The Virginian-Pilot
                             THE VIRGINIAN-PILOT 
              Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc.

DATE: Wednesday, August 16, 1995             TAG: 9508160459
SECTION: LOCAL                    PAGE: B7   EDITION: FINAL 
SOURCE: BY ROBERT LITTLE, STAFF WRITER 
DATELINE: RICHMOND                           LENGTH: Medium:   78 lines

QUIET CROWD AT CEREMONY PAYS ITS RESPECTS TO ASHE

There were no ``demonstrations, uproarious in nature,'' to quote the nation's first elected black governor.

No apparent belittling of Virginia heritage, as a man waving the stars and bars predicted.

A few hundred people gathered Tuesday along the city's famed Monument Avenue to pay respect to Arthur Ashe, the tennis star, humanitarian and Richmond native whose statue will punctuate the street built to honor Robert E. Lee, J.E.B. Stuart, Stonewall Jackson and other heroes of the Confederate South.

But Richmond did more than simply break ground for the statue of a black man on the City of Monuments' showpiece boulevard. In a place perhaps known best for its Civil War past and its history of racism, city leaders decided neither is more important than the other.

Tuesday on Monument Avenue, Richmond looked more like a city of the New South. And still, it promised to remember the old days.

``Some say that Arthur Ashe doesn't deserve to be here, some say he deserves better,'' said former Gov. L. Douglas Wilder, a stain of sweat on his collar and a grin on his face.

``That battle is over, and we're breaking new ground now. We are here to learn from our history, not to escape from it.''

In the national spotlight, the city struggled for months to decide how best to honor Ashe. Some blacks said he was too great a man to stand with the generals who fought for racism and separation. Some whites called it insulting to let modern-day politics make a statement about the past.

Tuesday's ceremony was notably Richmond-esque: Hot and humid. Steeped in history. Seersucker suits, fancy hats and Confederate flags waving in the background.

Behind the stage erected for the occasion, a dozen or more men wore Confederate uniforms, held Confederate flags or otherwise paid their own homage. Others held signs promising ``The South will Rise Again.'' The protesters were quiet for the most part, and they took care to position themselves and their flags in a direct line with the TV cameras that faced the microphone.

Ron Doggett, host of what he calls an ``unapologetically pro-white'' local access cable TV show, ``Race and Reality,'' weathered a few jeers from the crowd. One woman blamed him for racial violence in the city. ``Richmond is belittled by violence, and it's not done by people wearing Confederate flags,'' he responded.

But Tuesday's ceremony was reverent, the protests mostly distant and respectful. George D. Canavos, a 35-year-old counselor from Glen Allen, hand-wrote ``Let Arthur Rest in Peace'' on a cardboard shell and held it aloft with a yardstick. He had heard there might be protests, and came hoping to head them off.

``He stood for more than just sports: He was a dignified man I could look up to,'' Canavos said. ``We don't have too many heroes these days. We should all see that this is a good thing, not bad.''

Rev. Michael Johnson, a minister at the Sixth Baptist Church in Richmond's West End, came to the ceremony with 30 children from the church summer camp.

Normally, the grade-school kids would be in classes and workshops on a Tuesday morning. But the ground breaking, Johnson said, will teach them more.

As Johnson talked to two newspaper reporters, the gaggle of young children bubbled around him as if he were the ice cream man. The monument will cast a similar scene: Ashe holding a book and a tennis racket, surrounded by children looking up.

``What do you know about Arthur Ashe?'' Johnson asked the kids. They responded with a collective stare toward the ground. Johnson laughed and put each hand on a young shoulder.

``They'll learn,'' he said. ``We'll teach them how much he means to the city. Especially now, they'll learn.'' ILLUSTRATION: Photo

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Sculptor Paul Di Pasquale and Lorene Ashe, aunt of the late tennis

geat Arthur Ashe, take shovels and break ground on Richmond's

Monument Avenue Tuesday for a statue honoring Ashe.

by CNB