The Homewood Star
TheHomewoodStar.com
July 2014 •
Volume 4 | Issue 4 | July 2014
Open for business
neighborly news & entertainment for Homewood
Making waves of change
Find out what your neighbors are enjoying about the new community center and its pool. Read more inside.
Community page 16
Since the beginning
Former radio deejay and current o2ideas CEO Shelley Stewart now works with education initiatives through the Mattie C. Stewart Foundation. Here he stands in his Homewood office with memorabilia from his life journey. Photo by Sam Farmer.
By MADOLINE MARKHAM
Carolyn Rayford started teaching at Homewood High School when its doors opened in 1972. Learn about her story in this issue.
Feature page 20
INSIDE Sponsors ................. 4 City ........................... 5 Business .................. 7 Food .......................... 11 Community ............. 13 School House ......... 21 Sports ...................... 27 Calendar ................. 30 Opinion .................... 31
Shelley Stewart will tell you he is still doing the same thing he was doing 50 or 60 years ago — bringing people together to make the world a better place. Today, at age 80, that looks like running an advertising agency and an education-focused nonprofit organization. But
in the 1950s and ’60s, he was better known as on-air radio personality Shelley the Playboy. As a longtime deejay in Birmingham, Stewart provided commentary on what was happening in the city with the fight for civil rights. As his biography, Mattie C’s Boy: The Shelley Stewart Story, describes, he was riding on his popularity to
cloak his talk of what other media outlets were unwilling to report. On WENN-AM radio in 1963, Stewart updated listeners cryptically about times and locations for meetings and rallies. His role would become critical in the middle of that year. “Children were saying, ‘We want our freedom,’ and adults were
saying, ‘We are afraid,’” Stewart recalled in a recent interview. With that in mind, Stewart worked with other leaders of the movement to go a new route. In May, Stewart and other radio personalities invited high school student leaders to lunch at the
See STEWART | page 29
Treasure finders Annual church rummage sale to return July 4 By MADOLINE MARKHAM
Pre-Sort Standard U.S. Postage PAID Birmingham, AL Permit #656
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Each year Our Lady of Sorrows evolves into a sort of department store leading up to July 4. Once the church’s school lets out in May, shelves are installed throughout its gym, and volunteers start regular shifts to sort clothes, test electronics and organize books for the annual Trash ‘n’ Treasure rummage sale. Sale chairman Melanie Falconer said she has seen everything including, literally, the kitchen sink come in over the years — doors, a car, old windows, wedding dresses, pianos, ukuleles and an accordion.
See TREASURE | page 29
Stephanie Murdock and Mary Ann Dennis fold and sort clothes for the Trash ‘n’ Treasure sale July 4 at Our Lady of Sorrows. Photo by Madoline Markham.
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Give yourself a break, call the cleaning service most recommended to family and friends.
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