and Abilene, a museum news release said. Other posthumous in- ductees include profes- sional rodeo cowboy and livestock owner Floyd Buck Wyatt, who originated the knee-jerking technique still used by bull and bronc riders; Col. Allen Allensworth, who was born a slave but escaped and distinguished himself in military service, educa- tion, the ministry and mu- nicipal development; and Woody Strode, an actor whose roles included an Ethiopian king in The Ten Commandments. Living inductees in- clude watercolorist Burl Washington; Fred Whitfield, the first African-American to win the Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association’s calf-roping world cham- pionship; Mollie Taylor Stevenson Jr., the woman who grew up and still lives on one of the oldest black- owned ranches in Texas and who helped establish the American Cowboy Museum in Houston; and Lawrence Homer “Big Buckle” Coffee, the man credited with breaking the professional rodeo color barrier. The zydeco music fes- tival will include Step Rideau and the Zydeco Outlaws. Throw in vendors with exceptional red beans and rice, catfish and crawdads, and you’ve got a winner. Pioneers of the Western way will join Hall of Fame 7 National Day of the American Cowboy will be celebrated all weekend. By Terry Evans [email protected] Courtesy photo Pam Grier ABC Walt Willey If you go Today 9 a.m.-3 p.m.: Free Western Heritage Symposium, Nation- al Multicultural Western Heritage Museum, 3400 Mount Vernon Ave. 7 p.m.: Hall of Fame Induc- tion and Banquet, Worthing- ton Renaissance Hotel, 200 Main St. Saturday 1 p.m.: Wild Bill Hickok one- man show, River Ranch Stock- yards, 500 NE 23rd St. 4 p.m.: Zydeco music festival, River Ranch Stockyards Sunday 7 p.m.: Hall of Fame Rodeo, Cowtown Coliseum, 121 E. Exchange Ave. Information: 817-922-9999 or www.cowboysofcolor.org CLASSES IN FORT WORTH 817-735-9973 • Ask for Joe/Jerome Reserve Your Keyboard Now! WANTED 20 SENIOR ADULTS with little or no musical experience. Learn to play the keyboard/orchestra the EZ way. For more information or to sign up visit www.fortworthgolf.org or contact host course (817) 624-1771 The Rivers Edge Now Open NOT ENOUGH TIME TO PLAY 18 HOLES? Play our 6 hole-Par 3 or the 3 hole-Par 4 at Rockwood Dental Implants Implant Plus Abutment Plus Crown $ 1795 Extraction, bone grafting, & radiology fee included if done in the same appointment. Ask about New-Smile-In-A-Day! 817.336.0212 William C. Roddy DDS General Dentistry 10 % Limit 1. Not valid with any other offers. Expires 9.30.13. NP037 Off Most In-stock Items FREE w/ purchase of watch battery - $4.99 Limit 2. Some makes, models or styles may be excluded. Expires 9.30.13. NP046 Watch Battery Installation Batteries & light bulbs for home & business FORT WORTH 5733 S. Hulen St. 817-744-7636 FORT WORTH 5825 Camp Bowie Blvd. 817-377-2288 N. RICHLAND HILLS 5041 Davis Blvd. 817-428-8658 ARLINGTON 3430 S. Cooper St. 817-467-0613 ARLINGTON 1130 N. Fielder Rd. 817-274-1400 WEATHERFORD 2929 S. Main St. 817-599-8700 For additional savings visit batteriesplus.com findamassagetherapist.org Hundreds of Items on Display! Custom Colors Available 5703 Airport Freeway (Hwy. 121) Haltom City, Texas 76117 (Exit Carson St.) 817-222-9735 Classic Stone Enjoy Huge Savings Buy Direct From Manufacturer Delivery and Installation Available Closed Sun. & Mon. Tue.-Sat. 9:00am–5:30pm Best Selection and Best Prices and much more! Planters Benches Table Sets Fountains Statues Animals Shop Early For Best Selection! HUGE SUMMER SALE 25%-50% off everything HURRY SALE ENDS SOON FOREST HILL An 18-year-old woman who was shot in the head and neck at a par- ty Wednesday night has “a severe, possibly permanent injury to her neck,” police said Thursday. Forest Hill police were looking for the per- son who shot Mashana Henderson during a par- ty at a residence in the 6800 block of Trailwood Drive, Police Chief Dan Dennis said in a news re- lease. Police are asking anyone who witnessed the shooting or who has information about it to call Forest Hill po- lice at 817-531-5250. Staff writer Bill Miller contributed to this report. Domingo Ramirez Jr., 817-390-7763 Twitter: @mingoramirezjr Teen shot in head, neck at party By Domingo Ramirez Jr. [email protected]

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4B Friday, July 26, 2013 www.star-telegram.comS H

Tarrant & Texas

FORT WORTH — Threedecades after trying toright a wrong — and apol-ogize to Japanese-Ameri-cans incarcerated duringWorld War II — formerU.S. House Speaker JimWright will be honored forhis effort on the issue.

Wright, 90, will bepresented with the firstGov. Ralph L. Carr Awardfor Courage tonight inWashington, D.C., for hiswork to pass what ulti-mately became the CivilLiberties Act of 1988.

“I proposed legislationto acknowledge to thesepeople, citizens of theUnited States who wereincarcerated, that we wereready to resume our hon-or,” said Wright, a formerDemocratic U.S. Speakerof the House and House

Majority Leader. “I thinkwe’ve done that by ac-knowledging the wrong ofit and making restitu-tion.”

Wright will receive theaward — designed to hon-or a person “who embod-ies the principles and sac-rifices” of Carr, a formerColorado governor whoencouraged residents inhis home state to welcomedisplaced Japanese eva-

ing the war as militarymembers moved into thearea.

Around 120,000 Japa-nese and Japanese-Amer-icans were affected —nearly two-thirds of themAmerican-born citizens.

“We weren’t keepingwith the constitutionalrights and provisions oflaw ... in a time of severecrisis,” Wright said. “Wewere certainly in a periodof anxiety.

“But I had known allthese years that it wasn’tin keeping with the pledgeof liberty and justice forall.”

The measure heworked on for years wasultimately signed into lawin 1988 by President Ro-nald Reagan, giving for-mer detainees $20,000and a letter of apologyfrom the United Statesgovernment.

Anna Tinsley, 817-390-7610

Twitter: @annatinsley

cuees — tonight duringthe 2013 Japanese Ameri-can Citizens League Na-tional Convention.

“We recognize thatSpeaker Wright’s leader-ship resulted in the pas-sage of the Civil LibertiesAct of 1988 ... the firstpresidential apology to anentire group of Ameri-cans,” said Priscilla Ou-chida, executive directorof the Japanese AmericanCitizens League, thelargest and oldest Asian-American civil rightsgroup.

The group is honoringWright for his work thatbegan in 1983 to formallypropose recommenda-tions for the Commissionon Wartime Relocationand Internment of Civil-ians.

The measure formallyapologized to Japanese-Americans forced out oftheir homes and into in-ternment camps, or “warrelocation centers,” dur-

Ex-Speaker Wright honored7 He worked to giverestitution to Japanese-Americans put in camps.

By Anna M. [email protected]

Star-Telegram/Ron T. Ennis

Jim Wright will receive anaward named for Colorado’sgovernor during World War II.

FORT WORTH — Jim Aus-tin is looking forward tohearing great zydeco musicthis weekend.

“I’m really excitedabout that culture becauseit has a rich cowboy ethnicfeel to it,” said Austin,board president of theNational MulticulturalWestern HeritageMuseum.

A zydeco music festivalis part of a weekend-longNational Day of the Amer-ican Cowboy celebration,which begins today andcontinues through Sunday.Eight legendary cowboysand two cowgirls will beinducted into the mu-seum’s Hall of Fame.

The museum focuses onthe people and practicesthat created the uncom-mon culture of the Amer-ican West and contributedto rodeo history. And that’swhat drives the selectionof Hall of Fame inductees.

Unlike her better-known movie characters —Jackie Brown and FoxyBrown — Pam Grier hasloved the Western lifestylesince she was a girl in Den-ver. She was the honoraryhost of last year’s event atthe Pam Grier CommunityGarden and will be induct-ed into the Hall of Famethis year.

Unfortunately, Grierwon’t be able to accept thehonor in person, eventspokeswoman Vivian Ful-lerlove said.

“She’ll still be inducted,but she has some issuesthat prevent her from at-tending,” she said.

Another inductee, WaltWilley, brings Wild Bill!An Evening With JamesButler Hickok to the mix.With credits that includedaytime soaps, stand-upcomedy and satire, Willeyis being inducted “becauseof what he’s doing to keepthe Western culture alivewith this one-man show,”said Gloria Austin, the mu-

seum’s executive directorand co-founder.

Willey said he is honor-ed to be inducted “becauseit’s for this show and cer-tainly not for me.”

“I’ve never been a cow-boy. They’re also inductingHickok at the same time,which is a little ironic. Hedidn’t much like cowboysor Texans.”

That’s understandable. Cowboys and Texans

would have been amongHickok’s nightmares as hewent about taming theKansas frontier towns ofHays City and Abilene, amuseum news release said.

Other posthumous in-ductees include profes-sional rodeo cowboy andlivestock owner Floyd BuckWyatt, who originated theknee-jerking techniquestill used by bull and broncriders; Col. AllenAllensworth, who wasborn a slave but escapedand distinguished himselfin military service, educa-tion, the ministry and mu-nicipal development; andWoody Strode, an actorwhose roles included anEthiopian king in The Ten

Commandments.

Living inductees in-clude watercolorist BurlWashington; FredWhitfield, the firstAfrican-American to winthe Professional RodeoCowboys Association’scalf-roping world cham-pionship; Mollie TaylorStevenson Jr., the womanwho grew up and still liveson one of the oldest black-owned ranches in Texasand who helped establishthe American CowboyMuseum in Houston; andLawrence Homer “BigBuckle” Coffee, the mancredited with breaking theprofessional rodeo colorbarrier.

The zydeco music fes-tival will include StepRideau and the ZydecoOutlaws.

Throw in vendors withexceptional red beans andrice, catfish and crawdads,and you’ve got a winner.

Pioneers of theWestern way willjoin Hall of Fame 7 National Day of theAmerican Cowboy will becelebrated all weekend.

By Terry [email protected]

Courtesy photoPam Grier

ABCWalt Willey

If you go

Today9 a.m.-3 p.m.: Free WesternHeritage Symposium, Nation-al Multicultural WesternHeritage Museum, 3400Mount Vernon Ave.7 p.m.: Hall of Fame Induc-tion and Banquet, Worthing-ton Renaissance Hotel, 200Main St.

Saturday1 p.m.: Wild Bill Hickok one-man show, River Ranch Stock-yards, 500 NE 23rd St.4 p.m.: Zydeco music festival,River Ranch Stockyards

Sunday7 p.m.: Hall of Fame Rodeo,Cowtown Coliseum, 121 E.Exchange Ave.

Information: 817-922-9999or www.cowboysofcolor.org

CLASSES IN FORT WORTH

817-735-9973�•�Ask�for�Joe/Jerome

Reserve Your Keyboard Now!

WANTED 20 SENIOR ADULTSwith little or no musical experience.

Learn to play the keyboard/orchestra the EZ way.

For more information or to sign up visit

www.fortworthgolf.org or contact host course

(817) 624-1771

The Rivers EdgeNow Open

NOT ENOUGH TIME TO PLAY 18 HOLES?Play our 6 hole-Par 3 or the 3 hole-Par 4

at Rockwood

Dental Implants

Implant PlusAbutment PlusCrown $1795

Extraction, bone grafting, & radiology fee includedif done in the same appointment.

Ask about New-Smile-In-A-Day!

817.336.0212William C. Roddy DDS General Dentistry

10%

Limit 1. Not valid with any other offers. Expires 9.30.13. NP037

Off Most In-stock ItemsFREE

w/ purchase of watch battery - $4.99

Limit 2. Some makes, models or styles may be excluded. Expires 9.30.13. NP046

Watch Battery Installation

Batteries & light bulbs for home & business

FORT WORTH5733 S. Hulen St.817-744-7636

FORT WORTH5825 Camp Bowie Blvd.817-377-2288

N. RICHLAND HILLS5041 Davis Blvd.817-428-8658

ARLINGTON3430 S. Cooper St.817-467-0613

ARLINGTON1130 N. Fielder Rd.817-274-1400

WEATHERFORD2929 S. Main St.817-599-8700

For additional savings visit batteriesplus.com

findamassagetherapist.org

Hundreds of Itemson Display! Custom

Colors Available

5703 Airport Freeway (Hwy. 121) Haltom City, Texas 76117 (Exit Carson St.) •�817-222-9735

Classic StoneEnjoy Huge Savings

Buy Direct From Manufacturer

Delivery and Installation Available

Closed Sun. & Mon.Tue.-Sat.

9:00am–5:30pm

Best Selection and Best Prices

and much more!

Planters

Benches

Table Sets

Fountains

Statues

Animals

Shop EarlyFor Best

Selection!

HUGE SUMMER SALE25%-50% off everything

HURRY SALE ENDS SOON

FOREST HILL — An18-year-old womanwho was shot in thehead and neck at a par-ty Wednesday nighthas “a severe, possiblypermanent injury toher neck,” police saidThursday.

Forest Hill policewere looking for the per-son who shot MashanaHenderson during a par-ty at a residence in the6800 block of TrailwoodDrive, Police Chief DanDennis said in a news re-lease.

Police are askinganyone who witnessedthe shooting or whohas information aboutit to call Forest Hill po-lice at 817-531-5250.

Staff writer Bill Miller

contributed to this report.

Domingo Ramirez Jr.,

817-390-7763

Twitter: @mingoramirezjr

Teen shot inhead, neckat partyBy Domingo Ramirez [email protected]