Coyne Babbles on TV about Christmas in the Peace Corps

Doug Kiker was from Griffin, Georgia and had early success as a short story writer while still an English major at Presbyterian College in Clinton, South Carolina. There’s a story about how he wanted to get published and he picked up Martha Foley’s short stories collection, went to the rear of the book and found the list of keiker-d-2short-story publishers, closed his eyes and punched in the dark. He hit the Yale Review, to which he promptly submitted a short story. And they accepted his story.

While still in college he worked as a reporter, covering the Senate race between Strom Thurmond and Olin Johnston. After college he joined the navy and was commissioned an Ensign, serving in Korean War. Discharged, he returned to Atlanta and worked at the Atlanta Journal and covered the first sit-ins at lunch counters in North Carolina. Out of that experience came his 1957 novel, The Southerner, the story of an African-American educator who goes from North to South to participate in integration. The book was a success not only in the United States but in England and Germany. He published next the novel Strangers on the Shore, about life in the peacetime Navy in 1959.

In June of ’61 he became the Washington correspondent for the Atlanta Journal, and like many others, he got caught up in the excitement of the new Peace Corps. He left the Atlanta Journal less than two months after he arrived in Washington to handle Peace Corps publicity and liaison with newspapers and magazines. Like most of the early staff of the Peace Corps, he was young, only 32, when he took over the job. But he didn’t last long.

When I met him–in December of ’64–he was already gone from the Peace Corps and was working for the New York Herald Tribune. He also had a television program on the new education channel in D.C. which was then broadcasted from a tiny studio on the campus of American University.

I had just gone to work (that September) for the Peace Corps as the African Liaison Officer in what was then called the Division of Volunteer Support. [A division that no longer exists.] The Press Office was looking for RPCVs to go on Kiker’s show and talk about Christmas in the Peace Corps. Three of us, as I recall, were drafted and we took a taxi from 806 Connecticut Avenue up to American University where the PBS studio was located in the basement of a campus building.

I had a college job working on a radio station and was familiar with the seat-of-the-pants production such at this one at AU. Kiker chatted briefly with us, mainly to get a ‘hook’ on where were we had been last Christmas. I told him about singing carols for Selassie and his eyes brightened.

When we went to the video tape, he screwed up his introduction and from high up in the booth he was told he only had one more tape [remember this was early PBS broadcasting] so he started over and went back to his scripted opening, then to the other RPCVs (if I recall Peggy Anderson of Togo was one of us) and he worked around to me and said with great enthusiasm “Well, John, I bet you’re going to tell me that you sang for Haile Selassie!”

That caught me a little flat footed and I mumbled yes and began to talk and talk, filling more air than Doug might ever have wanted. When I saw his eyes flash, I summed up almost in mid-sentence. Both of us were clearly new to this television game. And Kiker to his credit was no Chris Matthews.

Leaving the studio, he was still upset at my babbling, and asked in controlled southern rage, “how in the world did you get into the Peace Corps, Coyne?”

I thought about that for a second, then replied with true innocence, “I applied.”

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  • I remember my Christmases in Jimma, Ethiopia, where we had a tree from the local forest, decorated with paper decorations and strings of popcorn (and I can tell you it takes a lot of time to string enough popcorn to loop it around a tree a few times). We had small gifts we exchanged among volunteers, but the most fun was giving gifts to the people who helped around our house and to the students we supported.

    Great story, John.

  • From your Kiker debut in the basement at American University in 1961 radio station WAMU 88.5 became the leading public radio station for NPR news and information with a national audience of 2.2 million daily . In 1961 the University hosted 500 student leaders from colleges across the country to endorse the Peace Corps. The group was addressed by Sarge Shriver. AU remains one of top ranked contributors of volunteers, and the AU library hosts the Colombia and National PC Council archives.

    Colombia (1961-1963)
    AU Board (2010-2011)

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