The Weekly Vista

Reflection­s on my column

- DAVID WILSON

It is a great privilege to write in this space each week. Beginning in May 2016, the editors welcomed my submission­s and, since then, they have published more than 120 installmen­ts of this column.

I’m extremely grateful to them for that, and I am very grateful to you for reading each week.

If you have followed along regularly, you know that we have examined history, sports, education, nostalgia, smalltown values and matters of faith.

At this time, I have other writing endeavors and other obligation­s, and that means I cannot continue to provide a column in the newspaper each week.

The editors are very gracious and flexible and have indicated they would welcome some columns from me in the future, even if it isn’t every week.

In the coming weeks, we hope to collaborat­e so that we can commemorat­e the 100th birthday of Billy Graham, which is coming up in November, and also do something to reflect upon the 100th anniversar­y of the end of World War I, which is also coming in November.

Any submission­s after that would be much like those you have seen before, dealing with a number of different topics.

For instance, it is now the 70th anniversar­y of the toy known as electric football. I was not aware that the game had been around that long, but it has. It was in use before I came along, and it was something that both of my sons enjoyed while growing up.

It’s a game that has literally been enjoyed by two or three generation­s.

If you aren’t familiar with electric football, how both young and old have enjoyed it for decades and how a person can collect any number of profession­al teams to use in the game, then it would probably be a good topic to explore in a column such as this.

Another possible topic would be a look back about 50 years ago in the world of sports. On Oct. 19, 1968, the Razorbacks went to Austin, Texas, to battle the Longhorns in football but came up short in a 39-29 decision. Arkansas traditiona­lly had trouble defeating Texas, and the 1968 game was no exception. The Hogs took an early lead but then fell behind when everything went the Longhorns’ way.

Arkansas Gazette sports editor Orville Henry described how the game got away from the Razorbacks, writing, “…the Steers then ran off 36 straight points over a period of 19 minutes in the middle periods.”

Arkansas, however, rallied in the closing quarter to make the final score more respectabl­e.

And still another topic could be the insights in books by pastor and author Ken Boa of Atlanta. You might like his book, “Rewriting Your Broken Story,” or the one entitled “Life in the Presence of God.”

In the latter, Boa wrote that it is important to always strive to make progress in life and in one’s faith.

“We’re never supposed to plateau, spirituall­y,” he wrote, “never retire from growth and learning, even in old age.”

I’ll miss this weekly experience, but I will still be engaged in various writing projects, including articles on my website at DWilsonNot­es.com.

Having said that, however, I remain a big fan of community newspapers, especially the paper versions that you can fold up.

Some say the paper format of newspapers is going away, but I certainly hope not. I still prefer reading those the old-fashioned way, sitting in my recliner.

In my heart, I will always be a respecter of journalist­ic endeavors, and I’ll

always be a teacher and a writer. And I’ll always be an

Arkansan.

Those things tend to come out in my writing, as I’m sure you’ve noticed.

Thanks for reading.

David Wilson, Ed.D., of Springdale, is a former high school principal and is the communicat­ions director for the Transit and Parking Department at the University of Arkansas. He has other articles online at DWilsonNot­es. com. Opinions expressed are those of the author.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States