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Distinguished
Guest Series Lecture
University of North Texas
9/29/05
The speech was held in a ballroom on the UNT
campus. There were maybe about 250 people
there. The first 4 rows were roped off for
"VIPs" (chancellors, university muckety-mucks
and a small contingent from Uncertain). We
sat 2 rows behind that right in front of the
podium.
Don was first introduced by the UNT student
body president who had hair the color of
Opie's. He made some general remarks and
then let
Senator Bob Deuell talk about some of
the legislative work he's done on behalf of
Caddo. Senator Deuell made some funny
remarks about how he attended UNT at the
same time Don did. The Senator was a music
major studying percussion and Don was an
English major. Now Don is a famous drummer
and the Senator still has trouble with
English. He also said that his wife was
probably the only one there to see him
instead of Don. Don then took the podium.
Don was wearing a black suit, white shirt
and a dark blue (almost sapphire) tie that
we're not sure worked with the black. He
also had a pair of glasses that he didn't
wear once. He merely gestured with them and
waved them about all night long. We
particularly enjoyed when he put them in his
mouth to clap for the other speakers.
Don gave some introductory thank-yous to the
assembled dignitaries. He talked about his
time at UNT and that the music theory class
there was the only F he ever received.
He mentioned where his campus apartments
were and that he found one and couldn't find
the other. Apparently, Don lived with
roommates the first year at UNT and then,
"....roommates being what they are" Don
lived alone the next year.
Don talked about how much he enjoyed being
at UNT. He had spent a few years at Stephen
F. Austin University were everyone was
either an agribusiness or forestry major and
Don was a freak because his hair touched his
ears. He mentioned some of his favorite
professors including his Shakespeare
professor who "...now lives in Arizona and
still chain smokes". She also writes very
long, very elegant and funny letters.
Don then asked everyone who had been to the
lake. About half the people raised their
hands. He seemed surprised. He said that he
had brought an audio-visual aid (we had been
hoping for a PowerPoint), but it was only a
short film. Don said he'd be in the back,
"...adjusting the volume...that's what I
do".
The film was really nice and featured some
local Caddo characters. Don also appeared in
the film looking like the scary mountain man
picture. He talked about how his dad had
taken him fishing and that he had recently
taken his son fishing there for the first
time and felt a real bond.
After the film was over, Don came back onto
the podium (everyone had left it so that
according to Don, "...our big heads won't be
in the way"). Don was surprised that nobody
else came back onto the podium. "I'm all
alone up here...where's the band?"
Don told us that his speech would be 2
parts. One would be "anecdotal" and the
other would be technical and contain lots of
acronyms (Don hates acronyms). He gave us
all permission to go to Starbucks during
that part.
During the anecdotal part of the speech he
mentioned going to Caddo when he was 8 and
not realizing it's historical importance. He
mentioned that even Elvis had been to Caddo
and that someone in Shreveport gave him a
photo of Elvis leaning up against a tree at
Caddo Lake State Park. He said that he
couldn't believe that Elvis' daughter would
grow up to record one of his songs (and not
very well). Don then asked them to not put
it in the paper because she's a good girl
who just needs some guidance. As an aside,
Don said that maybe Tom Cruise could provide
the guidance. He cracked himself up with
that one.
Don then talked about getting involved with
the lake. When he was living in California,
he kept getting phone calls from his friends
in East Texas asking him to help. That's how
he got involved.
Some of the things mentioned during the
technical part of the speech were:
The RAMSAR designation as a wetland of
international importance and how getting
that designation helps them collect
important scientific data. Despite the fact
that politicians (including the president)
don't seem to like scientific facts, they've
found that a clearinghouse of information is
essential to getting things done.
Don talked about forming local collaborative
groups to monitor water and identify
problems. It's a model that really works
although collaboration is not always a
panacea. Don said he knows this very well
because, "...I'm in a band".
Don talked about how the main pollutant to
the lake was air pollution and how if local
power plants would make the very inexpensive
shift from coal burning to natural gas
things would be much better.
Don wondered why Texas, whose main economic
source of income is tourism, would rather
support polluting businesses instead of
clean, recreational activities.
Don talked about the nitrogen in the lake
and how water lilies can be a bad thing.
He mentioned that he has to go to Washington
D.C. on Monday to talk to Senator Hutchinson
about something, but that was a story for
another day.
Don talked about the fact that if countries
like Iran can be part of an international
organization to help their wetlands (yes,
Iran has wetlands) that even Texas could do
it.
See, we were paying attention!
Don really took his mission to inform
students about the lake seriously.
Throughout the speech he was jovial, cracked
lots of jokes and was great to just sit and
listen to. |
These Photos Are From
Jess
Jess's Story
this was my first time to get to see
Don in person. I haven't been to an Eagles concert or
a Henley solo concert so this was really exciting for
me. I also mentioned to you that I went with a good
friend of mine, or rather I made her go with me. She
likes some Henley and Eagles songs but she's not crazy
about them like I am. She had promised me a long time
ago that if I ever got to see Don that she would be
right there with me, she just didn't know the first
time I would get to see him he would be giving a
speech. I didn't know either but I have had a couple
of chances to see him in concert and both of them
ended up getting canceled s o once a friend told me he
was going to be giving a lecture at Denton (which is
only two hours away from where I live) I knew I had to
make this one happen.
I didn't think he would be signing autographs
afterwards but I brought my record albums just in
case. After the lecture was over we waited in line
with Dana and her friend and my heart was beating
faster and faster as we got closer. I was glad to see
that he was allowing people to take pictures so I got
my digital camera ready. When I first saw him up close
there were two ladys taking a picture with him and one
of them kissed him on the cheek as the picture was
taken. Don just smiled and said "That'll cost extra."
Everyone laughed and got a kick out of that. After
about 15 minutes we were finally next in line. Dana's
friend went first and then Dana. They both talked to
him for a bit but I didn't hear what they talked
about, I think by that time I was in too much of a
daze. Now I was next.
Now I'm only 21 yrs. old but that had to have been the
greatest moment in my life so far!!!:) I was so
nervous. I didn't know what to say. I just gave him my
albums to sign and he said "You look too young to have
these, where did you get them?" I told him I got them
at a record store in Oklahoma City then he asked me
how much I paid for them and the first thing that came
out of my mouth was "I don't remember" and I knew how
much I paid for them but like I said I was really
nervous. I just felt like such a dork afterwards. I
should have better prepared myself. I had always told
myself that whenever or wherever I got to meet him I
would be sure to look at his beautiful baby blues but
I just completely forgot about it. Hopefully I'll have
another chance to see him and I won't be such a dork.
But for now I have some great pictures and autographs
to remember that wonderful day. My friend went after
me and she got her ticket signed for h er mom. He
asked her where her mom was and she told him that she
was at home preparing for a tribal meeting the next
day. Then she said the magic words "I'm Caddo." That
really got his attention. He started asking her
questions about the tribal meetings and wrote down a
website for her to go to. We must have held up the
line for at least 10 minutes then he frantically began
to look for someone he called V.A. He asked us to hang
out for a bit. Of course we said yes and his assistant
began to take down all of my friends information and
proceeded to tell her about some upcoming events that
involve the Caddo tribe and Caddo Lake. All
information was exchanged and as we were about to
leave he asked us if we got all the information and
told us "Thank you for coming this evening." I
couldn't believe that happened. The one person who
really didn't even care to be there got the hook up.
Now I'm full blood Indian but I'm not Caddo. This had
to have been the onl y time in my life where I
actually said the words "Why couldn't I have been
Caddo?":(
I don't remember if I told you about this but his
people already called my friend the following morning.
They gave her more info about some meetings and they
told her "Mr. Henley would like to thank you for
attending and was happy that someone was there to
actually hear his speech and not just for an
autograph." She told me "I wasn't there for either of
those." Go figure. I'm still so jealous of her.
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Article
from the Daily Texan Student Newspaper
In a
far cry from the usual setting of a rock musician,
former Eagles drummer Don Henley spoke about the
environment and his work for Caddo Lake, the only
natural lake in Texas, Thursday night at the Gateway
Center.
David Hall, Richardson junior and president of the
Student Government Association, began the lecture by
introducing state Senator Bob Deuell, R-Greenville to a
round of applause.
“It really is good to be back here at North Texas”,
Deuell said.
Deuell was a freshman music student at NT in the late
’60s when he knew Henley, who was an English student at
the time.
“Don got real successful with the music and I’m still
learning English,” he said, joking.
Deuell said he had already promised Henley he would help
save Caddo Lake, even though it is not in his district.
“What the Caddo Lake Institute has let me do as a
senator is that I can go and use environmental facts and
sound science and use it in legislation,” he said.
Deuell said he was part of a non-partisan group of
senators who proposed Senate Bill 3 to the Senate in
Washington, D.C. to stop construction at Caddo Lake.
That bill did not pass.
Henley took the podium and spoke in a low-key and gruff
manner before showing a 12–minute video excerpt from a
documentary being filmed at Caddo Lake.
The video highlighted the history and creation of Caddo
Lake in eastern Texas, when water from an adjacent basin
spilled over and formed the lake.
The lake is called “Caddo,” because the Kadohdacho
American Indians inhabited the watershed for roughly
“1000 years before the arrival of Fernando DeSoto,”
Henley said.
Henley reminisced about his days as a child in the ’50s,
growing up in Linden, near Caddo Lake, in eastern Texas.
“I remember the first time I saw a bass fish come out of
the murky depths...my eyes were like saucer plates, and
my heart was beating in my frail chest,” he said.
Henley said his fishing trips with his father formed his
ideas about the environment and his work with Caddo
Lake.
Henley went to NT from the fall of 1967 to the spring of
1969 and said his time here further shaped his
“conversion” to environmentalism.
“I had a good academic experience here, with the
exception of the music theory class I failed,” he said,
laughing.
He said reading writers steeped in nature, such as Henry
David Thoreau helped him become environmentally aware.
Henley said the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers began
building levees and canals to use the Caddo Lake area
for commercial shipping in 1990.
Henley founded the Caddo Lake Scholars Program with the
help of the former Governor Ann Richards, D-Texas in
1992. Soon after, they convinced budget appropriators in
Washington D.C. to halt the Army project at Caddo Lake.
“We know … that once we get one thing stopped, another
comes along,” he said.
Henley said business magnates in Marshall, near the
lake, are attempting to build an industrial park near a
biological refuge for animals at Caddo Lake.
“I would like to speak more on that but there is ongoing
litigation,” Henley said.
He said he constantly travels to Austin and Washington
D.C., working with state senators and representatives to
stop the construction.
It is difficult because Caddo Lake resides in Texas and
Louisiana and has “at least four agencies in each state
with jurisdiction there, not to mention the federal
level,” he said.
In addition, he said the Caddo Lake Institute is helping
educate residents there about the scientific details of
the watershed’s activity.
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