Thursday, March 5, 2015

The Defeat of Fayetteville's Ordinance Prohibiting Anti-LGBT Discrimination: Was it Fair to Have Polling Places in Churches?

Note:  The following is more a research paper than a blog entry. For easier reading, the whole paper, about 20 pages, can be downloaded from the following:
https://www.scribd.com/doc/257680456/THE-DEFEAT-OF-FAYETTEVILLE-ARKANSAS-ORDINANCE-PROHIBITING-ANTI-LGBT-DISCRIMINATION-WAS-IT-FAIR-TO-HAVE-POLLING-PLACES-IN-CHURCHES

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Voters in Fayetteville, Arkansas repealed the city’s “Civil Rights Administration” ordinance at a referendum on December 9, 2014.  The ordinance had been approved by Fayetteville’s city council at a meeting on August 19th that ended in the early hours of August 20th. The purpose of ordinance 5703 was to protect “the right of all persons to be free from discrimination based on real or perceived race, ethnicity, national origin, age, gender, gender identity, gender expression, familial status, marital status, socioeconomic background, religion, sexual orientation, disability and veteran status” to ensure equal access to employment, housing, and public accommodations.[1]

This ordinance was adapted from one drafted by the Human Rights Campaign (HRC), a Washington-based advocacy group for Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender (LGBT) people.[2] In addition to prohibiting discrimination, it called for designation of a city civil rights administrator to investigate discrimination complaints and refer them, if needed, to the city prosecutor’s office. The ordinance specified that violators could be fined up to $500 if convicted of violating its provisions. It applied to businesses in the city employing five or more people and to contractors doing business with Fayetteville. Similar ordinances have been enacted in about 200 cities in 18 states. None had been passed in Arkansas.[3] 

Technically, ordinance 5703 would have added chapter 119, titled “Civil Rights Administration,” to the city code, and this chapter would have provided the protections and their administration. However, chapter 119 never became part of the code because a group calling itself “Repeal 119” collected enough signatures to require a vote on whether ordinance 5703 should be repealed. The referendum title was: “Repeal, in its entirety, Ordinance No. 5703 which enacted Chapter 119 of the Fayetteville, Arkansas city code.” A “yes” vote was to repeal the ordinance and stop the enactment of Chapter 119.

Because a majority of Fayetteville voters voted “yes,” ordinance 5703 was repealed and chapter 119 was never implemented. Of the 14,574 citizens who voted on the issue, 7,527 of them (51.6%) supported repeal and 7,047 (48.4%) voted against repeal. The margin of victory for the repeal supporters was 480 votes.

This narrow margin is significant because of the extraordinary circumstances of the referendum: 16 of the city’s 17 polling places were in church buildings, sites associated with ministers and religious spokespersons who led the effort to repeal ordinance 5703. These spokespersons asserted that the ordinance was an attack on religion and it would unleash sexual predators to prey on women and children in publicly accessible bathrooms. They, including several who live elsewhere, exhorted Fayetteville ministers to take urgent action to get voters to the polls to stop an ordinance that would “restrict religious freedom” and “degrade morality.”

When Election Day came, almost all voters cast their votes that day at polling sites located in the buildings of organizations that had been in the forefront of the campaign to repeal the ordinance. Did the fact that almost all of the polling places on December 9th were in churches have an effect on the outcome of the election? Some data suggest, but do not prove, that it did. If it did have even a small effect, influencing just a few people to vote for repeal of the ordinance, that number might have been sufficient to swing the election. The ordinance would not have been repealed if 241 election-day voters had voted to reject the repeal instead of supporting it.


The Church-Based Campaign for Repeal

The campaign to repeal ordinance 5703, cancelling implementation of Chapter 119, was conducted largely by Repeal 119, a church- and religion-dominated “ballot question committee.”[4] According to Repeal 119’s website, more than half of the churches in Fayetteville supported repeal of the ordinance. Apparently, the remaining Fayetteville churches did not take a public position on the issue, except that the clergy of three churches, St. Paul’s Episcopal Church, First United Presbyterian Church, and Good Shepard Lutheran Church, spoke against the repeal of 119.[5]

Several churches and religious organizations donated money to Repeal 119 to help pay for its campaign.  Contributors included Baldwin Baptist Church ($1,000), Rocky Beach Baptist Church, Rogers ($215), Lighthouse Baptist Church, St. Paul ($500), Pathway Baptist Church ($500), Trinity Fellowship Rolling Hills ($500), and Eastside Baptist Church ($300).[5]  Also, Repeal 119 received a $6,000 contribution from an organization called Wallbuilders that leads efforts to rewrite American history based on their evangelical beliefs. (see  http://www.wallbuilders.com/ABTOverview.asp )

Duncan Campbell and Wendy Campbell
From the Northwest Arkansas Times, Nov. 30, 2014, p. 1a 

The president of the Repeal 119 campaign organization was a minister, Duncan Campbell, and his wife Wendy Campbell was secretary of the organization. The two have what they call “apostolic and prophetic ministries.”  According to their website:

As a dynamic Apostolic and Prophetic team, Duncan and Wendy minister by preaching, teaching, and demonstrating the presence of God. Preparing the Bride for her wedding march up to Zion and revealing the Bridegroom is at the core of what Duncan and Wendy are all about. From evangelistic and healing campaigns and creative arts worship and prophetic conferences to the streets of cities around the world the Campbell's are dedicated to bring people the joy of knowing God and knowing His plan for their lives.
  
During meetings it is common to experience miracles, healings, freedom and fresh anointing- discovering how to praise God with all heart, mind, soul, and strength. They have an unending love and devotion for the Messiah and a vision to see people from every nation released into the presence of God. (from website http://duncanandwendy.com/profile.html )

Explaining his personal beliefs, Duncan Campbell said his conscience tells him homosexuality is a sin, like adultery. He said, “Many people who study the Bible believe it’s unbiblical behavior.”[6]

Duncan Campbell and Travis Story at Repeal 119 Victory Party
From Northwest Arkansas Times, December 10, 2014, p. 1a

The attorney for Repeal 119 was Travis Story whose firm donated $16,590 in legal fees to it.[7] Story  graduated from Liberty University’s School of Law. Liberty is a fundamentalist Christian university founded by Jerry Falwell. According to his law firm’s website, Story is a member of and does volunteer work at Cross Church, a megachurch based in Springdale (with branches in other locations, including Fayetteville) that is headed by Ronnie Floyd, at present president of the Southern Baptist Convention. Floyd strongly supported repeal of 119. His views were distributed in a blog entry dated December 8th on his personal blog (see http://www.ronniefloyd.com/blog/8282/southern-baptist-convention/fayetteville-arkansas-americas-current-religious-liberty-battleground/ ; that entry was reprinted on the same day in the blog of the Biblical Recorder:  http://www.brnow.org/Opinions/Guest-Columns/December-2014/Arkansas-America-s-current-religious-liberty-battl

The Repeal 119 campaign focused on three assertions that were included in its half-page advertisement in the December 7th edition of the Northwest Arkansas Times (NWAT):  (1) This law is dangerous for people of faith, (2) This law is dangerous for women and children, and (3) This law is dangerous for business. The third argument, concerning the putative impacts of the ordinances on businesses, echoed the claims of the Fayetteville Chamber of Commerce.[8] The first and second claims, addressing religious and “moral” concerns, were central to Repeal 119’s campaign.

               “Dangerous to People of Faith

As spokespersons for Repeal 119, the Campbells had much to say about it.  Wendy Campbell asked, “Why do they want to persecute the church….?”[9]  And in a video on the Repeal 119 website, Duncan Campbell claimed that the ordinance would “allow the city to dictate to a church, to ministers, and to believers who they must hire for certain positions they deem secular, who must serve same sex ceremonies, and there are no stated exceptions in the law for ministers.”

In its December 7th advertisement in the Northwest Arkansas Times, Repeal 119 stated that the law “is dangerous for people of faith,” because:   
This ordinance limits the scope of both free speech and the free practice of religion guaranteed to us by the U.S. and Arkansas Constitutions. It goes as far as to dictate the criteria by which churches hire their own staff. It requires pastors, rabbis, and imams to perform same sex ceremonies unless they can “prove” they are not being discriminatory; otherwise they will face CRIMINAL charges….This does NOT protect religious rights – it puts believers at great risk.
Repeal 119 Advertisement
Northwest Ark. Times, Dec. 7, 2014, p 3a

In his personal blog, Ronnie Floyd elaborated on the putative effects of the ordinance on religious freedom:

(1) Christian small-business owners could be fined or even face jail time if they refuse services to one of this new protected ‘class’. Just like the recent episode with a baker in Colorado, if someone refused to bake a cake for a same sex wedding because it violated the business owner’s conscious or religious view, they would now be violating the law.

(3) Churches must allow a biological man, who identifies himself as a woman, to use the women’s restroom, and it would be an illegal act for the church to stop this use.

(4) Churches now must hire a person who is not of the same belief as the church for any job except a pastor, such as a secretary or custodian.

(5) Pastors face fines and potential jail time if they refuse to marry a gay couple. These fines could reach $8,500 in the first 30 days, and if not paid, they could be put in jail.


               Dangerous for Women and Children

While Repeal 119’s assertion that the ordinance would infringe on religious freedoms was an important part of its campaign, another claim was featured even more prominently in its message, perhaps because it was more a more effective way to alarm and frighten voters. In its December 7th newspaper advertisement, Repeal 119 stated that the ordinance was “dangerous for women and children” because it would enable men who said they were transgender to use women’s bathrooms, dressing rooms, and locker rooms.
Repeal 119 Advertisement
Northwest Ark. Times, Dec. 7, 2014, p. 3a

Even before the ordinance was passed, Jeremy Flanagan, pastor of Pathway Baptist Church on Mount Comfort Road in Fayetteville, complained that under this ordinance, a man could claim to be a woman in an effort to gain entry to women’s bathrooms or changing areas. He said the ordinance “gives anyone claiming to be transgender the right to choose which public locker room, dressing room, bathroom or other previously gender-specific area they wish to use. If anyone questions them or refuses to let them use the space of their choice, that individual could be held criminally liable. This new, special privilege opens a door for sexual predators to claim being transgender in order to access these private areas.”[10]

About the same time as Flanagan was making his assertions, Michelle Duggar, a Springdale resident who apparently is famous because of the number of children she has borne and a cable reality show featuring her Christian family, was making robocalls to Fayetteville households. Her message was this:
Hello, this is Michelle Duggar. I’m calling to inform you of some shocking news that would affect the safety of Northwest Arkansas women and children. The Fayetteville City Council is voting on an ordinance this Tuesday night that would allow men — yes, I said men — to use women’s and girls’ restrooms, locker rooms, showers, sleeping areas and other areas that are designated for females only. I don’t believe the citizens of Fayetteville would want males with past child predator convictions that claim they are female to have a legal right to enter private areas reserved for women and girls. I doubt that Fayetteville parents would stand for a law that would endanger their daughters or allow them to be traumatized by a man joining them in their private space. We should never place the preference of an adult over the safety and innocence of a child. Parents, who do you want undressing next to your daughter at the public swimming pool’s private changing area?"  http://www.examiner.com/article/reality-show-star-says-trans-women-are-men-with-past-child-predator-convictions
Echoing these assertions, Duncan Campbell, in a video on the Repeal 119 website, said that the ordinance “legalizes indecent exposure for transgender men in women’s locker rooms, showers and bathrooms because under the new law they would be considered women.” He continued, “If you refuse to let a man enter a woman’s locker room at your local gym, even if your wife or daughter was in the locker room taking a shower, you become a criminal.”

               Rise Up and Send a Clear and Compelling Message

Another argument for repeal, though not featured in Repeal 119 advertisements, was that its defeat would help stop the LGBT movement’s broader efforts to gain civil rights protections.  Many repeal supporters came from outside Fayetteville with the message that the city had the chance to be the first local government to reject the type of ordinance some called a SOGI [Sexual Orientation Gender Identity] law. They apparently not only viewed Fayetteville as one of many battles to be fought against advocates for gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender rights, but most were also contemptuous of the idea that such people needed or deserved protection. They urged ministers to fully use their pulpits and positions to get Fayetteville voters to take a “historic” stand.

One repeal supporter who spoke in Fayetteville was David Welch, director of the Houston Area Pastor Council. In his remarks in a video message on the Repeal 119 website, he made clear what he and other religious leaders believed was at stake in the referendum.  He called the ordinance “a direct assault against the foundational principles that this nation was built on.” He continued, “When we are battling over an ordinance that says a male is not a male and female is not a female, and we can decide our own genders, we are at the last stage of cultural degradation. We have to turn this thing around.”

He urged pastors to act:
Between now and next Tuesday (December 9th), every pastor in this city who has any commitment to their calling or the word of God, please step forward and use every means at your disposal in your church – electronically and personally – to communicate with every voter  that this is “show up time.”… The opportunity for the city of Fayetteville, right now, to be the first city in America to stop and defeat one of these egregious ordinances is literally a historic moment that cannot be described adequately.
In his blog, Ronnie Floyd, president of Southern Baptist Conference, added to the exhortation to Fayetteville voters to strike down the ordinance. He wrote:
This is the nation’s current battleground on which to stand for religious freedom. Fayetteville, please rise up and send a clear and compelling message to all those propagating this agenda – that the people of Fayetteville will stand up and protect our religious freedoms. Fayetteville is the first city to get this issue on a public ballot, and the first city with a chance to repeal this ordinance. This is the chance for Fayetteville to make a national impact by becoming the first city to reject this offensive SOGI [Sexual Orientation Gender Identity] law. (See http://www.ronniefloyd.com/blog/8282/southern-baptist-convention/fayetteville-arkansas-americas-current-religious-liberty-battleground/)
Another minister from San Antonio, Charles Flowers, made a similar plea to voters:
It is a privilege to be here in Fayetteville to help the body of Christ confront this ordinance that so restricts freedoms and so compromises safety and so degrades morality….I plead with all of you listening to get to the polls and vote your biblical convictions.[11]
A Texas-based organization, the National Black Robe Regiment (NBRR) wrote about the referendum on its website. The NBRR is “a network of national and local pastors and pastor groups that equips and empowers pastors to engage in their Biblical and historical role to stand boldly for righteousness and transform society through spiritual and cultural engagement.” It supported the repeal effort and made the following observations in an article titled, “Fayetteville, Arkansas Pastors Rally to Repeal Anti-Religious Freedom Ordinance”:
[T]he goal [of the ordinance] is to punish individuals and businesses that do not override their deeply held Biblical convictions to affirm special rights for homosexuals….
The churches in Fayetteville are stepping up. They are making phone calls, walking blocks and mobilizing pastors and churches to educate their congregants about the importance of voting on December 9. There is unprecedented unity and cooperation between Black, white and Hispanic pastors in Fayetteville as well as pro-family organizations across the nation, state and city. What happens in Fayetteville depends upon the involvement of pastors and churches in that city. And the efforts currently underway in Fayetteville need to be replicated across the nation in the more than 170 cities that have also passed SOGI ordinances that include penalties for dissenters. http://nationalblackroberegiment.com/fayetteville-arkansas-pastors-rally-repeal-anti-religious-freedom-ordinance/
These calls to battle for Fayetteville churches and ministers illustrate the primacy of the religion-based campaign for repeal of 119 as well as the motives and beliefs of many of the repeal supporters.[12] They sought to make all churches active advocates and partisans in the referendum campaign. It is not hard to imagine what ministers in Baptist Churches, and probably in many others, had to say about the ordinance on the Sunday before the referendum vote.

               Opposition to Repeal of 119

Opposition to the repeal of Chapter 119 was led by a “ballot question committee” called “Keep Fayetteville Fair.” Its president was Anne Shelley, executive director of the Northwest Arkansas Rape Crisis Center. This organization argued that gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender residents of Fayetteville needed the same protections as provided by state and federal law against discrimination based on age, color, religion, national origin, and sex. (see http://fairfayetteville.com )

From Northwest Arkansas Times, Nov. 30, 2104, p. 1a
The alderman who was the leading advocate for the ordinance, Matthew Perry, spoke often against repeal.  He summarized the argument against repeal as follows: “No one should be kicked out of their house. No one should be kicked out of a restaurant. Nobody in Fayetteville should lose a job because of who they are or who they love.”[13] He also argued:

All folks who work hard, pay their taxes, serve in our military, and contribute to our community deserve to be treated fairly under the law, including our gay and transgender neighbors. Freedom means freedom for everyone – it is wrong to treat people differently solely on they are or who they love. After all, everyone needs to be able to earn a living and provide for their families.”[14]

The Fairness group spent much of its efforts trying to refute the many assertions of the Repeal 119 group and its allies. They pointed out that the city council had passed an amendment to the ordinance that made it clear that ministers would not be forced to conduct gay marriages and that the city council had also amended the ordinance that would stop prohibit anyone “to enter any gender-segregated space for any unlawful purpose.”[15] In an op-ed piece in the NWAT on Nov. 30, Petty maintained that “all of the arguments of the opposition have either been debunked or are addressed by the ordinance.”

The two groups, Repeal 119 and Keep Fayetteville Fair, each collected and spent about $33,000. Repeal 119 received over $30,000 worth of nonmonetary donations; other pro-repeal expenditures by the Fayetteville Chamber of Commerce and the Little Rock-based Family Council were not reported. Keep Fayetteville Fair received $166,080 in nonmonetary contributions from the Human Rights Campaign whose staff helped conduct the campaign against repeal of the ordinance.[17]


Church-Based Polling Places

While no one would suggest that churches and religious organizations did not have the right to actively support the repeal of 119, their deep involvement in the referendum created a strange and unsettling situation: a majority of Fayetteville churches actively supported repeal of the Civil Rights Administration ordinance AND their church buildings were used as polling sites. Because 16 of the city’s 17 polling places were in churches, almost all election-day voters had to travel to, enter, and vote in buildings of organizations that, as a whole, had actively taken a position on the issue.

Among the church-located polling places, one (Covenant Presbyterian Church) gave Repeal 119 office space to use as its headquarters. Three of the polling places were in Baptist Churches; as noted above the president of the Southern Baptist Convention, Ronnie Floyd, was a zealous supporter of repealing 119.  At least one church took advantage of its location as a polling place to put up a sign at an entrance to its parking lot urging voters to vote to “Repeal 119.”[18] This sign was a legal distance (more than 100 feet) from its entrance, but was visible from polling place.

Polling Place at Trinity Fellowship, Rolling Hills Drive, Dec. 9, 2014
An Entry to the Polling Place is the Door Located Above the "r" in "December"

Aside from the obvious observation that it is strange that active partisans in the election hosted supposedly neutral polling places, other potential problems of using churches as polling places for votes on “moral” or religious issues are these:
* Some voters may be uncomfortable going into churches or into buildings associated with certain denominations or religions and thus may deterred from voting. For example, if a polling place were in a mosque or a temple, some Christians might be uneasy about voting, or even unwilling to vote, in those locations.[19] Similarly, non-religious or non-Christian voters may have qualms about going into church buildings to vote, especially if they know the churches have taken a public stance opposed to theirs.
In the Fayetteville case, the voters most likely to have no discomfort with, or have any doubts about, voting in polling places located in Protestant churches are the ones most likely to vote for repeal of 119.
* When going into churches to vote, voters are inevitably subjected to religious cues or stimuli – both subtle and not-so-subtle -- that may, often unconsciously, influence their voting behavior. The influence of these cues or stimuli has been called the “Polling Place Priming Effect.” The existence of such an effect has been found in the limited research done on the topic of how voting in polling places located in schools affect voting results. This research has shown that voters who vote in school-located polling places are more likely (compared to voters who vote in non-school locations) to vote for measures, such as tax increases and bond issues, that would benefit schools.
At present, research is inconclusive on the effects of voting in church-located polling places on vote results when issues are “moral” or religious. Priming theory suggests the existence of such an effect, and a few empirical and experimental research studies have found that some votes cast in churches on issues such as gay marriage were influenced by the setting. However, other empirical studies have found no such locational effect. (See a summary of research on this topic in appendix 1.) Until more and better research has been conducted on the topic, it is not possible to make a definitive claim that voting in a church-located polling place does or does not influence some voters.

Did Voting in Churches Affect the Outcome of the Fayetteville Referendum?   

For the Fayetteville referendum, voters had the option of voting early by going to the county courthouse to vote or by submitting absentee ballots by mail.  In all, roughly one-third of the voters (4,622) cast their votes during the week prior to Election Day. 

None of the early voters went to church-located polling places to vote. Neither did the people who voted on Election Day at the Yvonne Richardson Community Center Polling Place (525 persons). In all, the total number of voters who did not vote in polling places within church buildings was 5,147 persons. The other 9,427 voters, voted on Election Day in church buildings

The voting results differed greatly by location of polling place and by when people voted. Voters who voted in polling places in churches strongly supported repeal of the Civil Rights Administration ordinance: 56.7% voted for repeal and only 43.3% voted against it. In contrast, only 42.4% of the voters who did not vote in church-located polling places supported repeal while 57.6% voted against it. See table 1. 

Similarly, among voters who voted on Election Day, 55.3% supported repeal and 44.7% opposed it. Of the voters who voted early, casting their votes at the county courthouse or by mail, only 43.8% supported repeal and 56.2% opposed it. See table 2.

The 14.3 percentage point difference in support for repeal of 119 by voters in church-located polling places (56.7%) and by voters at non-church polling places (42.4%) suggests that voting in churches might have influenced how some people voted. If not, other good explanations must be found to account for the differences in vote results by church and non-church polling locations.

One possible alternative explanation is that the socio-economic characteristics (e.g., age, employment, and income) of voters opposing repeal made them find early voting more appealing than voting on Election Day, or perhaps they found it more necessary than election-day voters to vote early because of their work responsibilities. Another possible explanation is that perhaps some repeal opponents did not want to go to a church-located polling place to vote, so they voted early to avoid doing so; conversely, some repeal supporters might have preferred voting in church-located polling places, especially if the polling place was in their own church, so they waited to vote on Election Day.

Unfortunately, none of the explanations of voting result differences by location can be tested statistically because the voting data are incomplete. While the votes cast on Election Day were tabulated by the polling places (although not by precinct) of voters, the early votes were not. That is, early voters were not identified by the precinct in which they live, or by their polling place jurisdiction. Thus, it is not possible to determine by precinct or by polling place jurisdiction how many people voted or how the votes for and against repeal of 119 were distributed.


Table 1
Votes on Repeal of Ordinance 5703 (Chapter 119)
By Voters Who Voted in Church Buildings and Voters Who Did Not


Type of Voters
Votes For Repeal
Votes Against Repeal
Total Votes
Voted in Church Polling Places



Number
5,347
4,080
9,427
Percentage
56.7
43.3





Voted in Non-Church Polling Places
2,180
2,967
5,147
Number
42.4
57.6

Percentage







Total



Number
7,527
7,047
14,574
Percentage
51.6
48.4





Table 2
Votes on Repeal of the Ordinance 5703 (Chapter 119)
By Early Voters and Election Day Voters

Type of Voter
Votes For Repeal
Votes Against Repeal
Total Votes
Election Day Voters



Number
5,502
4,450
9,952
Percentage
55.3
44.7





Early Voters*



Number
2,025
2,597
4,622
Percentage
43.8
56.2





All Voters



Number
7,527
7,047
14,574
Percentage
51.6
48.4

       *Includes 132 absentee ballots. All others are early votes in the County Courthouse

The problems with the data can be seen in table3. It lists the 17 polling places and shows for each: (1) the precincts within it, (2) the number of registered voters, (3) the number of voters who voted on Election Day, and (4) the percentage of voters who voted for repeal on Election Day.  These numbers are incomplete because the vote counts exclude voters living within polling place boundaries who voted early. Thus, we cannot determine accurately the total number of referendum votes cast by voters living in each polling place jurisdiction nor the percentage of voters living in each polling place jurisdiction who voted for repeal.



Table 3
Precincts, Number of Registered Voters, Referendum Vote on Election Day, and
Percentage Voting for Repeal on Election Day by Polling Place

Polling Place





Churches

Precincts
No. of Registered Voters
Number Voting in the Referendum
Pct. Voting
for Repeal
Awakening (Baptist)
28
1,374
300
79.7
Baldwin C. of Christ
11, 47
1,226
382
67.5
Buckner Baptist
12
2,421
595
66.2
Central Methodist
4, 5, 36
3,739
568
21.4
Christ’s Church
1, 10, 15, 16
2,671
381
51.0
Christian Life Cathedral
14, 22, 37, 38, 41
2,865
374
57.2
Covenant Life (Presbyterian)
30, 32, 43, 46, 48
3,499
654
75.2
First Assembly
21
654
189
70.4
Mt. Comfort C. of Christ
2, 27, 31,33, 40
6,829
1337
67.0
First Presbyterian
7, 29
1,810
542
55.0
Sang Baptist
2, 3, 26, 42
5,386
824
49.5
Sequoyah Methodist
17, 18
2,314
767
45.2
St. John’s Lutheran
19, 44
2,211
610
59.3
Trinity Fellowship
13, 14
2,458
1188
64.6
Trinity Methodist
6, 30, 35, 39, 45
5,071
294
25.1
Wiggins Methodist
9, 24
2,546
418
34.7
Total Churches

47,074
9,957
56.3





Non-Church




Yvonne Richardson Center
8, 25
2,445
525
29.5





Total Polling Places

49,519
9,947
55.3

The vote results presented in table 3 show that, at least on election-day, votes for and against repeal varied greatly by where voters live within Fayetteville. At one extreme, 79.7 percent of election-day voters at the Awakening Baptist Church polling place (located along the northeast border of the city) supported repeal of 119. At the other extreme, only 21.4% of election-day voters at the Trinity Methodist Church polling place, which lies in the center of the city, voted to repeal the ordinance. In general, the greatest election-day support for the repeal came from precincts west of I-49 and on the eastern edges of the city. The strongest opposition came from the center of the city and areas to the north of it (see map in appendix 2).

Ultimately, without the complete voting results by polling place jurisdiction, which would have enabled some interesting statistical analysis of the votes, it is possible only to point out the huge difference in vote results for election-day voters who voted in churches and for all other voters. One plausible, but unprovable, explanation for at least part of the difference is that the locational effect influenced some votes. That is, some people who voted in church-located polling places for repeal may have voted against repeal if they had voted in a polling place not in a church. If 241 election-day voters did so, they provided the margin of victory for repeal supporters.  

Conclusion

The Washington County Election Commission, according to the local newspaper, received several complaints about the use of churches as polling places for the December 9th referendum.[22] Similar concern about this practice has been expressed in several other states.[23] The use of churches as polling places has even been challenged in court in a couple of states. However, so far, courts have not ruled against this practice.[24]

Using churches as polling places for the Fayetteville referendum seems especially problematic because of the involvement of churches in the effort to repeal ordinance 5703. Not only did a majority of local churches take a position on the issue, national religious leaders called on churches and ministers to convince voters to vote to repeal the ordinance. Also, several churches contributed money to the campaign supporting repeal and others provided assistance to the repeal campaign by providing office space or putting up campaign signs.

While the involvement of churches in the referendum campaign was appropriate, it seems in this situation it was inappropriate to use of churches as polling places. Given the nature of the issue and the referendum campaign, it is hard to see how on December 9th churches could be considered neutral places to vote.

The placement of polling places in buildings of organizations that have taken a public position on an issue raises three questions:
(1) Does the use of such polling places have an effect on vote results?
The Fayetteville vote showed a big difference in referendum vote results based on the location of polling places, with people who voted in church-located polling sites much more likely to favor repeal of the ordinance. One possible, but unproven, explanation is that a “polling place priming effect” influenced some voters at church-based polling places to support the ordinance repeal.
(2) Is it fair to allow organizations that have taken a public position on or have a stake in the outcome of an election to host a polling site?
If organizations take a vocal and vigorous position on an issue to be decided, are their buildings still neutral sites for voting? Couldn’t knowledge of their stance on the issue encourage some voters to go to polling places located in their buildings while deterring other voters from doing so? When voters are in polling places located in buildings associated with partisans in a referendum, couldn’t they be reminded by visible symbols of the organizations’ position on the issue and, perhaps subconsciously, have their votes influenced?
(3) Is it fair to put polling places in locations that are likely to deter some people from voting?
In regard to using the buildings of religious institutions as polling places, an assortment of voters may not want to go into the buildings of certain churches or religions, even to vote. If the location of polling places inhibits voting, is the election still fair?
It is reasonable to expect that elections will be free and fair, conforming to democratic norms. These standards can be met only if the administration of elections is neutral, providing each voter with a place to vote that is sheltered from partisans who might influence him or her as the ballot is marked. The mechanics of an election, such as the selection of polling places, should not give advantages to particular candidates and should not favor one side of an issue. When they possibly do, as when churches are used as polling places for votes on religious or “moral” issues on which they have taken a stance, questions about the fairness of the election and the legitimacy of vote results must be raised.


FOOTNOTES:

[1] To read Ordinance 5703, go to his link:  http://fairfayetteville.com/chapter119/
The ordinance can be downloaded from this link:

[2] Several people who supported repeal of the ordinance suggested that it was the product of outside forces trying to work their will in Fayetteville. Just as civil rights opponents in the 1950s and 1960s claimed that the issue was being created by “outside agitators,” mostly communists, several Chapter 119 opponents blamed the Human Rights Campaign (HRC) for the ordinance and the controversy surrounding the repeal effort. For example, Greg Harton, editorial page editor of the Northwest Arkansas Times (NWAT), which editorialized against 119, wrote in his commentary on December 8:
The population was dragged into battling encampments by Alderman Matthew Perry’s sponsorship of the Human Rights Campaign’s so-called civil rights ordinance….
The Human Rights Campaign didn’t tackle a city rife with discrimination. The group didn’t come to Fayetteville because the town is full of bigots, but because it is a place where people generally live and let live….The town still, however, has a streak of Ozark independence and doesn’t always take kindly to being manipulated by an outside influence…Some view this ordinance as Fayetteville being on the cutting edge, at least within Arkansas; others believe the elected leaders have allowed the city to be manipulated to the national organization’s purpose. http://www.nwaonline.com/news/2014/dec/08/commentary-fayetteville-is-t-so-simple
On December 22, he wrote:         
Fayetteville Alderman Matthew Perry thought a stand on principle would lead to victory in his effort to pass the Human Rights Campaign’s ideas for how Fayetteville should govern itself. The organization found in Petty a political leader willing to sponsor an ordinance drawn up by national LGBT activists trying to wage a national battle on local battlefields. http://www.nwaonlinecom/news/2014/dec/22/commentary-can-principle-pragmatism-co-/
According to a column in the NWAT by Woody Bassett, a local lawyer: “The blame [for the divided community and bad publicity] belongs mostly on the shoulders of our city government, which choose to enact a poorly written and overreaching ordinance and mistakenly allowed an out-of-state special interest group to use Fayetteville as a tool to advance its own national political agenda.” See Woody Bassett. City Can Heal, Find Resolution After Election. NWAT, Dec 18, 2014, p 2a.

Apparently Harton viewed Perry as a simple-minded tool of the outside agitators (this echoes the widely held view in the South during the 50s and 60s that local Blacks were duped simpletons manipulated by the sinister NAACP). I guess somehow it did not seem possible to Harton and Bassett that Perry and other aldermen who supported the measure viewed HRC’s model ordinance as, with some tweaks, a suitable legislative vehicle to accomplish an end they saw as desirable. Did the issue change because a particular organization provided a model ordinance or that it promoted its passage? Or were the complaints just another aspect of the effort to defeat the ordinance?

Another effort to smear the Human Rights Administration ordinance, its supporters, and HRC can be seen in a video on the Repeal 119 website. In a video statement by Duncan Campbell, he associated the ordinance with Terry Bean, a co-founder of HRC and a long-time Democratic political activist, who had been arrested in the middle of November on charges related to sex with a 15-year-old male. According to Campbell, it was Bean who “founded” HRC and who “conceived” of the ordinance (in reality he was one of several founders and was not involved in the day-to-day work of the HRC). Clearly, Campbell was using Bean’s arrest to suggest something unsavory about the ordinance and to smear its supporters.  

[3] The Arkansas state legislature passed legislation (Senate Bill 202) in February 2015 to prohibit local governments in Arkansas from enacting such ordinances as Fayetteville’s ordinance 5703 in the future. Because the bill was not signed (or vetoed) by the governor, it becomes law 90 days after the adjournment of the legislative session ends.

Taking advantage of the delay of the law’s implementation, Eureka Springs passed on February 9th an ordinance similar to Fayetteville’s, prohibiting discrimination against people based on “real or perceived” sexual orientation, gender identity, gender expression, or socioeconomic background. The city council approved a referendum on ordinance 2223, to be held on May 12th. Travis Story, the Fayetteville attorney for the Repeal 119 organization, is the attorney for a group in Eureka Springs called Repeal 2223. See Spencer Williams. Anti-bias-law ban, to end, goes unsigned. Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, February 24, 2015, pp. 1a, 4a and Bill Dowden. Eureka springs sets vote on its new anti-bias law. Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, February 25, 2015, pp. 1a, 2a.

[4] Ballot question committees are organizations set up under state law to oppose or support ballot issues. In addition to Repeal 119, the Fayetteville Chamber of Commerce and the Family Council, a Little Rock-based organization, campaigned in support of repeal of the ordinance.

[5] Joel Walsh, Civil Rights Vote, Supporters: Community Needs Protection. NWAT, Nov. 30, 2014, p. 1a, 2a.

[5] By law, Ballot Question Committees are required to file financial reports with the Arkansas Ethics Commission. The reports for both Repeal 119 and Keep Fayetteville Fair are available on line.

[6] Joel Walsh, Civil Rights Vote, Opponents Cite Religious Concerns. NWAT, Nov. 30, 2014, p. 5a.

[7] See Repeal 119’s Ballot Question Committee Financial Report for 11-10-14 to 12-02-14 filed December 4, 2012 with the Arkansas Ethics Commission. According to this report, Stephanie Nichols, a lawyer in Jonesboro also provided legal advice valued at $7,000 to Repeal 119. See http://www.arkansasethics.com/blqc/Local%20Committee/Fayetteville/repeal119/Repeal1192014-12-04.pdf

[8] In its advertisements, Repeal 119 included the assertion that the ordinance was “dangerous to business.” This argument echoed and supplemented the main talking points of the Fayetteville Chamber of Commerce, which also supported the Repeal 119 effort. The Chamber bought a full-page advertisement in the Northwest Arkansas Times on the Sunday before the referendum to advertise its support for the repeal of the ordinance because of its putative effects on businesses. The chamber did not, at least publicly, echo the claims that the ordinance was a “danger to children and women” and a “danger to religion.”

[9] NWAT, Nov. 30, 2014, p. 1a (see note 6)

[10] NWAT, Nov. 30, 2014, 5a (see note 6)

The use of this argument continued even though the city council addressed the concerns on August 19th by amending the ordinance to state that a person was not allowed “to enter any gender-segregated space for any unlawful purpose.”

[11] Dan Holtmeyer. Campaigns Condemn Sign Slur. NWAT, Dec 3, 2014, p. 2a

[12] See the Repeal 119 website (http://www.repeal119.com/) for additional information on the leaders supporting repeal of 119. The site includes videos supporting repeal by:

*Charles Flowers, pastor of Faith Outreach Center International in San Antonio, TX.        
*Dave Welch, director of the Houston Area Pastor Council.
*H.D. McLarty, long-time Baptist pastor in Fayetteville (described on the site as “Pastor of the Razorbacks for 30 years”)
*Jeremy Flanagan, pastor of the Pathway Baptist Church in Fayetteville.
*Jerry Cox, director of the Little Rock-based Family Council, a religion-based anti-abortion and anti-gay lobbying group.  This group actively campaigned against 119 through telephone calls to Fayetteville voters.
*Carolynn Long, apparently a local celebrity based on her television appearances in Fayetteville over several decades

At the Repeal 119 website, you could download a song written “by a local artist” titled, “Gay is NOT the new Black.”  http://www.repeal119.com/news1/local-artist-produces-song-gay-is-not-the-new-black

[13] Joel Walsh. Special Election Today. NWAT. Dec. 9, 2014, p. 2a.

[14] Matthew Petty. Let’s Keep Fayetteville Fair, NWAT, Nov. 30, 2012, p. 5b.

[15] NWAT, Nov. 30, 2014, 5a (see note 6)

[16] Petty, p. 5b (see note 14).

[17] See the financial reports for Repeal 119 and Keep Fayetteville Fair at the web site of the Arkansas Ethics Commission (http://www.arkansasethics.com/ )

[18] Dan Holtmeyer. Church Polls Raise Questions. NWAT, December 14, 2014, pp. 1a, 7a

[19] They might be upset if their polling place were in, for example, a Church of Scientology. According to the Hollywood Reporter, voters in a district in Los Angeles voted in the Hollywood headquarters of the Church of Scientology in the 2014 general election. The newspaper reported:
If some Los Angeles residents wanted to vote in Tuesday's midterm elections, there were required to enter the Church of Scientology's mammoth blue Hollywood headquarters to do so.
Voters living in the 90029 zip code area were first required to pass several Scientology members handing out promotional leaflets at the corner of Sunset Boulevard and Vermont Avenue.
They then walked down a long pathway to the entrance of the building at 4810 Sunset, one voter tells The Hollywood Reporter, where they were instructed by a church member to descend a set of stairs.
Along the way, voters were made to pass several framed posters. One beckoned to "attend a Scientology Sunday service." Another featured the silhouetted image of a man staring out at a sunlit path, promising that attendees of a "Happiness Rundown" would "flourish and prosper and live a happier life."  http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/church-scientologys-la-headquarters-serving-746485
[20] Thanks to the Washington County Election Commission staff for providing the vote results by polling place and for responding to questions about how to understand them.

[21] Northwest Arkansas Times, December 14, 2014, p. 1a, 17 (see note 18]

[22] For a summary of controversies in Florida, Minnesota, North Carolina, Missouri, Ohio, and Virginia, see the document at the following link: http://americanindependent.com/217973/civil-liberties-groups-decry-church-messaging-at-polling-places

[23] “In 1991 Frank Otero, an atheist running for mayor of Miami, Oklahoma brought suit against Oklahoma challenging the use of churches as polling places (Otero v. State Election Board of Oklahoma 975 F.2d 738 (Sept. 1992)). Otero argued that the use of churches as polling places harmed his campaign by increasing the chance that voters will think about religion when voting. A year later, in Florida, Jerry Rabinowitz filed suit because in the church where he voted there were “pro-life” banners and various religious symbols and sayings which he felt could bias voter’s choices (Rabinowitz v. Anderson Case No. 06-81117 Civ.). In both cases, the courts failed to find evidence that voting at churches taints elections.”
Quote from Ben Pryor, Jeanette M Mendez, R. Herrick. 2011. Does Where You Vote Matter? Polling Location Priming for State Ballot Issues. Oklahoma Politics, 21, p. 56. Available at this link: http://ojs.library.okstate.edu/osu/index.php/OKPolitics/article/view/1020/920


For an in-depth discussion of the legal issues involved in these cases and the general issue of voting in church polling places, see Jeremy Blumenthal and Terry Turnipseed. 2011. “The Polling Place Priming Effect: Is Voting in Churches (or Anywhere Else) Unconstitutional. Boston University Law Review. Volume 91, pp. 563 – 598.  Available at this link: https://www.bu.edu/law/central/jd/organizations/journals/bulr/documents/BLUMENTHALandTURNIPSEED.pdf



Appendix 1 
Research on the Impact of Location Cues on Voters

Assertions that the location of a polling place can influence voters’ choices are based on research on how external cues or stimuli can influence behavior. This research has found that certain cues prime (or nudge) behavior, often even when people are not consciously aware of them. For example, one study showed that individuals behave more aggressively when in the presence of a weapon, even when the task is unrelated to it.  Another study has shown that playing French classical music in a wine store resulted in increased sales of French wine while playing German classical music in the same store increased sales of German wine. Summaries of these studies and other examples on the priming effect are found in Blumental and Turnipseed (2011, pp. 563-565), Glas (2014, pp 2 – 7), and Pryor, Mendez and Herrik (2011, pp. 58-62).   

Drawing on the general literature concerning priming effects, some researchers have applied the findings to elections, suggesting that the location of a polling place can, under certain circumstances, affect decisions made by some voters. The two most-hypothesized effects of location on voting decisions are (1) if  a polling place is in a school, voters there are more likely to vote favorably on proposals, such as tax increases and bond issues, to improve schools, and (2) if a polling place is in a church, voters at that location are more likely to vote for conservative candidates and to be influenced by “religious’ or “moral arguments” when contentious social issues (e.g., alcohol, gambling, abortion, gay rights etc.) are on the ballot. In both cases, the locational effects are expected to be marginal, influencing a small number of voters.

These two hypothesized relationships between polling places and voting results have been investigated in recent years by a small number of researchers. When researching the effects of voting in a polling place located in school, researchers have consistently found that the polling place marginally affected voting results. Using different methodologies to analyze voting results in several different states, researchers have identified a small priming effect:  holding other things equal, a larger percentage of voters who cast their votes in schools, compared to voters who voted in other locations, favored proposals that would benefit schools.  These studies include:  Berger, Meredith, and Wheeler (2008), Rutchick (2010), Glas 2011, and Pryor, Mendez, and Herrick (2011, 2014)

Research has been less conclusive when the hypothesis is that voting at polling places located in churches influences votes on moral or religious issues. The first research on the topic (Ruthick 2010) found an effect that Blumenthal and Turnipseed (2011) labeled, in a Boston College Law Review article, the “Polling Place Priming Effect.”

Rutchick’s (2010) work, published in Political Psychology, examined votes cast at different types of polling places in South Carolina’s sixth congressional district.  First, he examined votes in a congressional election in which a conservative Republican challenged an incumbent Democrat.  Then, he analyzed votes on a proposal to amend the South Carolina constitution to state that marriage is legal only between a man and a woman.  Controlling for age, race, gender, and party affiliation, he found that the Republican candidate and the constitutional amendment got greater percentages of the vote in polling places located in churches than in other polling places. His concluded that voting in churches was “associated with support for…a conservative constitutional amendment, but only if the amendment was relevant to Christian values.”

Based on this research by Rutchick (2010) and related research by Berger, Meredith, and Wheeler (2008), Blumenthal and Turnipseed (2011) suggested that when people vote at polls in churches, they are influenced by cues or stimuli associated with the location. According to them, “a non-trivial percentage of the population is affected on an unconscious level by voting in churches.” (p. 563)

However, research published after Rutchick’s journal article has been at best ambiguous on whether voting in a church polling place affects votes. In some of the research, the hypothesis has been rejected.

In his 2011 master’s thesis for Georgia State University, Jeffery Glas analyzed the effect of polling place location on votes cast in California’s 2008 general election on various ballot initiatives. He analyzed votes on two social issues: (1) a requirement that parents or guardians be notified before a minor could have an abortion and (2) a constitutional amendment prohibiting same-sex marriages. In both cases, the percentage vote for the proposal was greater in churches than in other locations, but the differences between the vote results were not statistically significance. These results provide some weak support for the hypothesis of the effect of location on votes, but was not as conclusive as Rutchick’s study or the research of the effect voting in schools on vote results.

S.R. Daniel, in papers for the American Political Science Association (2011) and the Midwest Political Science Association (2012) annual meetings, also analyzed the effect of voting in churches on the 2008 Prop 8 results in California.  Using a structural equation model to test for the effect of voting in churches on votes for Proposition 8 (prohibiting gay marriage, he found, after controlling for numerous factors, including education and precinct conservatism, no independent impact; that is, his model did not find a significant effect on polling place on voter’s decisions. However, the power of the model was diminished because his data mixed precinct voting data with county-wide social and demographic data.

Two studies by Pryor, Mendez, and Herrick (2011, 2014) also did not find that voting in churches influenced voters in way that was hypothesized.  Their 2011 study examined a referendum in the 2004 general election in Oklahoma on a proposal to prohibit gay marriage. The researchers found that voters who cast their votes in churches were not more likely to support the proposal; instead, they were more likely to oppose it.

The second study analyzed votes in the 2012 general election on proposals in Maine, Maryland, and Minnesota to either allow or prohibit same sex marriage. Again, their analysis found voters who their voted at polling places in churches were not more likely that voters at secular locations to support limitations on same sex marriage. As in their first study, they found that such voters were more likely to oppose it.

The consistent results showing that voting in schools has a marginal effect on vote results supports the assertions about the existence of a polling place priming effect. However, the mixed results of the research on the effect of voting in churches leaves open the question of whether voting in churches has a consistent polling place priming effect.  The amount of research on the topic is still quite small, and each study has its strengths and weaknesses. None, singly or together, is conclusive. Thus, research to date is insufficient to either strongly support or reject hypotheses about the existence of the influence of church polling places on voters.
  
Sources consulted:

Berger, Jonah, M. Meredith, and SC Wheeler. 2008. Can Where People Vote Influence How They Vote” The Influence of Polling Location Type on Voting Behavior. Stanford School of Business Research Paper no. 1926. http://www.gsb.stanford.edu/insights/can-polling-location-influence-how-voters-vote

Berger, Jonah, M Meredith, and SC Wheeler. 2008. Contextual Priming: Where People Vote Affects How They Vote. Proceedings of the National Academy of Science of the United States, 105: 8846-8849.  http://www.pnas.org/content/105/26/8846.full

Blumenthal, Jeremy and Terry Turnipseed. 2011. “The Polling Place Priming Effect: Is Voting in Churches (or Anywhere Else) Unconstitutional. Boston University Law Review. Volume 91, pp. 563 – 598.  https://www.bu.edu/law/central/jd/organizations/journals/bulr/documents/BLUMENTHALandTURNIPSEED.pdf

Daniels, R. Steven. 2011. Voting Context and Vote Choice: The Impact of Voting Precinct Location on Voting for California Proposition 8. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Political Science Association, Seattle WA, Sept 1-4. http://www.researchgate.net/publication/228198068_Voting_Context_and_Vote_Choice_The_Impact_of_Voting_Precinct_Location_on_Voting_for_California_Proposition_8

Daniels, R. Steven. 2012. Voting Context and Vote Choice: The Impact of Balloting in Churches on Voting for California Proposition 8. Paper presented at the Western Political Science Association Annual Meeting.   http://wpsa.research.pdx.edu/meet/2012/daniels.pdf

Glas, Jeffery M. 2011. The Priming Effect of Polling Locations on Ballot Initiative Voting Decisions. Thesis, Georgia State University. Accessible at: http://scholarworks.gsu.edu/political_science_theses/39

LaBouff, Jordan. 2014. How Balloting in Churches Sways Attitudes and Votes. Scholars Strategy Network Key Findings. http://www.scholarsstrategynetwork.org/sites/default/files/ssn_key_findings_labouff_on_how_voting_in_a_church_influences_voter_attitudes.pdf

LaBouff, Jordan, Wade Rowatt, Megan Johnson, and Callie Finkle. 2012. Differences in Attitudes towards Outgroups in Religious and Non-Religious Contexts in a Mult-National Sample: A Situational Context Priming Study. International Journal for the Psychology of Religion, 22, pp. 1-9. 

Pryor, Ben, Jeanette M Mendez, R. Herrick. 2011. Does Where You Vote Matter? Polling Location Priming for State Ballot Issues. Oklahoma Politics, 21, pp. 55-71. http://ojs.library.okstate.edu/osu/index.php/OKPolitics/article/view/1020/920

Pryor, Ben, Jeanette M. Mendez, and Rebekah Herrick. 2014. Let’s Be Fair: Do Polling Locations Prime Votes? Journal of Political Science and Public Affairs (open access), Vol. 2 (3), p. 126.

Rutchick, Abraham. 2010. Deux ex Machina: The Influence of Polling Place on Voting Behavior. Political Psychology, 31 (2): 209-225


Appendix 2:  Map of Vote Results


Thursday, February 5, 2015

Thank You, Fellow Citizens and Taxpayers, for All You Did for Me

As I approach my 68th birthday, I need to do something I should have done many years ago: I would like to thank you, fellow citizens and taxpayers, for everything you did for me during my lifetime. Thanks to you and the governments you elected and financed, I have had tremendous opportunities to experience things and to do interesting work that would have been impossible if I had been born in other times or in places where society did not nurture its children, support public services, and provide economic and social stability.


First, thanks for creating the setting for a healthy and happy childhood. When I was born into a family of modest means, the event took place in a government-operated hospital subsidized by tax payers. For a few months, I lived in “city housing,” public housing with cheap rents. When I was growing up, a local government – elected and funded by residents of Fayetteville – paid for the buildings, teachers, and services where I attended schools. Also, they paid for the parks where I played and for the roads that took my dad to work where he could earn a living. When I think of the teachers who worked so hard to educate me and the coaches who challenged me, I have to thank everyone who provided tax money to pay them.

Thanks for the great college education. The people of Arkansas – through taxes paid to their state government – financed much of the cost of the two degrees I earned from the University of Arkansas (a governmental institution), including expenditures to build and operate a beautiful campus and to pay the professors who filled the classrooms with students. When I moved to California, state taxpayers there through their government financed a large part of the expense of the degree I earned from the University of California, one of the best public institutions of higher education in the world. Again, many thanks to taxpayers in both states for paying taxes that helped these universities have quality programs to prepare people like me for their future.

Also, I should also thank the taxpayers of the United States and Austria who provided funds for the Fulbright Fellowship program that financed a year of research in Vienna. That year was a highlight of my life. Many thanks! 

Thanks for a great job and interesting work. As a faculty member at the University of Georgia, a public university, taxpayers paid, in part, my salary. There, the numerous projects with local governments in Georgia and with partners in many different countries were financed at least in part by taxpayer funds. So, many thanks for the taxes you paid that helped fund my teaching and research, and the different projects in which I took part to improve local governments throughout the world.

Thanks for the great libraries. My research was (and still is) done in taxpayer-funded libraries operated by governments. I cannot imagine my life without these places. Thanks for paying taxes for the creation and operation of such centers of learning, thought, and exploration.

Thanks for a secure retirement.  In retirement, I depend in part on government-administered social security payments and Medicare. Both are managed reasonably well by the federal government, and, if I live long enough, both will continue paying benefits long after the amount of my contributions have been exceeded. Thanks for that security financed by the taxes you pay.

Finally, thanks for life-long national security and personal safety. Throughout my life, taxpayers have helped finance hugely expensive government programs that have provided national security and local protection. Because of these programs, there have been few threats of foreign invasions and most people have been safe from crime in their daily lives. So, thanks to everyone who helped pay for national defense and local government police protection, and even greater thanks to the people who take the dangerous and difficult jobs to carry out the programs.

I should also thank taxpayers for other things, such as the great roads that take me quickly from place to place and coast to coast, the airports at which I have spent so much time, the national forests and parks I have visited, and many other things have made life both more efficient and rich. Please include these things in my overall thanks.



Over the years, I have tried to repay the great debt that I owe taxpayers by cheerfully paying my full share of taxes to help finance government programs, even those such as public schools from which I get no direct benefit. I hope that some of you taxpayers (or your kids) have found them valuable. (Wouldn't I be a jerk if, after benefiting so much from programs paid mostly by others, I complained about having to pay my share of taxes for government activities that enable the following generations to have the opportunities I had?)

I have also tried to repay my debt to taxpayers by working seriously and hard to provide things of value (mostly knowledge, information, and skills) to students and to others who took classes that I taught, participated in the programs I managed, or read the results of my research. I hope that by the end my accomplishments will have justified the sacrifices made by taxpayers. If they don't, it was my fault and I apologize. If they did, I know I  didn't achieve them alone.

So, thanks again to all the people, past and present, who have paid their fair share of taxes, making it possible for people like me to have so many opportunities in life. I hope that I and others of my generation, and those that follow, will continue to pass along such opportunities to others.

Wednesday, January 28, 2015

Visiting Israel, February 1968

I went to Israel in 1968 during the University of Vienna’s month-long semester break. At the time, I was studying at the Institute of European Studies (IES), which was part of the University, whose its fall semester ended in late January and whose spring semester began in March.

With no classes in February, students had time for long trips, and the Austrian student travel association (ÖKISTA) offered the most enticing travel options, including a group trip to Israel. Its prices were cheap, but then students in Europe had plenty of opportunities to enjoy life at reduced prices. 

The Israel trip included travel by ship from Italy to Israel, with stops along the way, plus two weeks in the country, at an all-inclusive price that was barely believable. I hopped on board, as did several other fellow IES students.

Although it barely occurred to me at the time, the dirt-cheap price likely was related to the “Six Day War” that Israel had fought seven months earlier, in June 1967. Israel had battled Syria, Egypt, and Jordan. After winning the war decisively, it had occupied land taken from its opponents. Some people might have had second thoughts about traveling to a country, aboard one of its ships, whose existence was under threat by most of its neighbors. I, being young, did not, of course, give this situation a second thought.  
Dan Durning & Mike Ramaker, 1968

The travel group included two of my Parisergasse suite-mates (God rest the soul of our Hausfrau, Frau Winckler). They were Mike Ramaker and Jack (last name escapes me). Mike (from Indiana) and Jack (from Florida) were roommates, but did not care much for each other. I shared an adjacent bedroom with roommate Tom Dodds (a Texan). I enjoyed being around Mike, whose sarcasm and acerbic comments often amused me. Also, I had a friendly acquaintance with Jack, but we had little in common.

The Journey to Israel

The group of about 20 students, plus a few older folks, took off early one February morning in a bus heading toward Italy. We spent a night in Venice and the next day we arrived in Naples, where we boarded an Israeli passenger ship aptly named the Dan. The ship was named after a city located during Biblical days in what is now the northeast corner of Israel.
Israel Ship, the "Dan" in the Port of Athens, Feb. 1968

The Dan made several stops on the way to Israel, giving us a few hours to visit different ports, including Athens (Greece), Rhodes (Greek island), Izmir (Turkey), and Cyprus. Most impressive was the chance to see Athens, a striking and inspiring city whose ancient buildings and ruins remind us of the advanced civilizations that paved the way for the modern world. At the time I was there, Greece also was a reminder of threats to democracy: it was under military control. (Later, memories of my short visit in Athens enhanced my enjoyment of the movie “Z”, which came out in 1969, about a military dictatorship in Greece.)
The Acropolis, Athens,  February 1968

The hours in Rhodes, an island on which one of the original several wonders of the world was located, left me with a strong desire to return to this beautiful island. Maybe in 2015.

Cyprus was a tense place with armed soldiers eyeing everyone around them. Crossing the border from the Greek part of Cyprus to the Turkish part, and vice versa, was harrowing. At the time, Cyprus was in the midst of campaigning for a late February presidential election. Somehow I ended up with a campaign poster for the leading candidate, Makarios III, who won re-election; sadly the poster was made of such cheap paper that it quickly deteriorated.

Most of the sailing was done in the evenings and nights after the port visits, and the ship provided ample post-dinner entertainment. One night a hypnotist provided a show and one of his “subjects” was an IES student. The show went well, with the hypnotized student doing silly things as ordered by the hypnotist; then, near the end the act the “hypnotized” student turned his eyes to his friends in the  audience and winked to let us in on the joke. Also one night, a costume contest was held and someone convinced me to go as “Baby Hughie,” wearing a sheet as a diaper. I did not win the best costume prize and am glad that no photos have survived.

Of the several days on the ocean, one night stands out. It was the night we were hit by a storm that tossed us around like a dare-devil carnival ride. I downed some Dramamine, got into my upper bunk bed and promptly went to sleep, awakening periodically when a great swell threw me from one side of the bed to the other.

Arrival in Israel and the First Visits

The ship arrived in Haifa in the northern part of Israel. The initial view of the city was dominated by a large gold-domed Bahai Temple that sat midway up a ridge on the east side of the city. 

When going into the city for the first time, we were pleased to find that the weather was mild and the trees were green. It was a pleasure to trade the Austrian winter for these new surroundings.
Hill above Haifa, Feb. 1968 (Bahai Temple)

Most of the group headed off for a week at a Kibbutz, but Mike and I, being lazy and independent types, decided that we would go our own way and meet up later with the others for the scheduled tour. We stayed at a hotel in Netanya, a coastal city south of Haifa with about 55,000 residents. Our room was a short walk to the Mediterranean Sea.  The hotel served tasty kosher meals, the first I had eaten.

During the week in Netanya, Mike and I went to Jerusalem a couple of times. That required taking a bus from Netanya to Tel Aviv, then boarding another bus from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem. We quickly figured out that the country is tiny, the bus system was efficient and travel times were quite manageable.
Dan D. at Netanya Beach, Feb. 1968

We wandered around the arid and largely treeless underdeveloped eastern side of the city that had been part of Jordan until June 1967. In this hilly area, families lived mostly in modest huts, and it was not rare to see people riding on donkeys.

In contrast to the languid pace of life and desolation on the east side of Jerusalem, the western part of city, which had been part of Israel from its early years, was a high-energy modern city. It had new buildings and heavy traffic, and most people wore western dress. It seemed to occupy a different world that the one inhabited only a few miles away by the people in east Jerusalem.
Dwelling in East Jerusalem (formerly part of Jordan), Feb. 1968

Looking to the Walled City from East Jerusalem, Feb. 1968

The Old Walled City was an exotic place for an innocent traveler who not experienced the color, smells, and jostling bustle of Arab commerce. In many parts of the city, the narrow passageways were lined with small shops selling foods, clothes, tobaccos, and other goods that came without packaging. The oddly dressed crowds, the emphatic conversations in an unfamiliar language, and the energetic efforts of the sellers created an impression of chaotic strangeness that, alone, was worth the trip. I watched in amazement as others lived lives that I had not imagined.
Eastern Wall of Jerusalem, Temple Mount and Dome of the Rock in the Middle, Feb. 1968

View of War Damage and Dome of the Rock from Within the Walled City, Feb. 1968

When entering the Walled City, evidence of the recent war was prominent. The history of the war describes fierce fighting for it, including hand-to-hand combat on Temple Mount, an area of the city sacred to both Muslims and Jews. Many of the battles took place at its entrances. Seven month later, bullet marks and damage from explosives still scarred both the walls and buildings near them.
Damaged Spire, see picture above for
the location

Aside from the Jerusalem visits, the most memorable experience during the first week was time spent in Caesarea, which lay several miles up the coast from Netanya, about half way to Haifa. Mike and I went there by bus to see the ruins of this ancient Roman city. We had the whole place to ourselves as we walked amid the remains of a coliseum and strolled among fallen columns and shells of buildings. It looked as if an earthquake had destroyed a large Roman city and the ruins and rubble had remained largely untouched for centuries.

When we walked a short way to the shore of the Mediterranean Sea to view the ruins from that perspective, a local kid ran up to us to offer some wet Roman coins he had fished  from the Sea. I bought one for a small price, but much of it disintegrated when it dried. Still, I was awed to hold this item in my hand and wonder in what other hands and pockets it had been since it was created, and how it had ended up in the water.
Fallen Columns at Caesarea, Feb. 1968

We enjoyed the Caesarea ruins so much that we did not notice that it was getting dark. At last, we realized that we had to leave before night fully came. We went to the bus stop to find we had missed the last bus that would take us back. So, in the darkness we walked a couple miles down an empty road between Caesarea and a bus stop on Highway 2. For a second I wondered whether I should be scared, but decided nothing could happen on such a peaceful night while walking in the company of a multitude of Roman ghosts.









Walking Path in Caesarea, Feb. 1968



Caesarea at Sundown, February 1968

The Top to Bottom Tour

After a week on our own in Netanya, Mike and I joined with the rest of the University of Vienna group for a tour that took us from one end of Israel (Golan Heights) to the other (Eilat), with many stops in between. We had a knowledgeable guide, who sometimes offered a little too much information. Despite occasional yawns, we learned much from him.

The following is an overview of some of the places we more memorable places we visited:

Golan Heights (Occupied Syria). We went up to the southern edge of the Golan Heights that overlook the Sea of Galilee and the surrounding parts of Israel. Until June 1967, the Golan Heights had been part of Syria from which it could easily fire weapons, mortar and artillery at Israeli settlements below. It provided Syria with a commanding military position.
Sign showing location of former frontier on road to
Golan Heights, Feb. 1968

To Damascus with Love, on the Road to
Golan Heights, Feb. 1968

We stood on top of Syrian military bunkers to view the green valley and the stunted hills that stretched before us. From there, we saw the well-tended land surrounding the Sea of Galilee and the small mountains that arose in the distance. 
Viewing Northern Israel from the Top of a Syrian Bunker; Guide is in front;
IES students Winnie (light hair,  side view), Mike Ramaker (beside her), and
Pat Hurley (sun glasses facing camera) can be seen

View of the Sea of Galilee from the Golan Heights

Service at the Ruins of an Old Church by the Sea of Galilee, Feb. 1968

Megiddo (In Greek, the name in Armageddon). This site is located in the northern part of Israel about 25 miles from Haifa.  For many of the pre-Christian Era centuries, it occupied a strategic location guarding a narrow pass on a trade route that connected Egypt with Assyria. At this site, cities were built at different times from 7000 BC to 586 BC., and they were repeatedly destroyed by battles, then rebuilt again.  

Archaeological excavations of Megiddo have found 26 layers of ruins that accumulated during it 6,500 years of existence. Visiting these ruins created a new appreciation of the scope of history that has been lived in times before ours. The six and a quarter centuries between the time of Columbus’ arrival in the “New World” and the present is less than a tenth of the time of Meggido’s existence.   
Some views are better than others: IES Student Pat Hurley, Feb. 1968

Inspired by my visit to this site, I tracked down a book, The Source, by James Michener, that tells the story of a fictional ancient city in Israel resembling Megiddo and lives of people living there as it was repeatedly destroyed and rebuilt.

 Jerusalem. Returning to the city with the group, I visited major spots important to Christian, Jewish, and Muslim faiths. The city of full of them; many of the Christian sites are associated with the crucifixion story.  Probably the most famous – and certainly the most visible – place in the Walled City is the Dome of the Rock, on Temple Mount. This Muslim Shrine was built on the location of the Jewish Second Temple, which was destroyed by the Romans in 70 C.E. (aka A.D.). The Dome of the Rock is built over the “Foundation Stone.” According to Muslims, it is from this stone that Muhammad ascended to heaven. Jews regarded the “Foundation Stone” as the holiest spot on earth; it was the “Holy of Holies” during the time the Second Temple was located there.
Dome of the Rock, Feb. 1968
After visiting the various religious shires and holy place, I enjoyed walking around the Walled City. As I was hunting for souvenirs just before our group was about to leave, a slick-talking hustler started walking uninvited beside me and acting as a tour guide, pointing out interesting things in the area. After walking beside me for about 15 minutes and gently steering me in a direction I was not sure I wanted to go, he stopped and pointed to a building. He told me that his lovely sister was there and was available for a small fee. When I thanked him for his kind offer, but said I needed to get back to my group, he suddenly became belligerent and demanded pay for his “tour” services. Another lesson learned.

Market on Narrow Street in Jerusalem, Feb. 1968

Bethlehem and Jericho (occupied Jordan). We made a trip to sites well known to Christians, including a church that purported to be built at the birthplace of Jesus. This area had been occupied by Israel six months earlier, and we did not seem particularly welcome, except by sellers of trinkets.
Market in Bethlehem, Feb. 1968
Dead Sea/Masada.  The Dead Sea is huge body of water, framed by bare, inhospitable mountains. We got to spend enough time at the Dead Sea to prove that, in fact, it was impossible to drown in such salty water. Then we went to a legendary site in Jewish history, Masada. It was at this mountain, as described by the historian Josephus Flavius, that a band of zealous Jews held out against the invading Roman army in 73 A.D. The mountain top – where the defenders had their garrison -- was accessible only by a winding, narrow path. The Romans surrounded the mountain and laid siege, then they built scaffolding for passage up the mountain. When they finally were able to enter Masada, they found that all of the defenders had killed themselves. Some historians claim that Josephus Flavius’s story was not accurate and no mass suicide occurred, but it is still told as an example of Jewish resistance to invaders.   
The Trail up to the Top of Masada, Feb. 1968

The Buildings and Fortifications on Masada

View of the Dead Sea from Masada, Feb. 1968

In 1968, the only way to get to the top of Masada was to walk up a steep, winding, and, in places, narrow path. Now, a cable car is available to whisk lazy people to the top. On the top of Masada are ruins of the military outpost. Also, the top provides a sweeping view of the Dead Sea. 

Eilat. Most of the southern part of Israel is made up of the Negev Desert; the drive from Be’er Sheva to Eilat passes through rugged and largely uninhabited desert land. After driving through the desert, it is a relief to reach Eilat, a city located on the Red Sea’s Gulf of Aqaba. The water was pristine. We took a glass-bottomed boat to view the under-water world of the Gulf. 

After a couple of days to float in the warm Gulf waters, we headed back to Haifa for the trip back to Vienna. 

Heading Back

The trip to Israel left some strong impressions. Some of them came from having spent so many hours as a kid in Sunday school and church hearing stories from the Bible. It was exciting to see the places whose names I had heard so often: Jerusalem, Sea of Galilee, Bethlehem, Nazareth, Mount of Olives, Jericho, etc. 

Other impressions were of the state of Israel. It was a surprisingly small country and much of it was made up of an inhospitable desert. It was hard to believe that a country with so little land and so few resources, surrounded by hostile neighbors, had been so successful. 

I was surprised that Israel had such a distinctly modern and Western feel, and the differences between the places we visited that had been part of Israel since its creation and the parts that had been occupied seven months earlier were stark. Visiting the occupied areas was stepping back in time.  
  
As we were headed back to Vienna, on the day I turned 21, I thought to myself how much I had enjoyed visiting Israel, what a great opportunity it had been for me to travel there, and how much I had learned from the trip. Even now, more that 45 years later, I still feel the same. 


(Note: I took all of the photographs except for the two that I am in.)

Monday, January 5, 2015

September 12, 1931: Journalist Friedrick Scheu Meets Actress Luise Rainer After Her Vienna Debut

On reading of the death on December 30th of actress Luise Rainer (1910-2014), I recalled her connections in the early 1930s to two reporters who were part of the Anglo-American Press Association (A-APA) and the Café Louvre Circle, both made up of reporters in Vienna who covered Central Europe and the Balkans for newspapers in the United States and England.[1]  In fact, one reporter, Friedrich Scheu, who was part of both groups, attended her debut stage performance in Vienna on September 12, 1931 and afterwards co-hosted a party for her and others who staged the theater production.
Publicity Photo of Luise Rainer (www.icollector.com)

Scheu (1905-1985) was a Vienna native, the son of a well-known lawyer, Dr. Gustav Scheu (1875-1935), who served on the Vienna city council as a Social Democrat during the First Republic. His mother, Helene Scheu-Riesz (1880-1970), was a writer who had considerable success with her books for children and as a publisher.[2] This liberal Jewish family lived in the Hietzing district (13th) of Vienna where they had a house designed for them by Alfred Loos in 1912. It was called Haus Scheu [3] At this house, Frau Scheu-Riesz hosted a salon that was visited by many famous Viennese such as Loos, Oskar Kokoschka and Alban Berg. The house at Larochegasse 3, which still stands, was known as the “Haus der Begegnung” (house of encounters).[4]

In his book, Der Weg ins Ungewisse: Österreichs Schicksalskurve 1929-1936 (The Way into the Uncertain: The Arc of Austria’s Fate), Scheu wrote the following about his first encounter with Luise Rainer:

"On the evening of September 12, 1931, there occurred an event of interest to Vienna: the first night of a play by the German playwright Fritz von Unruh at the Volkstheater. The piece was named “Phäa” and it addressed in an ironic form the fate of a bit movie actress who wanted to become a star. The actress in the main role has to climb into a lion’s cage, and a key moment in the piece lies in the instructions that the film director gives to the camera crew: “If the lion, God forbid, should eat the young lady, don’t stop filming!” The play was a satire on the inhumanity of the film industry.
Coincidentally the play brought a small, unknown actress from Düsseldorf to Vienna soil for the first time. Her name was Louise [sic] Rainer and the premiere in Vienna was for her the opening of a fairy tale film career in Hollywood.[5] The role that she played in Unruh’s piece had many parallels to her own fate.
The director of the play, Fritz Peter Buch was acquainted with my parents and after the premiere we had a small celebration at the home of my parents on Laroche Gasse – Fritz von Unruh, Fritz Peter Buch, Louise Rainer, and Hans Schweikart, who played the lead male role. The celebration of the success of the premiere lasted into the early morning hours."[6]
The Scheu House, Designed by Alfred Loos in 1912
http://www.galinsky.com/buildings/scheu/scheu02.jpg

In 1931, at the time of this party for Rainer and her colleagues, Scheu was not only a lawyer working in his father’s firm, but also was the Vienna correspondent for the British Labor Party’s newspaper, the London Daily Herald. As a member of a prosperous and prominent family, he had been able to travel with his parents to the U.S. (1926) and England, where his mother had lived for a while. Also, he perfected his English when he spent 18 months in England on an exchange program. He had taken on the journalist position in 1929 and was one of the first members of the Anglo-American Press Association when it formed in 1930. 
Friedrick Scheu (photo from book cover)

Apparently Scheu was a well-liked member of the A-APA (he was elected its secretary in 1931), and he also spent time at the Café Louvre with the journalists who hung out there. Among his colleagues was Robert Best (1896-1952), the heart and soul of the Café Louvre Circle. Scheu described him as “one of my best friends."[7] There is some irony in that description because Best, a South Carolina native who wrote for the United Press news agency, stayed in Austria after the Anschluss and was in Germany during the war, from which he made propaganda broadcasts. His broadcasts were filled with anti-Semitic remarks; as mentioned earlier, Scheu was a Jew.[8] Best was convicted in 1948 by a U.S. court of treason.

Another of Scheu’s colleagues was John Gunther (1901-1970), who had arrived in Vienna in 1930 to write for the Chicago Daily News. Gunther was another acquaintance of Luise Rainer; in fact according to William Shirer, one of Gunther’s friends, his infatuation with her was a major source of tension in his marriage. Apparently in the 1930s, Rainer had many men in love with her and she paid no special attention to Gunther.[9] 

After Gunther left Vienna in 1935, he wrote a novel, a roman-à-clef, about his Vienna years in which he and his wife are the two main characters. It was scheduled to be published as Ring Around Vienna in Spring, 1938, but the publication was halted because of fear that a libel suit might be brought against the publisher: the book contained an unflattering portrayal of a character named James Drew who could clearly be identified as Robert Best. The book was finally published in 1964 as The Lost City. One of the major characters in the novel – Richardo Stein, a lawyer-journalist and zealous social democrat -- was clearly based on Friedrich Scheu. From Scheu’s depiction in the novel, it is clear that Gunther thought highly of him.[10]  Though the book’s lead character, Mason Jarrett (the ersatz Gunther), is good friends with a nightclub singer, the daughter of his landlord, and a young artist, he does not link up with beautiful young woman who becomes a Hollywood movie star.
John and Frances Gunther in 1929
(photo from Inside:
The Biography of John Gunther)

As described in Gunther’s novel, Scheu was not only a lawyer and journalist, but also an ardent socialist.. He had been active as a youngster in the Socialist youth movement. After the 1934 civil war, the Social Democratic party, outlawed by the Austro-fascist government, went underground, but covertly Scheu remained an active member of the party.  When someone tipped off the police that Scheu was reading outlawed newspapers and journals, he was arrested in January 1935, but he was released without imprisonment. The A-APA was active in efforts to get his release.

After his release, Scheu went to the American embassy to thank the ranking diplomat there, George Messersmith (1881 – 1960), for assistance in obtaining his release. (In fact, the Americans could do nothing to assist him because he was not an American citizen and reported only part time for an American press agency.) Messersmith mentioned his meeting with Scheu in a letter to one of his superiors:

"A few days ago a young Austrian lawyer here, Dr. Scheu, who on the side also reports for the Daily Herald in London and for the Federated Press at home, was detained by the police and his house searched. He is a young fellow about thirty, whose father is a prominent lawyer here with close connections with the United State. The young man is quite a Socialist, as is he family. As soon as he was arrested the Vice President of the Anglo-American Press Association here called me up and wanted me to do something. I told him that I could not until we knew what he was detained for, and then it was much a question whether I could even make the most informal enquiry, as he was an Austrian and his newspaper connection was principally with the Daily Herald, and that his American connection with the Federated Press was attenuated that I felt there was really nothing we could do…. He was in fact released on the afternoon of the same day.
George Messersmith, Dec. 2, 1946
http://content.time.com/time/covers/0,16641,19461202,00.html

"I took the opportunity of Scheu's call on me to talk to him, and I find that he is a Socialist of such an exaggerated type that he is more interested in there being a socialist government in Austria than in the maintenance of Austria….I found the young man one of these liberals who are so prejudiced they cannot even consider anyone else's point of view. I pointed out to him that anyone who held such strong view as he did had to consider very seriously as to whether he was not coloring his news with his prejudices, even when he was serving socialist papers. I gathered the impression that he considered himself more of an advocate than a reporter."[11]

When Germany invaded Austria in 1938, Scheu had to quickly escape the city and find a clever way to do so. He went to Prague, where his wife joined him; then to England. After some years, the parents were reunited with the child they had to leave behind in Vienna with this wife’s mother. Scheu spent the war years in England. After the war, he worked as a reporter for the Daily Herald. In 1954, he returned to Vienna to report on international affairs for the Arbeiterzeitung, the newspaper of the Social Democrats. He remained in that position until 1972. 

Scheu wrote several books that documented his times. His book Der Weg in Ungewisse is a memoir of the interwar years. It contains the best and most complete account of the A-APA and the Café Louvre Circle that is available, and it tells the story of his work as a correspondent and socialist activist in Vienna in the 1930s. [12]
Luise Rainer
http://www.theplace2.ru/photos/Luise-Rainer-md3751/pic-242377.html
Likely, Scheu included the information about the night of September 12, 1931 and his meeting with Luise Rainer in his memoir because who can forget their encounters with famous movie stars, especially one as attractive and talented as Luise Rainer.


Notes

 [1] Luise Rainer died on December 30, 2014. She was a German actress, who had great success in Vienna before she immigrated to the United States in 1935. The following year, she won an Oscar for Best Actress and she won the same award again in 1937.  Wikipedia has a nice biographical sketch of her life and career at this link: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luise_Rainer
For an excellent obituary, with clips from several of her movies, see http://www.theguardian.com/film/2014/dec/30/luise-rainer

I have a research interest in foreign correspondents in Vienna during the inter-war period. Here are some links to other things I have written on the topic.

Vienna’s Café Louvre in the 1920-1930s: Meeting Place for Foreign Correspondents

Marcel W Fodor: Foreign Correspondent

A Great Night at Cafe Louvre in Vienna (February 2012)

John and Frances Gunther Celebrate the New Year, Vienna, December 31, 1930 (January 2013)


[2] She immigrated to the United States in 1935. For more information on Helene Scheu-Riesz, see these links:



http://sophie.byu.edu/node/3299  (several columns she wrote for the Neue Freie Presse can be found here)


Some information (in German) on Gustav Scheu is available at this link:  http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gustav_Scheu

Gustav, Helene, Friedrich and his wife Herta are all buried in a family plot at Feuerhalle Simmering, a cemetery located beside Vienna’s first crematorium.


[4] Austrian Radio Network (ÖRF) interview with Friedrich Scheu on January 5, 1977. It can be heard at this link:  http://www.mediathek.at/atom/017829D2-2C2-008F5-00000BEC-01772EE2

[5] (Although the name “Louise” is used in the text, the correct first name Luise is in the index.

[6] See  Friedrich Scheu.1972. Der Weg ins Ungewisse: Österreichs Schicksalskurve 1929-1938. Verlag Fritz Molden. P. 92. (I translated the paragraphs from German.)

Fritz von Unruh (1885-1970] was the son of a German army general and also served as an army officer until 1912. He left the military to pursue a writing career. Much of his writings were anti-war and could be calledexpressionist. He was a staunch opponent of the Nazis, and left Germany in 1932 after Hitler seized power. He was for many years a refugee in the United States. He returned to Germany in 1962.

Fritz Peter Buch (1894-1964) was a director for Max Reinhardt’s Deutsche Theater in Berlin. Buch later directed propaganda files for the Nazis after they gained power in Germany.

Hans Schweikart (1895 – 1975) was a successful actor, film director, and screenwriter.  He directed 26 films between 1938 and 1968. According to the William Grange in his Historical Directory of German Theater, Schweikart during the Third Reich, Schweikart “had been a much-favored director and playwright under Goebbels, but his reputation survived.” See http://www.hans-schweikart.de/

[7] Scheu interview (see note 4)

The Cafe Louvre Circle was an informal one that came into being over time. Best did his work at the Café Louvre and it became a place for journalist to get together informally to find out what had been going on in Central Europe and the Balkans. It was located just a few steps away from telegraph and telephone services. (See https://www.scribd.com/doc/81223692/Vienna-s-Cafe-Louvre-in-the-1920s-1930s-Meeting-Place-for-Foreign-Correspondents )

The Austrian Anglo-American Press Association was created in 1930, soon after the arrival of John Gunther and Whit Burnett from their posts in Paris. It was modeled on the Anglo-American press association in Paris.  

[8] John Carver Edwards. 1982. Bob Best Considered: An Expatriate's Long Road to Treason.
North Dakota Quarterly , 50(1), Winter, pp. 73-90

[9] John Cuthbertson. 1992. Inside: The Biography of John Gunther. Bonus Books. "He fell for her to an extent that I don't think Frances [Gunther's wife] was pleased. John had a roving eye and liked to flirt." Rainer later recalled: "He was tall, husky, and blond. He was, of course, very bright and had a great sense of humor. I thought he was a terribly nice fellow... However, I must say something simply and brusquely: I was never in love with him, or anything of that kind."

[10] John Gunther. 1964. The Lost City. Harper & Row.  In his novel, Gunther built much of the plot around important events in Austria from 1930 to 1934. His characters, based on his journalist colleagues in Vienna, kept the personality and some background of each person, but changed many of the details and fictionalized many of their actions. For example, in the novel, Richardo Stein was a Viennese lawyer as well as a journalist and was a committed social democrat (both of which Scheu was). He also flew his own airplane (Scheu did not) and was killed during the 1934 civil war (Scheu was not).

[11] The letter is from G.S. Messersmith to J. Pierrepont Moffet, U.S. Department of State, dated January 19, 1935. It can be downloaded from this site:  http://udspace.udel.edu/handle/19716/6438, p. 8

[12]  His books include: Ein Band der Freundschaft: Schwarzwald-Kreis und Entstehung der Vereinigung Sozialistischer Mittelschuler. 1985; “Humor als Waffe”: Politishen Kaberett in der Ersten Republic. 1977; Die Emigrationspresse der Sozialisten: 1938-1945. 1969; The Early Days of the Anglo-Austrian Society. 1969; and Die Englische Arbeiterregierung, 1949. One book is in English: English Labor and the Beveridge Plan, 1943. This book was published by the Island Press, which was an American publishing house owned by his mother.