Seeing Red?

Our celestial neighbor is closer than ever

For those of us who still cling to the possibility that Martians could attack at any moment, the coming weeks will be revealing.

Look at the southern pre-dawn sky, and the steadily brightening red light is ominous: If an invasion were ever going to happen, Aug. 27 would be the day.

On that date, Mars will be closer to Earth than at any time in recorded history — 34,649,589 miles away, to be exact. If the Martians are energy-conscious, it would make perfect sense.

So, you might think the astronomers who spend much of their time with their heads in space would be freaking out right about now.

Nope. Try decidedly underwhelmed.

Mars will be a significant display, they say, but nothing that will be marked in the annals of history.

In astronomical terms (which, in this case, is not meant to sound overwhelming), Mars won't be a "disc," like the moon, but neither will it be just a "point," like a star.

"It's not maybe so dramatic as some people have made it sound," says Mark Leising, a Clemson University physicist and astronomer. "It is closer than we've been in some tens of thousands of years, perhaps 60,000 years, but only by a little."

The truth is, Earth and Mars meet every 26 months when our planet laps its closest neighbor on the orbital inside track around the sun.

The two worlds meet for their predetermined neighborly wave at "opposition," an astronomical term for when the Sun, Earth and Mars form a straight line. But how intimate they get is different every time, because their orbits are elliptical, not circular.

On other dates throughout history — Aug. 23, 1924; Aug. 18, 1845; and Aug. 13, 1766, to name a few — Mars and Earth came about as close as they will come to each other later this month, about 35 million miles.

The next meeting will be Halloween 2005, when about 43 million miles will separate the two planets. So, in effect, Leising says, "Every 2.2 years is a good time to look at Mars."

The last time Mars came anywhere near this close to our planet, the Neanderthals were scratching their heads at that strange red dot in the sky.

Then, Earth and Mars were about 150,000 miles farther apart than they will be on Aug. 27.

When the two meet again in 2005, Mars will be about 8 million miles farther and about 70 percent dimmer than it will be on Aug. 27.

And not until the year 2287 will Mars be closer than it will be in a few days.

Forgive us unscientific, naive Martian-invader/abduction theorists who learned what we know about Mars from those Bugs Bunny cartoons, but 150,000 miles and 8 million miles sound a long ways away.

As do mention of "Neanderthals" and "the year 2287," let alone Halloween 2005 and the prospect of what crazy new costume some eccentric party crasher will come up with by then.

When we talk about outdoing the Neanderthals, it doesn't seem like any great accomplishment. But this shared event is a tie to a long-gone age, and the next-best living thing we've got is Meatloaf or Neil Young.

Wild ride

For the vivid imagination, the absolute precision of a mathematical formula charting the night sky is so … inconvenient.

Forget Copernicus. No good celestial event, not one, is worth mentioning unless it can be cast in a completely homo-sapien-centered spotlight.

It's times like these that we pay just a little more attention to Martian conspiracy theorists, the Richard Hoaglands of the cyberworld.

In these times when mystery meets possibility, the circular, so-not-elliptical thinkers of our planet become sages of the cosmos, a tradition dating back to the ancients.

Mars is the planet that, when its red hue painted the dark sky, convined the Greeks a horrible, bloody war was on the horizon.

In 1877, Italian astronomer Giovanni Sciaparelli observed what he called "canali," or channels, on the surface of Mars, which was mistranslated into English as "canals."

The Suez Canal in Egypt, then a recently completed modern marvel, was fresh on the minds of everyone, and some concluded that the surely advanced Martians must have played a hand in its construction.

In 1938, the day before Halloween, a radio broadcast based on H.G. Wells' "War Of The Worlds" — performed by Orson Welles in the form of a news bulletin — actually whipped the nation into a Martian-invasion frenzy.

Those were the days, when an incredibly irrational Martian theory was no grounds for commitment to a mental institution.

But, alas, robotic modules have set down on Mars, and the little green men never showed their little green faces.

There were no intricate "canals," though there was a creepy, Sphinx-like face in the dirt, reminiscent of the occasional Virgin Mary sighting in a steamed-up window or a bagel.

Room for beauty

Still, the world of scientific precision has room for beauty and wonder.

Aside from the moon, Mars will be "the most brilliant thing you see in the southern sky," says Doug Gegen, an astronomer at the Roper Mountain Science Center. "Mars is accessible to even small telescopes this year."

In fact, a good pair of binoculars might get you a good glimpse of the planet, and with a decent telescope and favorable viewing conditions, the melting south-polar ice cap will be particularly visible.

From now until Aug. 27, amateur sky-watchers can check each dark morning as Mars gets brighter, and through September as it steadily wanes.

Now, Mars is most visible in the predawn hours. In September, viewing will be possible at a more reasonable hour, beginning around 10 p.m.

"Most people don't get the chance to see something like that, except for maybe watching the phases of the moon," Leising says.

In September, Roper Mountain Science Center will point its 23-inch telescope toward the red planet for the public to see, Gegen says.

The good thing about predictability, sometimes, is its predictability.

"If it's pouring rain that night (Aug. 27), then you're good for another several weeks anyway," Gegen says. "Start looking now and keep looking on through September."

And just because this isn't the only time Mars comes close to Earth, and just because we haven't seen the little green men, doesn't mean the mystery is gone.

Mars, Leising says, is our nearest neighbor, most similar in environment and still our dream of extraterrestrial colonization, a dream NASA considers as "not completely crazy."

And this current Mars approach is not without its possibilities to discover the incredible.

In anticipation of the shortest journey so far in human history, an armada of NASA space probes, which include two ground rovers, are on a mission to Mars.

"From a scientific point of view, this is actually important, because it's easier to get there," Leising says. "You're a little late if you want to leave now, though."

So, if that's the way it is, are the Martians also taking this opportunity to, say, mount a massive, cataclysmic invasion?

"They would have left some months ago," Leising says. "They would be arriving already about … now."

Finally!

Long-unanswered mysteries can be solved: Is Cher really a Martian, debunking the "little green men" myth? Why, in almost every alien abduction, is there the obligatory cavity probe? Can we give you California and call it even?

Published in:  on August 15, 2003 at 10:29 pm Leave a Comment

Take Note!

Overused exclamation mark often misses the point

It is the unabashed expression of emotion. The voice of anybody who is convinced no one is listening.

It's the tourist sunburn. The wife who's finally had it being turned off by the remote control. The scream of both joy and desperation.

"Notice me!" it says. And you do, whether you like it or not, because the exclamation point is in your face, everywhere.

It's in the e-mail reminding you to "file that TPS report!"

On the TV infomercial, fervently yet ambiguously tempting you with "risk free!" products and services.

On the sticky note branded onto the refrigerator door, warning you to consider your life before even thinking about drinking the last of the milk!

Thanks to the convenience of the keyboard, there's no longer just one exclamation, but five!!!!! Or more!!!!!!

With the rise of e-mail communication and the relative anonymity of the corporate workplace's break-room microwave, the exclamation point has become the symbol for how we express tone and body language when neither can be heard or seen.

This mark of punctuation screams silently.

Somewhere within the soundless discourse, particularly on the receiving end, is the idea that no life can be so dramatic that it needs more than one exclamation point.

Or if it does, watch out! This person could be a candidate for workplace violence!!!

"It's shaped like a bludgeoning device," says Doug Fisher, a University of South Carolina communications professor. "I think sometimes that's what people are trying to do, bludgeon you into paying attention, but too many of them knock you senseless, and you don't pay attention at all."

Take e-mail spam. Or leave it, as does Gary Duckett, a 47-year-old Greenville Tech student who is currently on sabbatical from the business world.

"There is no spam that doesn't have an exclamation point," says Duckett, of Spartanburg. "It's the equivalent of a shouting TV commercial, like one of those used-car salesmen who has a close-out sale every week."

Nowhere, he says, is the use of the exclamation point more abused and counterproductive than in a professional setting.

Hospital rooms, Duckett says, have signs that simply state, "Cell phone use prohibited." It's a warning that, if not heeded, could get someone hurt.

But somewhere in the hospital, he says he knows there's a sticky note scrawled by a desperate workplace employee, shrieking, "Do NOT take these pens!!!"

On the gas station window, a sign with two exclamation points boasts of lottery payouts, and the gas card banners scream "apply inside!"

The sign informing the would-be robber, however, speaks softly. For some reason — and there's probably a good one — the statement, "Employees do not have access to the safe," warrants merely a period.

Roz Canty, 27, of Anderson, says any correspondence she receives, whether physical or virtual, is put to the exclamation test.

"If I see a note with a lot of exclamation points, I don't read it," she says. "If you use too many, it's like crying wolf."

And therein lies the problem, communication experts say. Too often, the exclamation point is used when it will have the least effect.

"If you have to use punctuation or some other gimmick to convey that feeling, then it suggests that there's something wrong with what you've written," says Melinda Menzer, a Furman University English professor.

It's not the exclamation point that should be the object of scorn, Menzer says, only its abusers.

Some dialogue would be misleading without an exclamation point to capture a character's intonation, and in rare cases, she says, it can be used in professional communication.

But, in no note, letter or memo should it be used more than once, she says, because then it is reduced to "using punctuation to make up for the fact that you can't communicate otherwise."

Strunk and White argue in "The Elements of Style," widely considered the writer's bible, that an exclamation point should be used only to express "true exclamations or commands."

And it was F. Scott Fitzgerald who once said, "Exclamation points are like laughing at your own joke."

Well, a lot of people are laughing these days.

Fisher says let them snort and guffaw at themselves.

While critical of the punctuation mark's abuse, he is sympathetic with those who are simply emotional and want to share it. In fact, he says there should be "a society for the preservation of the exclamation point."

But it's the occasion, the medium and the attitude that must be right for an exclamation point to be endearing, he says.

"People like it because it expresses an internal feeling, you know? It's like, 'Wow, look at this!' In the world where we're surrounded and assaulted and battered by communication every day, there's a certain desire to fight for the attention."

Published in:  on July 27, 2003 at 10:28 pm Leave a Comment

Summer’s Here And Gone

Journey to autumn is a slide rather than a fall

Now is the time when we resign ourselves to melting, like a double scoop of Death By Chocolate down the back of the hand.

Slowly, we slide, content to slip as the sun retreats from the Tropic of Cancer and summer drips down its protracted decline to autumn.

The appreciation of summer lies in its promise: a new romance, a better body, a catchy song, an over-the-top blockbuster movie.

It's a pregnant dream that is born by midsummer, where we find ourselves now, paradoxically a mere three weeks after we celebrated the solstice.

Summer reaches its adulthood in its infancy, on the Fourth of July, like some exotic insect that lives for only a day.

Today, at Garden Ridge, summer is on clearance, in the form of a plastic pink flamingo or a cherub garden statuette staring blankly into a gazing ball.

Summer is the garden retailer's longest season, beginning in February and ending in August. Autumn is now.

The brightly colored fake flowers that paint the mosaic of summer are half off. They have to go; the brown-and-auburn-hued fake mums of autumn have arrived, as have the fake pumpkins and the turkey dressed as a pilgrim.

So is a season lost in the rush of autumn's grab for summer's crown, a coup d'etat emboldened by our relentless, anxious expectation.

Expectation for the summer we thought we should have had.

By midsummer, there is no first cool rush of water, first glimpse of a lightnin' bug flash, first beach trip, first temporary tattoo or first Super Soaker guerrilla ambush.

The firecracker was either a doozy or a dud, and there's no way to do it again, because the roadside fireworks stands beckoning our Visa cards and screaming, "Buy One, Get One Free!" are closed, waiting for a trailer hitch to make way for a pumpkin patch.

The spent bottle rocket in the bush speaks to you like some kind of somnambulent zombie (if you haven't started your summer diet or your regimen of 175 morning belly crunches for a better shirtless you …).

It and the black gunpowder stain in your driveway are a reminder that summer is declining, within you, slowly, almost imperceptibly.

The All-Star game just isn't what it used to be, when the heroes of summer would never have stood for a 7-7 tie.

Hollywood has had its way with your pre-Fourth giddiness. Were Arnold, Neo and Dr. Banner everything you had hoped? All that's left between now and school bells are the sequels that should never have been made.

And the fear of long summer days rich with too much freedom.

Or a lack of it.

In early June, when lifeguards to their perches, sunscreen could barely fend off the sun's daily assault.

Their return to college was somewhere in the distance, over the hills and far away.

By now, sunscreen is an afterthought. Enthusiasm, too, is a fleeting commodity, lost as they watche, day after day, the same children swim in the same water and break the same rules.

It's 92 degrees, the type of post-Fourth humid scorcher that has the TV anchorman blaming the weather personality for the same warmth he pined for just a few weeks ago.

A funny thing about the hottest time of the year: There aren't as many kids in the water as when being in the water seemed novel.

There is infinite beauty in the midsummer we neglect — a neglect rendered by our perception, like the parallax of a star that moves across the sky only because you have moved.

Yet, these are the days when summer's promise is fulfilled, when the fullness of the sun's rays blankets us, despite the creeping advance of a marketable plastic autumn.

Crape myrtles are blooming white and dark pink.

Shakespeare is in the park.

School buses are not yet lumbering down the road, even if the grocery store sign is beckoning you to get a head start on your back-to-school shopping.

Now is the time for the long, hot, mildly mournful decline.

A beautiful descent.

Published in:  on July 13, 2003 at 10:26 pm Leave a Comment

Think Purple

The dinosaur behind the perpetual smile

He loves you, and according to the song, you love him.

Why exactly, who knows? Barney the educational, extremely friendly dinosaur is largely an enigma.

His inveterate smile, seemingly unambiguous, in fact serves further to confound.

There is little room for interpretation in Barney's tightly controlled world, a world of hugs, only polite dissent and simultaneous-knee-bend choreography.

But underneath the purple haze is a Barney we adults know little about. A Barney craving to narrow the gap with the adults who criticize him. An elderly fellow young at heart who claims to be 200 million years old, a purported survivor of the "Big Asteroid" that wiped out the dinosaurs 62 million years ago.

In preparation for his live-show tour, "Barney's Colorful World," which comes to the Bi-Lo Center Friday and Saturday, the purple one took some time over the phone to talk about his family life, political aspirations and the NBA finals.

Like, for real. Like, the real Barney. No joke.

The News: Whereabouts do you live?

Barney: I live in your imagination … and I shoot my show in Dallas.

N: The "I Love You, You Love Me" song. So resonant after more than a decade. What inspired you?

B: I don't know. I just felt it in my heart.

N: You don't wear shoes, but Baby Bop and BJ do. Is it a back-to-basics '60s thing — as in 60 million B.C.?

B: It's actually kind of hard to fit me. Sometimes I go into Foot Locker and I scare off those people. They run away. But I have worn some tap shoes recently.

N: How do you think you've been able to survive the metaphorical cataclysmic asteroid of a fickle pre-school audience?

B: I guess if I can survive the real asteroid, I can survive anything.

N: How have you kept your youth for so long? Botox? Is that why your smile is frozen?

B: Botox does come in handy sometimes. I think it's all the dancing, just all the jumping around. Although my stomach, I don't know what's up with that. It's growing.

N: You seem to have been battling your weight over the years? Are you a carnivore, an Atkins diet loyalist?

B: No, I pretty much eat what I want. Sometimes I'll go into a restaurant, and they'll hand me the menu, and I'll say, "Yes, thank you."

N: Do you ever frown, at least on the inside?

B: I've never actually thought about it. I don't think anything's ever made me sad. Usually, a little sad thing starts to come in, and I kick it out with a big smile. Always be happy, I say.

N: A good many adults don't seem to get you, what with sitcoms and skits poking fun at you? Do you just laugh it off?

B: I don't really notice that. I'm so busy on my tour and my TV show. Do they really make fun of me?

N: Yeah, some of the Saturday Night Live stuff.

B: Oh, you're kidding. What do they say? What's that old thing, about impersonating people …?

N: The sincerest form of flattery?

B: That's it! I'm trying to get on "The Tonight Show." Now I know Jay Leno makes a lot of jokes about me, and I've got some of my own for him.

N: How hard is it to fight the stereotype of the "mean dinosaur" like those portrayed in "Jurassic Park"?

B: It's funny to me, because I've never seen it. There's always scary things, but I'm not. How can you be purple and really scary? Maybe if those T-Rexes had smiled a little, people wouldn't have run.

N: If you ran for president, and the voting age was set at age 18 maximum, how do you think you'd fare?

B: Oh, I don't know. I've had some ideas, like maybe calling it the Purple House instead of the White House. I think I would do pretty well.

N: You might have some problems with the teens, but you'd definitely win the preschool set, right?

B: Oh, I don't know. You know, those teens have grown up watching me, hopefully. Maybe they could find it in their heart to vote for me.

N: Those trans-dimensional journeys you do from the Land of Make Believe, do they take a toll on you?

B: You notice when I come to life on the set there, I kind of jump, like, "Whoaaaa!" I've landed on roller skates before. I've actually been inside a box. It's kind of like those old "Quantum Leap" shows: You never know where you're going to end up.

N: Is there a special someone in your life that we should know about?

B: Just all the kids. They make me so happy.

N: You spend so much time with others' children. Any plans for some of your own?

B: Ha, ha, ha. No. You're a funny one.

N: How did the death of Mr. Rogers, a true neighbor to us all, hit you?

B: Mr. Rogers was a great man. He will be deeply missed. He was an inspiration to all. He was such a kind man who did so many wonderful things for children.

N: Any plans for a Barney/Wiggles musical collaboration? The convergence of two such forces would be unstoppable.

B: That would be a great idea. I was thinking of taking my road tour to Broadway, so why not go the next step and make a movie? But you know what? I would have to direct.

N: Who do you like in the NBA finals? Or would you prefer that everybody win?

B: If whoever wins wins, then they were meant to win. How's that? I don't really care, just as long as they're happy when they're playing.

N: So it's the spirit of enjoyment of the competition?

B: And teamwork. Any team that has purple — yes. Who is purple?

N: The Lakers.

B: Oh, excellent. Go Lakers!

Published in:  on May 12, 2003 at 10:25 pm Leave a Comment

Time Passes, But Hope Remains

Elizabeth Smart case is painful reminder for Columbia's Dinwiddie family

She was the inescapable name and face, yet no one ever found her.

More than 10 years later, the disappearance of Dail Dinwiddie is as much a mystery as it was that dark, early-autumn morning when the 23-year-old vanished from a busy Columbia entertainment district after attending a U2 concert. Her likeness has been affixed to countless light poles and store windows, circulated in bulk on airlines and, now, Web sites.

Her name and face are a metaphor. She is a symbol – perhaps the symbol, not only in Columbia, but in South Carolina – for how the most unlikely of persons can simply drop off the face of the earth.

For a decade, her parents have walked the line between hope and resignation. The recent safe return of Elizabeth Smart, the 15-year-old who was kidnapped from her suburban Salt Lake City home in June and found under bizarre circumstances, offers Dinwiddie's father, Dan, little comfort personally.

But what the Smart story proves, he says, is that a family can never give up hope, no matter how long uncertainty tears at the soul and keeps a family frozen in a state of grief.

"To give up hope is almost denying that there's a possibility that your child will come back or be brought back," Dinwiddie says of his only daughter.

The Smart case is a mixed blessing of sorts for families of missing loved ones, and there are scores of them. As of March, 879 people, both juveniles and adults, were missing in South Carolina, the State Law Enforcement Division says.

A roommate last saw Jason Knapp, a 20-year-old Clemson University ROTC student, in April 1998. Nine days later, Knapp's car was found abandoned at Table Rock State Park, where police believe he drove on the day he disappeared.

Paula Merchant was 25 when she left home in Columbia in January 1999 to attend a meeting. She never showed up. Her car was found burning, but there's been no sign of her.

A family must always be ready for the return of a loved one with the full understanding that it could never happen. The new hope that Smart provides comes at a painful cost.

But moving on is something a family of a missing child cannot do, says Margaret Frierson, director of the South Carolina chapter of the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children.

What if a missing person sees the family or a neighbor give up? Smart apparently heard her uncle calling for her during search missions.

"Until we have proof to believe otherwise, we are going to operate under the assumption that the child is alive," Frierson says. "Whether it's nine months, 10 years or 15 years, there is that possibility."

To her family and loved ones, Dail Dinwiddie is not a symbol; she's a daughter, sister and friend. A reserved, sweet human being with an engaging personality.

A woman who vanished.

Harold Chambers, the semi-retired Columbia police investigator who has spent a decade sifting through crank calls and promising leads that go bust, always finds himself back where he started – 1:30 a.m., Sept. 24, 1992.

No evidence. No suspect. No witness. No idea where else to begin.

Meanwhile, Dail Dinwiddie herself is frozen in time, branded into the public consciousness by her posterized face, her light-brown hair distinctly swooshed to the left. Strong roots

Dail Boxley Dinwiddie had lived in Columbia almost her entire life.

When Dail was a little girl, Dan and Jean Dinwiddie built a home in the upscale Forest Hills neighborhood, a community straddling the line between the affluence of Forest Acres and the poverty on the other side.

From kindergarten to high school graduation, Dail was nurtured in an educational environment similar to her home.

Heathwood Hall Episcopal School – a pastoral, pine-dotted campus where students feel free to leave their bookbags unattended – offered a comfortable bubble apart from the troubled neighborhoods around it. Jim Gasque, Dail's high school English teacher, watched her grow up. Gasque's late mother had been Dail's baby sitter. Dail was like "a surrogate granddaughter," he says, and his mother never got over her disappearance. Dail was a quiet figure, easily liked. "She had a type of charisma that made people want to be around her," he says. Probably because of her small stature – she was 5 feet tall, 96 pounds when she disappeared – she always seemed vulnerable, he says. Gasque remembers taking her on a 10-day trip to England with 18 other high school seniors. Dail's parents were going to wire her some money, but she didn't want to go the Western Union alone.

"She was the type student who was reluctant to launch out in the city without me," he says. Being small, Dail always found herself having to speak up to be heard.

She had a sweet coating; she slept with her teddy bear, always, on into college. But underneath, others who knew her say, was a feisty spirit tempered with a sharp ability to judge character.

Dail and her mother were close. When Dail was 9, she inspired her mom to take up horseback riding, and the two rode together avidly. When it came time to go off to college, Dail's horse, Double-Time, was sold to help pay tuition.

In the fall of 1987, she enrolled at Randolph-Macon Woman's College in Lynchburg, Va., but transferred after a year to the University of Georgia.

Dail had intended to take some specialized art courses, but she soon found she was allergic to the trees and grasses in Athens, Ga., and she returned to Randolph-Macon. After graduating in 1991 with an art history degree, Dail returned home to look for a job in art restoration.

But slow economic times made finding work difficult. She hoped for better luck in Charlotte, where she found work at a frame shop. The shop closed six months later, and Dail found herself back living at home in February 1992.

She baby-sat to earn money while she volunteered at the Columbia Museum of Art, all the while preparing for graduate school at the University of South Carolina. By the time she finished grad school, she hoped, the economy would be better. A big night

Sept. 23, 1992, was to be a memorable day in Columbia, even before Dail's disappearance.

U2 was performing at Williams-Brice stadium as part of its "Zoo TV" tour, and even those who didn't have tickets made sure to be a part of the social scene.

The fall semester had begun, and many of Dail's old friends had returned from college or trips overseas and enrolled in law school, graduate school and medical school at USC.

Dail was invited by a friend to be his guest at the concert, where they met two other old high-school friends. After the concert, the group went to Five Points, a college village of boutiques and restaurants. When night falls, it transforms into mecca of revelry where bars stay open into the early-morning hours.

It was a Wednesday night. With U2 in town, the party started early that week, and Five Points was hopping. Dail and her friends ended up at their favorite watering hole, Jungle Jim's, in the heart of Five Points.

Through the night, Dail's friends came and went, and by 1 a.m. she had gotten separated from them. At about 1:15 a.m., she left Jungle Jim's after talking with the bouncer at the door.

A few minutes later, she returned, looked around the bar and then left hurriedly, telling the bouncer goodbye. He was the last person to see her. The search for Dail

Dail's father awoke about 6:15 a.m. As was his routine, he went upstairs to get the dog, who slept in his 16-year-old son's room.

He noticed that the lights in Dail's room were on, as well as her radio. Her bed had not been slept in.

It wasn't uncommon for Dail to call her father for a ride home if she needed it. Five Points is a long but doable walk from the family's home, but the neighborhoods along the way are potentially treacherous, and the drive is brief.

Trying not to panic, Dan awakened his wife and began to call Dail's friends to see if she had spent the night with one of them.

His daughter was not one to leave the family worrying.

At about 8:30 a.m., her parents called the Columbia City Police department, which, at first, was reluctant to treat the case as a kidnapping.

So many cases of missing adults are easily resolved: unexpected sleep-overs, personal sabbaticals or sometimes a stint in jail.

But as her parents described her personality, behavior patterns and demeanor on the night she left, the case was soon labeled a kidnapping.

In the days and weeks that followed, everyone with ears to hear and eyes to see learned the name and face of Dail Dinwiddie.

Her family was all over the news, with a parade of press conferences and rallies at the State House and tearful pleas for her safe return.

And the poster, everywhere – in the record store, on the lightpost, in the supermarket, passed out on passenger airlines and distributed nationwide.

Within a week, Dail was featured on TV's "America's Most Wanted," and a benefit concert at the bar where she was last seen helped raise a $2,500 reward to $50,000.

The strong support network of Heathwood Hall rallied to her cause. Young men and women stood in street medians, holding pictures of Dail, passing out fliers.

Nothing.

"One day she was here, one day she wasn't," Dan says. A frustrating case

Columbia Police investigator Harold Chambers has the look of an old grandpappy; his beige Members Only jacket, a relic of the 1980s, screams unassuming.

But his blue eyes pierce, and beneath his polite stoicism is a grandfather who doggedly wants to bring a child home.

Chambers, now a 35-year veteran, was assigned to the case from the start, and he has put off retirement in part to solve it.

He acts not only as investigator but as a counselor to the Dinwiddies, available at all times whenever they need to talk about theories or frustrations.

The job of cracking the case has been nothing if not frustrating for the grizzled investigator.

"You just can't fathom it," Chambers says. "Absolutely, it's frustrating."

He doesn't entertain theories of what might have happened, for fear that his imagination might be closed to any possibility.

Columbia police, the Richland County Sheriff's Office, the State Law Enforcement Division and the FBI have followed hundreds of leads since the police canvassed Five Points and the possible foot path home to Forest Hills shortly after Dail's disappearance.

The first 72 hours, says Columbia Police Capt. Steve Conley, is the best window to solve a missing persons case. From there, the trail only gets colder.

Investigators interviewed residents, looked in underground water lines and checked abandoned houses along the way.

Early on, police thought they might have had their guy. The morning of Dail's disappearance, a man was seen in Five Points forcing a woman into a car.

Investigators located him in Anderson County and brought him to Columbia. After interviewing him and a Sumter woman – his girlfriend – it became clear she was the one forced into the car that morning.

"It sounded real good to start with," Chambers says. "We thought we had it, but it fizzled out on us like so many more have."

Conley says the Dinwiddie case is perplexing: no crime scene, no witness among a crowd of thousands and no one enticed by the $50,000 reward. There is, however, that night, particularly memorable because of the concert, Conley says. Someone, somebody, had to have seen something, but no one is talking.

"People tend to run their mouth," he says. "It's frustrating with the amount of reward out there, when 99 times out of a hundred, a lot of people on the street would give up their brother for 500 bucks, I don't care what he did."

The only information police have ever received, Conley says, is murky at best – someone "acted strange" or "looked like."

The family and law enforcement have even entertained the visions of psychics, in hopes of any kind of lead.

Whenever an accused serial killer, kidnapper or rapist with a tie to Columbia is caught, investigators search for a link to Dail and other missing people.

That was the case in the fall of 2000 with the capture of Reinaldo Rivera.

Rivera has admitted that he raped and killed four young women beginning in 1999 in the Augusta, Ga., area. His attorney is defending him on the grounds of mental illness.

Around the time of Dail's disappearance, the now 38-year-old Rivera lived in Columbia and was a student at USC.

Investigators interviewed Rivera, but could find no link. Rivera had left a suicide note listing his victims, Chambers says, and denied any involvement with Dinwiddie (and Paula Merchant).

The trail to solving Dinwiddie's case has passed through places such as Las Vegas, Atlanta and Clarksville, Tenn. Police have "three file cabinets full" of leads.

The number of leads today has trailed off compared to a decade ago, when investigators could barely keep up with the flood of information.

But they still get them.

Last month, Conley and SLED agents spent two days in Minnesota interviewing a man in jail who was said to be involved with her disappearance.

Authorities couldn't find a connection, but they have not exhausted that lead and plan to investigate it further, says SLED special agent Dave Lawrence.

Too often, leads are built on what turns out to be a prank. Once, police received a tip that Dail's body was buried off Fish Hatchery Road southwest of Columbia.

Conley and Chambers arrived and found mounds on the property and had no choice but to dig them up with a backhoe. Eventually, they traced the call to a pay phone at USC; the date was April Fool's Day.

Some people have tried to pin the disappearance on a rival for revenge purposes. Inmates have used supposed knowledge of her disappearance as leverage to try to get out of jail.

Such is the nature of a high-profile case: a lot of potential leads but also a mess of misinformation. But investigators agree the high profile gives them a better chance at solving it.

"It seems to be the case that will not go away, which is a good thing," Lawrence says. Holding on to hope

"I'd love to see her walk through that door, like that little Smart girl," Chambers says. "Who knows? The day before Elizabeth Smart was found, no one knew if she was alive."

But Dail wasn't 14, and if she had a chance to escape, she likely would.

Because of that, investigators aren't planning to do an age-enhanced sketch of what Dail would look like at 33, soon to be 34 on April 12.

"Here, you're dealing with, if the opportunity presented itself, I feel certain she would make some kind of contact with authorities or home," Conley says.

Chambers says SLED tried to do an age-enhanced sketch four years ago, but it "didn't work out."

Hope in the Dinwiddie home is a commodity bought at an exorbitant price. Holding onto it has taken its toll.

The Dinwiddies watch TV's "America's Most Wanted" and "American Justice," Dan says, "not for the voyeur value, but to see if maybe there's something we haven't thought about. Maybe we could tie that in." Dan says he and his wife handle the loss differently. From day to day, talking about their daughter doesn't come easier, it's measured by how less difficult it is.

To talk about her daughter's case, Jean must reacquaint herself with a box of photos and news clippings. Dredging up the memories is like picking a scab from a wound that has not healed.

But, there is the hope.

"As a family, we're very private," Dan says. "We don't relish the publicity. The only reason we do this is because, one day, something that somebody has written or said might cause somebody to remember something and find Dail."

At any moment at the Dinwiddie home, an upsetting call can come – from an investigator, a prankster, a reporter, a tipster – the kind that Dan says "always makes our hearts go back in our throats."

At 3 in the morning, a woman called the Dinwiddie home, drunk, to let them know she was looking for their daughter in Five Points – a few years too late.

Sometimes, the calls are entirely well-meaning.

Dan says he got a call from a man in a bar in Green Bay, Wisc., one night: "He said, I know that your daughter is here in the bar tending bar.'"

By the next morning, law enforcement had met up with the woman in Green Bay. She indeed bore a striking resemblance to Dail, but she was nearly six feet tall.

Still, it was that type of dogged concern that found Elizabeth Smart. A couple passing by on a suburban Salt Lake City road insisted on following their instinct when they recognized Smart's suspected abductor from a sketch.

The public's vigilance is the only comfort Dail's father finds in the Smart story. Dail's case is entirely different.

He knows that if his daughter is ever to be found, it will be because people speak up about what they know, whether they realize they know it or not.

"I was very encouraged that the citizens found this child," he says. "The citizenry: That's who's going to find Dail. Insist. Just insist."

And never give up hope, no matter how much it hurts.

April 18, 2004

Above and beyond 

Until his death, Harold Chambers stayed true to his pledge to keep working until he found missing Columbia woman

AFTER SURGERY to remove a deadly brain tumor, Harold Chambers might have been expected to give up the search. But those who were close to the semi-retired Columbia Police investigator already knew what he would say. It was the same thing he had said for more than a decade. "I won't retire until I find that girl."

That girl is Dail Dinwiddie, a young woman who nearly 12 years ago vanished in Columbia and became, perhaps, the symbol in South Carolina of how a person can simply disappear off the face of the Earth.

 Chambers never did quit, and he never found Dinwiddie.

But his search is over. Chambers, who two weeks ago at age 62 died from complications of his illness, refused to retire from the force, even as the case had constantly perplexed him to the point of utter frustration.

 Despite the frustration, nearly every week he was investigating, searching for any shred that might set the Dinwiddie family free from their perpetual grief.

 Where there once was a force as unyielding as the Dinwiddies' suffering – a particular comfort for a family who has lost a child – there is a void, one the Dinwiddies says leaves yet another hole in their hearts.

 "He would always tell me," says Jean Dinwiddie, Dail's mother, "`We can do this. We can do it together. You don't have to do it yourself.' I don't think this family would have made it this far without this man."

Such personal relationships between police officer and distraught family are not the norm, law enforcement veterans say, but where they do exist, the professional commitment is equally as personal. Harold Chambers was a case study in the marriage of professional duty and personal mission. If anybody understands that, Tom Siegler would. Since 1978, Seigler has refused to let the case of Donna McCracken and David Clemishaw go – even though he left the Greenville County Sheriff's homicide force in 1981.

The young Asheville couple was found dead — murdered and apparently robbed — in a rural creek off Barton Road.

Seigler, now the head of the sheriff's Office of Professional Standards, says he's pretty sure he knows who did it — based on a statement implicating two suspects — but can't find enough evidence to win in court. One of the suspects is now deceased.

While he now oversees internal investigations, this is one external investigation Seigler says he will not let go. Providing peace to McCracken's family is what drives him.

He speaks regularly with McCracken's sister in Colorado and her mother in North Carolina, sharing any potentially useful information.

Cases like this aren't common, Seigler says, because "you don't have too many whodunits. Most cases clear after at least two years."

While rare, law enforcement veterans say, the commitment isn't surprising, because in every case like this, there is a personal connection with a suffering family.

"When that happens, friendships develop, and it's hard to let it go," says Columbia police Capt. Steve Conley, Chambers' boss before he died. "Anytime you can do that with a victim's family, you're better off."

In Chambers' case, the Dinwiddie family says, the grizzled but grandfatherly part-time investigator wasn't just close to the family.

"He was a member of our family," says Dail's father, Dan Dinwiddie.

A man on a mission

Dail, 23 at the time, disappeared in the early morning hours of Sept. 4, 1992, after losing friends in a bar in Five Points, the nightlife district for University of South Carolina students.

It was quickly established that Dinwiddie was kidnapped. She was not the type to leave her parents worrying, and she had no motivation to vanish.

Chambers was assigned to the case. He never knew that the trail would grow so cold, even as an outpouring of support from the community put the case squarely in the local and national media spotlight.

Up until his death, Chambers could claim not one shred of substantive evidence to work with.

In an interview with The Greenville News 13 months ago, Chambers stoically expressed his befuddlement.

"Absolutely, it's frustrating," he said at the time. "You cannot fathom it."

As a police officer, he was a rare breed, says Jenny Jacobs, a retired State Law Enforcement Division agent who worked the Dinwiddie case along with Chambers from day one.

Jacobs, too, would talk with the family, but somehow, she says, she couldn't rival Chambers' zeal and calm reassurance.

Chambers, she says, was not a man of words. "I knew him by his actions."

It was a pattern woven throughout his life, says his brother, Louie Chambers, a Fountain Inn city councilman and retired West Columbia police officer.

The two grew up together in Greenville, and Louie remembers distinctly how his younger brother always felt to him like his older brother.

Most people called Harold "Chub."

Years ago, he would go every night to a Columbia bar that Louie says had a history of rowdiness and drink coffee.

While "relaxing," he would make sure the place cleared out peaceably, Louie says.

Once, Louie remembers hopping in a car to answer a call of a robbery in progress, clear across town.

When they got to the scene, there was a cadre of police cars and blue lights. Inside was a robber who was holding a hostage.

Louie says his brother grabbed his shotgun and walked inside. Soon after, he came out with the hostage, a handcuffed suspect and the suspect's pistol in his hand.

Chub Chambers, he says, was the last guy the person who kidnapped Dail Dinwiddie would want to run into.

Chambers' daughter, Tammy, says her father was always a mixed bag. "We never knew what he was going to do next."

One predictable trait, however, was that Chambers cared for others, and far outside police work, his brother says.

"My brother took people off the street, homeless people, and carried them home to feed them," Louie says. "I could write a book about him."

More than a cop

At any hour of the night, Chambers made himself available to talk with anyone who wanted to offer ideas or ask questions about the Dinwiddie case.

To Dan and Jean Dinwiddie, Chambers was a counselor more than a cop.

Dan says Chambers would call the family on holidays, just to check in, knowing that holidays are difficult. It was his way of trying to provide assurance that there was someone out there who was committed to making it better.

Chambers also acted as a protector of the family as they answered prank calls.

Sometimes drunks in Five Points would call the home years after Dail's disappearance to tell the family that they would look for Dail.

If there was a lead, he was a conduit, a shortcut, to get the information checked out, whether he acted on it or had someone else act on it, says Shirley Haselwood, a longtime friend of the family who has helped extensively with the case, even after she moved to Greenville in 1998.

Jacobs believes that while Chambers is irreplaceable in so many ways, a set of fresh eyes could be good for the case.

Chambers, throughout his work on the case, tried to keep a fresh approach.

He said last year that he didn't entertain theories on what happened, because he didn't want to close any doors.

That, his daughter Tammy says, was a lesson learned the hard way. Chambers kept a file on a little girl who had been abducted and murdered.

He kept it, she says, long after the case was closed. Chambers homed in on one guy, only to find out someone else did it.

"I asked him why he had that file," Tammy says. "He said, 'I look at it every now and then, to remind me to never to do that again.'"

For his part, Conley, the police captain, has assured the Dinwiddie family that the case will not be shuffled under the pile. Chambers' relationship with the family can't be duplicated, he says, but the search for truth will continue.

It was Conley who just last year flew to Minnesota with Chambers to check out a lead that didn't pan out.

"It's not like he had all the files and nobody has access to them," he says. "It's not inactive by any stretch of the imagination."

In many law enforcement agencies, a special unit is assigned to longstanding cases.

In the Greenville County Sheriff's Office, Seigler says, a cold case unit spends its time on just such matters. The level of personal connection is different from case to case, and a lack of a deeply intimate relationship doesn't mean a cold case can't be solved.

Even so, once death removes the assurance that someone is on a personal mission, a large chasm opens.

A hole, a sinking feeling, but also, says Haselwood, the Dinwiddies' longtime friend, a warm sense of gratitude that will never fade.

"It is an empty feeling," Haselwood says, "like, 'What do you do now?' Besides his family, I know we'll miss him the most, because he was a part of our family. Under no circumstances would he quit — except, I guess, under these."

Published in:  on March 23, 2003 at 10:23 pm Leave a Comment

Neighborhood mourns Mr. Rogers 

Stomach cancer claims children's TV father figure

Goodbye, neighbor.

For 30 years, Fred Rogers — known to millions of children simply as "Mister Rogers" — built a television neighborhood that was closed to no one.

It was a community of never-ending childhood and ceaseless acceptance that was always just big enough for one more person.

Today, the neighborhood mourns.

Rogers, the soft-spoken Presbyterian minister who made generations of young audiences his secular congregation, died Thursday after a short battle with stomach cancer. He was 74.

Like teens compelled to make fun of our parents, those of us who grew out of "Mister Rogers' Neighborhood" found a certain satisfaction in poking fun at him.

But not today, not for any grown-up child who truly appreciated a father figure who would put on some comfortable shoes and actually take the time to sit down and talk to you.

Latchkey kids. Kids from the projects. Kids whose soccer moms were too busy to sit down and explain that the bathtub drain won't suck you down.

Always, it was about you, the child, who was OK just the way you were.

It's a simple — some might say simplistic — notion, but it's one that makes admirers refer to "the neighborhood" in a collective sense.

"He was a good influence on us," says Jeanette Rucker, 40, of Nicholtown. She recalls first seeing Mister Rogers when she was 6.

"He was a very nice guy," she said. "It was his smile that made you smile."

And so many other things.

The trolley to the "Neighborhood of Make-Believe" always seemed to go so much further than it really did.

The delivery man would come by to dispense something so basic but yet so interesting, because, on that particular day, we were going to learn how that particular thing really worked.

Even as adults, many of us still think of Mister Rogers taking off his cardigan sweater at the precise moment when we trade our work clothes for a T-shirt.

He didn't always get the shoes tied exactly as his song ("It's a beautiful day in the neighborhood") ended with a comforting "Hi, neighbor," but it was always exciting to see if he could.

"Mister Rogers' Neighborhood," produced at Pittsburgh's WQED, near Rogers' hometown, made its debut on public television in 1968.

His original last episode aired in August 2001. He came out of retirement in 2002 to do public-service announcements to help console children after 9/11.

Rogers wasn't the first of his kind, but he was the face of the children's television genre along with "Sesame Street" for nearly 20 years.

His show reached its peak of popularity in the mid-1980s. Then the onset of children's programming outside the sphere of PBS — channels such as today's Playhouse Disney, Cartoon Network and Nickelodeon — contributed to Mr. Rogers' decline.

His greatness radiated, in his greetings and his goodbyes. When it was time to go, the heart of a child hurt a little.

We had to return to our real neighborhoods, which might or might not be such comfortable places.

Now we say goodbye for good.

It hurts, more than just a little.

Published in:  on February 28, 2003 at 9:17 pm Leave a Comment

Terror Hangs In D.C. … Until Snowstorm Hits

Blizzard suspends fear

WASHINGTON, D.C. — The voice is flat and robotic but nonetheless pierces the discreet hum of the National Air and Space Museum: "Attention in the museum, attention in the museum …."

The pregnant pause that follows means something entirely different to the gut than it would have two years or even two weeks ago, before "Terror Alert High."

So does Virginia's interstate no-hitchhiking sign along I-95. The simple crossed-out thumbs-up hints to newcomers, "If you think everything's going to be OK, think again."

As it turns out in the museum, a high-school kid has gotten separated from his bus. There is no need for us to hold our breaths and evacuate the building or act out some other absurd scene that belongs in a doomsday action movie.

If only the speaker could add some reassuring inflection to his voice, we — the undaunted, apparently brave visitors to the heart of the nation's capital — wouldn't have to reach so deep to pull our hearts from our stomachs.

Such is the state of the American psyche in the heart of the nation's capital, a place where an orange terror alert somehow ceases to be a comfortably distant "Saturday Night Live" punch line.

Yet, for a precious few days over the President's Day weekend, the fear is smothered in white.

As the first snowflakes begin to fall, then plummet, then accumulate to near-record proportions, a more immediate concern replacs the scramble for duct tape and plastic sheeting: How in the world am I going to shovel out the car?

Perhaps the rest of our worried nation could use such a storm, a blinding white antidote to fear.

The brave few are gathered around the Washington Monument, gazing into a dreary, snowy sky, some surely wondering whether a rogue plane or an anti-aircraft missile will come into view.

Mothers endure the cold with their pink-cheeked toddlers, waiting outside the Air and Space Museum for their turn to remove their coats and submit to metal-detecting wands.

The National Mall echoes with music from a surly saxophonist, who offeres the opening notes of "Sesame Street" to elicit some change from a pregnant woman.

Meanwhile, a homeless man declares that he won't seek shelter — terrorism and impending blizzard be damned — because he "likes the outdoors."

Over the weekend, The Washington Post conducts a telephone survey of how 600 area folks are reacting to the heightened terror alert.

The survey finds that 75 percent are worried about a terrorist attack in the region and that nearly half fear they personally will be a victim.

But for those willing to come to a place that news reports suggest could become a new Ground Zero at any moment, the fear is mostly buried somewhere between denial and resignation.

At any other time, a blizzard in a densely populated metro area would be something to curse, especially one that forces the governor of Maryland to declare driving without just cause illegal.

But here, for this moment, the idea of being trapped in a home by Mother Nature — and not a dirty bomb – is somehow liberating.

Like the water rendered inert by freezing temperatures, the region's fear of terror is temporarily put on hold.

MSNBC and Fox News are unrelenting with their perpetual "Terror Alert: High" screen labels — but no one here can see it through the snowblind.

The local news heads talking about machine-gun-wielding guards on the Capitol steps disappears, suddenly, giving way to goofy weather personalities rooting for a few more tenths of an inch at Reagan National so the official snow total can be all the more historic.

The busloads of high school students visiting the Lincoln Memorial turn their attention away from the barricades and police trucks blocking passages and to the more immediate threat: the embarrassment of slipping on an icy sidewalk in front of their peers.

Then, as soon as it came, it's gone.

Skies clear, and life begins to emerge once again. Eyes squint at the first sunlight reflecting off a wholly white landscape. Blacktop emerges; customers find gas stations finally open for business.

For three days, talk of Colin Powell's presentation before the United Nations and talk of movable chemical weapons labs is silent.

Then, the sun's rays compel the long thaw, lighting places people don't want to see.

A familiar, unwelcome normalcy returns.

Published in:  on February 24, 2003 at 10:21 pm Leave a Comment

Perchance To Dream

Young competitors find their muse in Shakespeare

The holding room is swimming with unsettled nerves and raging teen hormones.

"My first instinct is to run," says 15-year-old Jessie Griffeth, the youngest competitor in the English-Speaking Union's High School Shakespeare competition. "If I don't run, I'm OK."

They make small talk even though they don't know one another, a nervous exercise, in part, to show that one doesn't think he or she is better than anyone else.

It's also to cope with the realization that they are about to pour out their souls to an audience of discerning strangers. The winner competes nationally in New York.

If they can simply finish, well, that's success, too.

They come to the Warehouse Theatre, the proving ground for this particular evening, from different places and stations in life but with one thing in common: A poet who lived 400 years ago has changed their lives.

One, eventual winner Mary Catalanotto of Clover, is a student at the Governor's School for the Arts.

Some are aspiring actors — their "ands" sounds like "ends." This is their chance to have professionals assess their dream in an unusual, rap-battle-like competitive setting.

Others, though, are here only because their love for Shakespeare is what gets them through the maze of adolescence. Nothing more.

While most teens find their poetry in Eminem cleaning out his closet, these kids are more inspired by Hamlet's anxious indecision.

Speaking to teens

Whether it's a story of love denied or a sharp-tongued character dissing another with language that would be profane if condensed to a single word, Shakespeare speaks to what makes teens what they are: moody, idealistic, confused.

"You can feel his pain and it corresponds to your pain; that's what's so beautiful about it," says Fermnell Dowell, a junior at Riverside High, where he's a running back on the football team.

He's among the 15 local students competing this night, all of whom earned a place here by winning preliminary competitions at their own high schools.

Dowell does a goose-bump-raising rendition of "Othello," when the Moor realizes he has been tricked into killing his love and slays himself.

There is something moving, it seems, in a handsome, nervously outgoing jock suddenly transforming into a character so tragic.

"These plays are about young people," says Dr. John Crabtree, a professor emeritus of English at Furman University, who calmed and advised the students before the competition.

After all, Hamlet was a college student who came home for his dad's funeral, and the angst of the young lovers in "A Midsummer Night's Dream" and "Romeo and Juliet" speaks to youth of any generation, Crabtree says.

To know that hormones and nerves are forcing some of them to hesitate or forget their lines makes the marriage of youth and Shakespeare all the more magnificent a thing to behold, he says.

"An actor and an athlete have a lot in common," Crabtree says. "They're saying, 'I have something here worth watching, now watch me.' It's quite frightening."

The competitors are well aware of this before they take center stage. The deep breaths they suck in hint at the buzzing that must be going on in their stomachs.

Alyssa Dimatteo, a J.L. Mann junior, shrugs it off as "performance energy." Dimatteo, who also attends the Fine Arts Center, says she wants to be a professional actress.

She looks and sounds the part, dressed confidently but conservatively, pronouncing every "T" distinctly in ordinary conversation.

Amy Bryant doesn't have the same credentials. She's a junior at Travelers Rest High, or "TR," where the "R" usually brings out of its students a distinct Southern drawl like the one Bryant has.

Bryant wants to be a veterinarian, and in some way, she looks the part of an outsider.

Her jet black hair contrasts with her pale skin and heavily painted, blue eyelids. The multiple ear piercings add to the image, but it's all disarmed with an engaging, braced-tooth smile.

She believes others at her school were more deserving, but if she's here, she's going to give it her best.

"I just want to prove to myself that I can do it," she says.

Bryant later proves to be a crowd favorite, not for her technical skill, but because of her zeal for the part she plays, the comical Thisbe in "A Midsummer Night's Dream."

Beaudelaire Garraud, a junior at Berea, might not look the part of a Shakespearean actor.

When Garraud's father, Marc, moved to New York from Haiti years ago, he spoke only Creole.

Marc says he named his son Beaudelaire because it was his middle name and his father, who was killed in Haiti when Marc was 3, loved the poetry of Charles Beaudelaire.

Marc is a jazz musician, but never cared much for Shakespeare. Beau, as he affectionately calls his son, found Shakespeare himself growing up in a Bronx ghetto, forsaking television to read the poet's works.

"You know, he's weird," Marc says, throwing up his hands to signify how he steps back and allows his son to find his own way. "I'm like, 'You've got the Shakespeare, man.'"

Beau, by his own account, is a quiet, analytical type and a serious perfectionist. His father searches for the right word as he watches his cherub-faced son try to strike up a conversation with the other competitors. The word finally comes: "introvert."

"I like to watch people; Shakespeare does that with words," says Beau.

His slight Creole/New York accent amalgam goes well with a flawless recital of Sonnet 116.

It's in Shakespeare's words that Beau says he finds the language to describe how he sees people. On the bus one day, he scolded an irritating girl: "Get thee to a nunnery!"

She was perplexed, to say the least.

He likes Macbeth, particularly the comical character of the porter. To find humor wrapped into one of the most depressing works of literature reminds him a bit of teenage life, he says.

"It'll be really terrible and something funny will happen, and then it's, like, I don't feel like smiling, but I'm going to smile." And then he does.

Dowell, the running back, says he can find no better way to secure a date. "He's smooth with the ladies," Dowell says, half-joking but maybe a little more than half-serious. "If you quote Shakespeare, it just touches a woman's heart."

Catalanotto says she loses herself in the language. She prefers to think of Shakespeare as "400 years young."

"It's a language in which you said exactly what you meant," says Catalanotto, who wants to go into broadcasting. "There's something about that that's really wonderful. It almost makes me hurt for today, that we can't come across that beautifully with our speech."

Love, above all else, seems to resonate with these teens. "A 14-year-old girl reading 'Romeo and Juliet' is going to understand and be able to say, 'I feel that way,'" says Dimatteo, the J.L. Mann and Fine Arts Center student.

And it's difficult for her to imagine anyone missing out. "Shakespeare definitely has a stigma," Dimatteo says, referring to students who are reluctant to decipher elevated text.

"Like anything, if you only know the stereotype, then you probably won't fall in love with it. We're not like a separate breed of people. I mean, we are teenagers. We just found a different love."

Published in:  on February 8, 2003 at 10:18 pm Leave a Comment

He Thinks Big

Mark Cieutat may be short in stature, but he stands tall in courage, ambition

The big rig idles like a fierce, grumbling beast about to devour a meal, the compressed air released from the brakes creating an imposing and recognizable "HIIISSSSS."

The sudden, startling sound is enough to make the feet tingle with a fight-or-flight adrenaline rush, at least for those who aren't familiar with the fine art of negotiating such a monstrosity.

Unfazed, the top of his head barely meeting the wheel well, Mark Cieutat leans against a tire as he takes a break during a delivery to Haywood Mall.

He is used to the hissing sound. He grew up around trucks — the BIG transport kind his father, uncle and brother drive. But to say he grew up is only partly true.

In literal terms, he didn't grow much. At a height of 3 feet, 11 inches, Cieutat barely stands taller than a preschooler and weighs about as much as a kindergartner.

What a sight it must be, he imagines: a 27-year-old man in the body of a child scaling daunting steps into a towering white rig's cab.

The sight is even more unsettling when it becomes clear he isn't aiming for the passenger side; he's getting behind the wheel, shoving that thing in gear and just … going.

As a "person of small stature," as he prefers to call himself, the taming of such a large beast is metaphorical, a feat filled with a not-so-hidden meaning.

"I like to think big," Cieutat says in the twangy dialect of his good ol' boy home, Gay, Ga., just outside Atlanta.

It's a ride he didn't know he would be taking, owning a one-man, one-truck shipping business (aptly named TOO Short Refrigerated Transport Inc.).

Two years ago, fresh out of West Georgia University with a degree in finance, he found jobs in the business world — even a mere interview — tough to come by.

Even with the job market the best it had ever been, Cieutat says he couldn't get people to take him seriously. His voice sounds like that of a young man's played a speed faster on a tape recorder.

Everyone thought he was a child, some prankster on the phone. In person, bank managers looked at him and told him exactly how everything wouldn't work.

"Over the phone, everybody tells you, 'That position is filled,'" he says. "You look in the paper two weeks later and realize that's not true."

So, after some reflection, he looked to his roots. The men in his family drive trucks. Why shouldn't he?

His dad (a father whom Cieutat says would make McGyver proud) built a foot stand for his son that made the gears and pedals reachable.

For a while, Cieutat had two trucks and an employee before he realized he hated management. Now, he alone takes work whenever it comes, traveling all over the Southeast.

Work comes often. He meets a lot of people, some pleasant, some scornful, some unknowingly condescending.

As Cieutat waits for employees of Great American Cookie Co. to bring a loading cart for their delivery, two teenage girls walk by with a male friend.

The girls coo as they look back at Cieutat leaning against his rig: "Awwww, cuuuute." The teenage guy gawks and laughs, playing the role of a too-cool cut-up.

While it might be the first time they've seen such a sight, it's not a first for Cieutat. He's heard the patronizing tone, subtle and not-so-subtle, before.

Why is it OK to stare at anyone for any reason? That's what Renee Hendrix wonders.

For five years, the 29-year-old Hendrix has worked at Great American Cookie Co. at Haywood Mall, making her way up to manager.

She knows a little about Mark's position. She observes as people stare at him when the two share casual conversations about corporate mergers, a favorite topic of the finance major.

She aspires to something greater, she says, maybe owning one of these big cookie stores if she works hard enough.

Mark's life, to her, is inspirational.

"He's got more heart than 10 of those people put together," Hendrix says. "He amazes me. He gets out there and works harder than anybody."

Cieutat, meanwhile, is virtually oblivious to what people think of him. He long ago accepted the notion that hundreds of eyes at a time might be watching him and only him.

He remembers the elderly women who saw him in the cookie store and said, "Oh, isn't he cute, he's waiting for his cookie." He knows they didn't mean any harm. Neither did the old fellow who warned him to step out from behind the rig.

"All you can do is laugh," Cieutat says.

He has fashioned his life in such a way that nothing seems odd for him. He spends more time looking outward than looking in. As a result, he's hard-pressed to examine himself, mostly shrugging when faced with deeper questions of how such shortness has molded his life.

Doctors have not been able to explain why he and his 20-year-old brother, Jody, who is a quarter of an inch shorter, didn't grow normally.

Neither can they explain why his 29-year-old brother, Sean, is 5 feet, 10 inches tall, of normal height like their mom and dad.

He has hydrocephalus and requires a shunt to drain fluid in his head. A Vitamin D deficiency has weakened his teeth so that every one of them has needed capping.

Otherwise, he's just short. And that makes life interesting.

Like buying clothes. Cieutat knows a thing or two about the latest styles; if anything, being forever locked into children's clothing virtually assures him of remaining hip.

Still, clothes for the youngest of children are usually placed higher, which adds to the challenge of wading through Elmo and Sponge Bob Square Pants shirts.

Every now and then, he'll buy a Dr. Seuss shirt for the fun of it.

Cieutat doesn't have to, but he helps unload the 30-pound boxes he delivers. He likes the exercise, which is quite a workout considering that he's lifting half his weight.

On the road, he orders kids' meals. It's quite enough.

Such are the details of being an extremely short man.

But when asked to reflect on the deeper challenges — staring down discrimination as he endures other people's stares — he's reluctant.

Or possibly unable.

The Cieutat brothers' parents — dad, Leon, and mom, Joanne — raised their children on equal ground, says Mark's younger brother Jody. Self-reflection is not a strong point.

Tall brother Sean never failed, Jody says, to treat his little brothers roughly, like a big brother should. "He still beat the crap out of us and held us up to the ceiling-fan blade," Jody says.

Like his older brother, Mark tried his hand at driving in stock-car races, only to realize he liked the pit-crew gig better.

From lessons such as those, Mark has learned to be an adviser to his baby brother in a way no other family member could.

When Jody doubted whether he should pursue a bartender's license, Mark encouraged him to see the benefit of being small. Who wouldn't want to frequent the bar tended by the short guy?

Thinking big started at an early age for Cieutat. He was always drawn to scale large things.

At age 4, his mother says, Mark was watching as kids his age but three times his size climbed to the top of a playground slide.

At 2 feet tall, barely the size of a baby first learning to walk, Mark asked his mom whether he could go, too. From the get-go, Joanne says, she knew she would never try to hold her child back.

She just held her hand under him in case he fell. He doesn't need that hand as much now.

"He climbed that thing, slid down and came around and said, 'Oh, I'm going to do that again.' But that's the way he's always been. Anything he's wanted to do, he's always done."

And now her little boy is grown, whether anyone who looks at him recognizes it or not.

 *****

(February 18, 2004) 

LARGER THAN LIFE  

Mark Cieutat was more than just a delivery guy; he was an inspiration

Mark Cieutat was a man trapped inside a child's body, but his size spoke nothing of his stature.

He conquered every challenge in his path – the doors shut in his face, the patronizing jeers, the growling big rig he drove not to prove everyone wrong, but to prove to himself he could do it.

But there was one obstacle he could not overcome: a man, police say, who was intent on robbing him. Instead of his money or his truck, Mark lost his life.

And what a life it was.

Here was a 28-year-old independent businessman with his own trucking company, who turned to the family trade when no one would give him a job out of college, despite a business degree in hand and stellar grades.

At 3 feet, 11 inches tall, with the voice and body of a preschooler, Mark was larger than life, those who knew him and love him say.

He touched lives everywhere he went … and he traveled often and to many places.

As the owner and driver of TOO Short Refrigerated Transport Inc., Mark virtually lived on Interstate 85, whether it was Raleigh or Charlotte or Atlanta or here in Greenville.

Or Montgomery, Ala., where he died on the same stretch of road that was the means to his livelihood, in a crash police say was caused by an attempted robbery.

For years, Mark made his way from his home in Gay, Ga., to Greenville delivering cookie dough to the Great American Cookie Co. in Haywood Mall.

Mark was more than the delivery guy, said Renee Hendrix, manager of the Haywood Mall cookie company location. She first met him 10 years ago when his dad began teaching him the family trucking business. "We looked forward to the truck coming every week to deliver," Hendrix said, "not for the work of it, of course, just because we knew he'd be coming. He was an inspiration."

So much to overcome

It was during a delivery to Haywood Mall shortly before Christmas 2002 when this reporter interviewed him for a story in The Greenville News.

"I like to think big," Mark said that cold morning as he helped unload a delivery at Haywood Mall, all the while strangers gawking at him.

And he did think big.

The top of his head barely reached the wheel well of the hulking rig.

The cab's roof was adorned with a life-sized Santa and reindeer, only adding to the contrast between the behemoth and its miniature master.

Leon Cieutat had hand-built a special pedal system to make it possible for his son to drive.

It must be quite a sight — Mark said at the time, in a distinctive, high-pitched Southern drawl — to see what looks like a kindergartner climbing into the cab and taming such a monstrosity.

Mark had long grown accustomed to the stares. By then he was used to the teenage girls — not conscious of their patronizing, condescending tone — who that day cooed, "Awww, cuuuute," as their boyfriends laughed dismissingly.

Doctors could never explain exactly why he or his 21-year-old brother, Jody, never grew to full form. Mark didn't have characteristics of dwarfism.

Nor could they explain why Mark's 30-year-old brother, Sean, who is 5 feet, 8 inches tall, was of a normal size, like their parents.

Mark suffered from hydrocephalus and required a shunt to drain the fluid in his head. But other than that and a Vitamin D deficiency that necessitated capping all of his teeth, he was simply short.

It certainly made his life interesting.

He was always up on the latest styles among the young crowd — the very young crowd. Being forever locked into children's sizes guaranteed that he was eternally hip.

Every now and then, he'd buy a shirt with a popular kids' character just for fun. Happy Meals were more than enough as dinner while on the road.

So much accomplished

Such are the details of what it means to be a little man, or as Mark liked to say, "a person of small stature." But what defined him as a man was much more complex.

What Mark would become, his father said, was evident when he was just a newly walking toddler and Leon came into the kitchen one day to find his son atop the refrigerator.

His son had pulled out all the kitchen drawers and used them as if they were rungs on a ladder. Once he reached the countertop, Mark had stacked pots and pans in an effort to reach his ultimate prize.

"He was sittin' on top of the refrigerator eatin' cookies," Leon said in a gruff vernacular that his son mimicked. "We were in trouble. I knew that from the damn get-go."

From kindergarten to high school, Sean said he never really had to stick up for his little brother.

Mark was adored by his schoolmates, both for his affable personality and his spirited resolve.

"Everybody that met him respected him," said Sean, who lives down the road from the home Mark shared with his parents in Gay. "He accomplished more than what three full-sized individuals would accomplish in two lifetimes."

Nowhere is Mark's dogged determination better told than through his foremost love, auto racing.

Allen Brown, a friend of Mark's for more than 10 years, remembers when he walked around the corner at a junkyard where the two worked part-time and found Mark transfixed, staring at a pile of aluminum scrap.

"He just looked at me and said, 'Al, you wanna go racin?'"

Brown didn't think twice. Mark had raced go-carts growing up. The owner let the two sell the scraps, and they used the money from scrap metal to buy parts to add to the shell of a Mercury Capri.

For a year, Brown said, the two worked every night on the car in Leon's shop beside the house. During the first practice run, when Brown crashed the car, Mark did what those who knew him say he always did.

He took control, he advised, he offered calm assurance.

"When I wrecked, I was hot," Brown said. "He leaned in the window and said, 'Calm down, Al.' He always gave me pep talks; just an amazing little guy."

Sean won a local track championship with that souped-up Capri. Eventually, Mark raced it, too.

In 2000, fresh out of West Georgia University with a degree in business and finance, Mark ventured into the job market. No one took him seriously, and too often, he couldn't even get an interview.

Invariably, the sound of his voice (it sounded like that of a child played on a tape recorder a speed faster) led people to believe he was a prankster.

"Over the phone," Mark said last year, "everybody tells you, 'That position is filled.' You look in the paper two weeks later and realize that's not true."

He soon accepted the notion that he would have to go it alone. His father, his brother and his uncle all drove rigs for a living. He had grown up watching and learning from his dad.

Mark got his plan together (friends and family say he was meticulously organized) and launched TOO Short. He picked up the cookie route his dad had driven, the one that brought him to Greenville.

At one point early in his business venture, Mark had an employee, but soon realized he hated management. He was fine going it alone. His dad said Mark wouldn't have it any other way.

"He was just an independent little man," Leon said. "He appreciated help, but he'd climb a greased pole before he would ask for it."

Recently, Mark had graded 15 acres he owned so that he could build his own shop, another attempt to separate himself from dependence on his family, to be his own man.

He wouldn't live long enough to see it through.

So much wasted

As he usually did before hitting the road, Mark had stopped by to visit his 15-month-old niece, Mallory, Sean's daughter.

It was Feb. 9, and Mark stayed for two hours before he left on his run to Alabama to deliver cookie dough, Sean said. That was the last time his family would hear from him.

Mark stopped on the shoulder of an entrance ramp to I-85 at about 10:30 p.m. and was attacked as he began to pull off, Montgomery police spokesman Huey Thornton said.

As the truck moved, a man jumped up on the steps leading to the driver's side door.

Mark's rig veered off the road and hit an industrial-strength lightpole and concrete base. Mark was killed in the crash.

Police found Jeffrey Jordan, a 45-year-old Montgomery man with no address, pinned between the truck and the light pole. Jordan, whose injuries Thornton said aren't considered life-threatening, is charged with murder and robbery.

At first, Leon said he had to convince investigators that the man they found dead was indeed an adult and a legitimate trucker.

Leon, who visited the crime scene, said he knows his son did everything right.

He noticed that Mark had pulled onto a wide shoulder in a well-lit area, heading down an incline steep enough to pick up a good head of steam before merging.

Exactly as his father had taught him.

In 32 years of driving rigs, Leon said he has never had so much as a scratch on his truck as a result of a collision. He taught Mark that there is, in almost all cases, no such thing as an accident.

Leon instilled in his son the importance of vigilance when driving, and Mark followed it, his father said. Mechanical failure, he taught, is the only accident, and even that can be avoided with periodic check ups.

His parents' nagging fear that Mark could at any time be "easy prey" apparently came true, Leon said, but he believes Mark was not as easily overcome as his attacker likely imagined.

"The satisfaction," Leon said, "and what keeps me halfway together is, I'd give a million dollars to see this man's face when he reached in to get a kitty cat and found out he grabbed hold of a … mountain lion."

It's little consolation, but a father must find comfort in any harbor. He lost a son who had overcome so much, only to forfeit it all to needless violence.

"To get caught by a guy like this … what a waste."

Picking up the pieces

In the wreckage lay a son, both in the sense of a father's child and that of an extinguished star that once radiated life into others.

He was buried Saturday.

All along the lifeline that Mark drove to maintain his independence, the same gravity by which he pulled people to him is now an equally powerful void.

The response from customers at a Great American Cookie location in Atlanta was so overwhelming that store workers had to direct calls of concern to the family.

In Montgomery, at the Eastdale Mall location where Mark was to have made a delivery that night, manager Kaye McCord said everyone who knew him is "devastated."

"I just feel blessed that I got to meet somebody like him," she said.

Hendrix, the manager of the Haywood Mall location, said she will miss the long talks the two often had about managing and finance and corporate mergers.

And, she'll miss the laughs, miss the sure smile and joke du jour that Mark always greeted her with.

It was a little inside joke they had, partly for laughs and partly so that Mark could escape yet again having to explain that he was a man in a child's body.

With only three years in age separating the two, Hendrix said their favorite stunt was to play along with anyone who thought Mark was her son.

"Is that your child?" people would ask. "I'd say, 'Yeah, that's Mark, that's my son.' He would just look at me and grin. In a way, he was. He was family."

Now his family must learn to live without their heart and soul.

It was Mark who nudged younger brother, Jody, 21, along as he considered bartending school. Jody was more self-conscious about his small stature, but with his brother's help, he finished the course.

When Jody was 12, he was the "go-fer boy" (go fer drinks, go fer sandwiches) as Mark and Brown were building their race car.

Now, he finds himself trying to piece together the details of the business his brother has so suddenly left behind.

Jody said he will keep the trucks running. One he will fix up extra nice just to have around to remember his brother.

"I don't know anything about log books or anything about running a company, but me and my brother are going to run this company and continue it," he said. "I'm not going to let it fold, seeing as how he worked so hard to get it."

But the void is deep, and Mark's reassuring presence is there only in spirit and in memory. Big brother Sean could use Mark right now, he said.

It was Mark who gave Sean a job with TOO Short when he got laid off from Delta Airlines.

And when Sean would stop off at auto parts stores and buy frivolous extras for his truck, it was Mark who would sigh like a patient father who just can't get through to his son.

Not long ago, when Mark saw the unnecessary chrome Sean had bought for his rig, he simply shook his head and calmly, dryly admonished, "Yep, that's gonna to make you a whooooole lot of money, isn't it?"

Sean often found himself looking down at Mark while simultaneously looking up to him. A little man with a spirit larger than life, short in size but not in stature.

"He was just as much my older brother as he was my younger brother. We're gonna miss him like crazy. In my eyes, he was 7 feet tall."

Published in:  on January 9, 2003 at 10:12 pm Comments (2)

Fear Hits Home

Attempted kidnapping steals community's innocence, steels parents' resolve

Parents file in, desperate for answers, or at least a sense of control.

Much of the Sparrows Point subdivision is at the East Simpsonville Fire Station, a stone's throw from their neighborhood, which just a little more than a week ago seemed the safest place on earth to live.

Greenville County Sheriff's Sgt. B.R. Donnelly is teaching the kids about "stranger danger."

"What can a stranger do to you?"

The children fidget and giggle with their friends, then a precocious voice rises above the chatter.

"A stranger could take you to someone's house you don't want to be at and kill you," the little one says matter-of-factly.

The kids are told not to just kick the shin bone, but scrape down it. If you get caught in a kidnapper's grip, the deputy says, focus on the weakness of the attacker's thumbs to escape.

Donnelly asks another question: "Are all strangers bad?"

The kids drone in unison: "Yeesss." Then, a confused mix of "yes" and "no."

They don't know for sure. No one does. But since Sept. 6, parents and children in the neighborhood of young families know a new, very real fear: A little girl in their community was almost snatched.

And much like Sept. 11 put Americans into a new state of unease, Sparrows Point residents find the incident has put them in a place they never would have imagined, both physically and psychologically.

Parents are shocked, angry. They quickly organized this gathering in an attempt to reclaim some normalcy and a sense of comfort.

Street names in the neighborhood would hint at comfort: Valhalla Lane, the heavenly; Ashridge Way, the bucolic.

Desirable neighborhoods on the Eastside with ways and lanes and drives aren't supposed to have strangers lurking for the opportunity to grab children at play.

But it was at Valhalla and Ashridge, in the absolute heart of the community and just yards from the pool, where two men in a car grabbed a 6-year-old girl as she rode her bike in the dimming light of dusk on a Friday evening.

Searching for a cat

She was helping a group of girls search for a lost cat.

Her 10-year-old friend, a small child with a cast on her arm from surgery, helped the younger girl fight off the would-be kidnappers. The men fled, and police say they are still at large.

In that instant, the bubble burst for Sparrows Point and the communities around it.

"My first thought was, 'We need to get out of here,'" says Dawn Arquette, a mother of three who moved to Sparrows Point two years ago from Los Angeles County. Her family's home is only a block away from the attempted kidnapping site.

"We know that that's reality, as it happens everywhere," she says. "But when it happens in your neighborhood to someone you know, it's very scary. This stuff really happens."

Debbie Chapman's family moved from Fort Lauderdale, Fla., seven years ago to get away from crime. At the time, her now 10-year-old daughter was only 2, and she wanted her to grow up in a safe environment.

Chapman lives in Gilder Creek Farm, not far from Sparrows Point.

The mother of two says now she won't let her kids play baseball in the street like she used to do when she was young.

And, since the abduction attempt, she says parents will no longer let their children play outside between services at nearby Emmanuel Lutheran Church.

"They can't do what I used to," Chapman says. "It changes everybody's way of life."

How could this happen here?

Sparrows Point is one of those places — more common with each clearing of pasture land — where the nearly 400 houses are so close together that a seeming wall of double-garage doors lines the streets, just steps from the road.

Windows facing the street make it feel that a hundred eyes are watching. Each yard-of-the-month sign seems to scream that this place is normal and innocent.

Child abductions happen in California or Utah or Oregon, as everyone saw on television and in the papers this past summer, not in Greenville County.

Certainly not in a quiet neighborhood like this.

Greenville hasn't had a case like this in the past 15 years, says Sgt. James McCann, a spokesman for the Greenville County's Sheriff's Office.

But as the incident proves, it could happen anywhere, to anybody, McCann says. And anyone could be a predator.

The perpetrators are described as a white man with gray hair in his 50s, wearing a gray shirt and black and red hat, and a black man in his 30s, about 5-foot-6, 200 pounds, and wearing a blue and green Hawaiian shirt.

They never said a word.

They drove an older model white, box-type car with rust spots. A day before the attempted abduction, a neighbor reported that she saw the two men walking around the community as if they were selling something, McCann says.

There's no way to know for sure whether the two men have been seen in other communities, because the description is so general, he says.

But Brian Kelly is convinced they will strike again.

"Every other neighborhood is wide open right now," says Kelly, head of the Sparrows Point Neighborhood Crime Watch. "I'm afraid it's going to take them doing it again to somebody else … to stop them."

Since the abduction attempt, Kelly says he's constantly fielding calls about white cars and license numbers. He relays the information to authorities, but how many white cars with rust spots are there?

The fact that two men were together is not necessarily odd in an abduction case, McCann says. "There's no way to profile an abductor," he says.

And while history has shown that anyone can kidnap a child, statistics paint a general picture. Most children are abducted by a friend, acquaintance or family member.

In the worst-case stranger abductions, when the child is killed, almost all perpetrators are male, under age 35; and 85 percent are unmarried and are unemployed, according to a U.S. Justice Department report.

Two-thirds of stranger abductions are sex related.

Overall, abduction cases are down over the past decade, the FBI says.

Last year, the FBI listed 28,765 people — adults and children — as missing under involuntary circumstances, such as abduction.

That number is down 8.8 percent from 2000.

On average, about 100 children are kidnapped and killed each year in the United States, down from the estimated 200 to 300 cases in the 1980s, according to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children.

In the face of such numbers, parents are left in a wilderness, without much to guide them. How can they talk to their children without robbing them of their innocence?

It's a delicate balance, says Ben Stephens, a Clemson University psychology professor.

Parents must try to tailor their discussions to each child, he says. Children handle such information differently.

"What might work with one kid might not work with another," Stephens says.

Also, parents should try to avoid talking about the "gory details of why" kids need be aware of their surroundings. Rather, parents should simply impose rules and enforce them consistently, he says.

Chapman, the Gilder Creek Farm mom, says neighbors must learn from this and change attitudes and preconceptions.

"It's not me watching out for my children and you watching out for your children," she says. "It's everybody watching out for all children. Whether you have a child or not, they're still children of your community. That's the important thing that needs to get through."

Published in:  on September 19, 2002 at 10:09 pm Leave a Comment