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Cover Feature News

The Man Behind the News

Reporters and editors, newspapers and newsmakers, judges and bad guys, politicians and prosecutors — they come and go in Memphis. Richard Fields endures.

For three decades, most of it as a civil rights lawyer, Fields has influenced the way Memphians hold elections, treat jail inmates, educate children, allocate property taxes, build public housing, sell cars, promote firemen, and run day-care centers.

Memphians like to talk about bridging the gap between the black and white communities. Ladies and gents, behold the human bridge.

He’s a 53-year-old, California-born-and-bred, Stanford-educated sole practitioner who lives alone (unless you count the pet rooster) in the historic Wright Carriage House in Victorian Village. His father was a winemaker. He’s partial to jeans, cowboy boots, and loud open-necked shirts. He sports a gray beard and a ponytail. He can speed-dial most of the important politicians, judges, civil rights figures, and reporters in Memphis. His fingerprints, not to mention his quotes, both attributed and unattributed, are all over scores of front-page stories. He was one of the first white men in Memphis to be legally married to a black woman. The marriage didn’t take. Neither did the next three.

In other words, about as typically Memphis as your average purple snow-capped mountain.

Shown a partial list of his cases over the years, Fields studies it for a moment, nods, and then puts it down with a shrug: “I know a lot of people in Memphis.”

Fields came here in 1969 to work for the Teacher Corps at Georgia Avenue Elementary, an inner-city school. It was the year after Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated. Not a good time, for sure, but a time of opportunity just the same, with liberals, blacks, Jews, and women coming to the fore and making their marks (Fields was raised Lutheran).

“I never thought I’d be doing this when I graduated from college,” he says.

Two events were formative.

He married a black woman at St. Thomas Catholic Church, something taboo and even illegal in parts of the Old South. The marriage, he says, “gave me a different perspective than a lot of people.”

In the fall of 1969, to press their demands for representation on the all-white school board, black leaders organized “Black Mondays” demonstrations. More than 60,000 students and 600 teachers skipped school. The only white teacher was Richard Fields. The only principal was Willie Herenton.

It proved to be a good career move for both of them. Herenton rose through the ranks to become superintendent, with the support of the Memphis NAACP. Fields left teaching for law school at the University of Tennessee, then returned to Memphis in 1976 to work in an integrated civil rights law firm with the late Marvin Ratner and Russell Sugarmon. He immediately went to work on high-profile school desegregation cases, one of which involved Shelby County and is still very much alive today.

Jimmy Carter was elected president that year. One of the things he did was appoint more black judges than his predecessors had. Blacks were still in the minority in Memphis, but by 1980 they had won some judgeships, school board seats, and the superintendent’s job. It was a good time and place for a young civil rights lawyer to start his career.

Through thick and thin, Fields hitched his wagon to Herenton’s star. They did not always agree. Fields was the unbending idealist. Herenton was the embattled pragmatist. One thing they split on was busing.

“When I was superintendent, I did not want segregated schools, but we reached a point where in my opinion busing had run its course,” recalls Herenton. “My position was, ‘Gentlemen, let’s call a truce. Busing has not worked.’ Richard was adamant that I was trying to return the public schools to segregation.”

Fields stood by him as friend and personal attorney when Herenton weathered a scandal involving a relationship with a former teacher, Mahnaz Bahrmand. When Herenton ran for mayor in 1991, Fields and Dr. Harry Moore, a liberal preacher, were the only two prominent whites to publicly support him. Herenton’s 142-vote margin and 49 percent of the vote would have thrown him into a runoff but for a landmark federal court lawsuit pressed by Fields, the NAACP, and others and resolved that year.

“Dr. Herenton,” he says, “has been absolutely a godsend to Memphis.”

And to Richard Fields. Backing Willie Herenton in 1991 was a little like buying stock in AOL at $10 a share. Herenton has been mayor for 10 years and counting and shows no signs of giving up the job. Fields has been there to hold his coat. He has been, at various times, the mayor’s personal lawyer, political adviser, schools liason, and spin-master on issues ranging from the 1999 mayoral election to the controversial firing of a police lieutenant to the proposed NBA arena.

“I give him advice when he seeks it,” says Fields.

Fields’ law practice, meanwhile, has ranged far and wide.

“My theory of law,” he says, “is do as many cases as you can that involve the broadest impact.”

What sets him apart from other busy lawyers is not only the nature of his cases but also his media connections, particularly with The Commercial Appeal and this newspaper. It would be nearly impossible to have been a beat reporter in Memphis over the past 25 years without crossing paths with Fields in the state or federal courts or at the city or county school board. Approachable and savvy, he is often a source for newspaper reporters and helps “spin” or influence their stories. What appears to be reportorial research is sometimes, on closer inspection, a repackaging of Fields’ research, briefs, depositions, or the comments of his clients or associates.

In newspaper terminology, he can set the agenda, often by merely filing a lawsuit. For example, “Fired officer sues for $6 million” was the headline for a front-page story in The Commercial Appeal on Harold Hays and the sheriff’s department in 1996. Typically, the party being sued, the sheriff’s department in this case, declined comment. The attention-grabbing $6 million figure, as is often the case in such lawsuits, was mainly window dressing; the lawsuit was settled for $650,000.

“I certainly don’t control the media,” says Fields. “I think I have credibility with the media, but that is partly the nature of the cases.”

A computer search of stories about Richard Fields turned up over 200 articles from The Commercial Appeal over the last decade, which is as far back as such searches go for that newspaper. The majority of them ran on the front page or the front of the Metro page. Some led to whole series. A partial list (see “Richard Fields’ Greatest Hits,” page 19): sales practices at Covington Pike Toyota, Cherokee Day Care, the Shelby County Jail, school desegregation, and corruption in the sheriff’s department. Some of the reporters who used to write about him are now the editors who make the decisions about where the stories run, including the CA’s Metro editor Charles Bernsen and deputy managing editor Otis Sanford.

In The Memphis Flyer, in the last year alone, Fields has been a key source for cover stories about the jail, foster children, and public housing.

A publicist who got a fraction of that attention for a client would be hailed as a genius. With local news increasingly displacing national and international news in newspapers and television newscasts, Fields highlights the uneasy working relationship between lawyers, who are hired advocates, and reporters, who are supposed to be objective. Each side gets something. Publicity can help a lawyer get business, especially if class-action status is sought, or pressure the other side to make a settlement, as in Fields’ lawsuit this year against Bud Davis Cadillac. The reporter gets a story with a crusading bent, news appeal, and gritty details that might have been mined by the reporter or might have been handed over by the lawyer.

Editors at The Commercial Appeal declined to comment for this story.

Sometimes Fields is on the side of the angels. He handled a case for low-income homeowners against former assessor Michael Hooks and won more than $3 million but took no fee. Other cases, however, have a distinct political angle, often against members of the Ford family, who happen to be the main rivals of Mayor Herenton.

In the Cherokee Day Care case, Fields said state senator John Ford conspired with operators to steer state funds to Cherokee. The case was hobbled by an unfavorable ruling in federal court, but there is a separate grand jury probe on similar issues. Fields himself was going to become a day-care broker consultant for Herenton, who had plans for the city to become the state’s day-care broker in Shelby County. The broker system was scrapped instead. As a lawyer, campaign adviser, and media contact, Fields did all he could to keep the story alive during the 1999 mayoral election when Herenton ran against Joe Ford.

Also during that campaign, Fields was wearing his “campaign attorney” hat when, in the words of The Commercial Appeal, he “drafted an official complaint” to the Shelby County Election Commission about certain actions of campaign workers for candidate Joe Ford. Sounds mighty serious. In plain language, Fields didn’t do squat. But this dog-bites-man fluff got prominent coverage that helped keep Ford on the defensive.

Fields’ favorite whipping boy is Sheriff A.C. Gilless and the Shelby County Jail. Since 1993 he has won seven settlements and judgments against the department totaling $2.43 million. He (and co-counsel in five of the cases) got about 30 percent of that. Another jail inmate suit seeking $20 million is pending. Gilless did not return calls seeking comment.

“I’m not a self-promoter, but certain exposure helps the public understand what kind of issues I deal with and what solutions I hope for,” Fields says. “I give the reporters facts and expect them to investigate fully.”

Not everyone does. This newspaper was burned recently when it failed to distinguish between monetary amounts sought and amounts actually paid in jail cases.

And not everyone likes what they see either. Even Herenton says, “A lot of my friends don’t understand my friendship with Richard because he irritates the hell out of them.” WREG-TV Channel 3 reporter Mike Matthews, a tough questioner of Herenton, is one reporter Fields won’t talk to because he thinks Matthews tries to embarrass the mayor.

Fields used Black Monday-style tactics against automobile dealers Bud Davis Cadillac and Covington Pike Toyota on behalf of black employees, or “our guys,” as he calls them. Kent Ritchey, general manager of Covington Pike Toyota, told The Commercial Appeal the picketing was aimed at “maximizing settlement opportunities.” Contacted by the Flyer, Ritchey declined to comment about Fields. Bud Davis also declined comment.

Fields says fair is fair. The car dealers, he says, launched their own “preemptive publicity” aimed at polishing their image. He does not plan to let up.

Last week Fields got a phone call as he posed for a picture for this story. The Covington Pike Toyota story had attracted some national interest. It seems Memphis might be getting a visit from Jesse Jackson. Fields tucked his cell phone back in his pocket and grinned.

You can e-mail John Branston at branston@memphismagazine.com.


Richard Fields’ Greatest Hits

Michael Hooks Sr.

Inequities in residential reappraisal, 1992-2001. “It was difficult because I had to sue Michael Hooks as assessor and I was friends with him. My clients were the poorest of the poor. Michael should have done it himself.”

Memphis Housing Authority, 1992-2001: “If there was ever a plantation system, MHA was it. They’re on the right track now, but basically they need to tear down all public housing and create mixed middle-income housing like what’s planned for Greenlaw and LeMoyne Gardens.”

Harold Hays (whistleblower in sheriff’s department), 1996-1999: “The best client I ever had and, ironically, the most establishment. His ethics were unquestionable.”

Mayoral election, 1991: “I was one of Dr. Herenton’s original white supporters and encouraged him to run. His comment was, ‘But I’m not a politician.’ I said, ‘That’s good.'”

Mayoral election, 1999: “I made sure the day-care issue got emphasized as a real scandal for this city.”

W.W. Herenton

Mahnaz Bahrmand, (former MCS teacher who sued then-Superintendent Herenton over a love affair), 1989: “Dr. Herenton came out of that with a true understanding of who his friends were and weren’t. Beyond that, it was private, and that’s all I’m going to say.”

Cherokee Day Care, 1999-2001: “An unbelievable scandal involving black entrepreneurs engaged in a corrupt scheme to the disadvantage of poor children and their parents.”

Tennessee foster children, 2000-2001: “One of the finest consent decrees I have seen in my life. It affects children most in need.”

School desegregation, 1976-2001: “As a former teacher with a master’s degree in education, I had to do those cases. Education is the most important issue in the city right now. Along with the Legal Defense Fund, I will continue to pursue the Shelby County school desegregation case which dates back to 1961.”

Memphis elections and local and state redistricting, 1991-1997: “I was the lawyer for the NAACP on the runoff provision in city elections. You know, I had forgotten about that one.”

John Ford

McKinney Truse (a low-income East Memphis neighborhood leveled for a Home Depot), 1987-1997: “A crowning moment in my career. We had to find 300 people all over the world and keep them together for 10 years. We won $9 million from Home Depot. Our fee was 9 percent over 10 years. We didn’t even make our hourly rate.”

Shelby County Jail, 1991-2001: “One of the true scandals of the Eighties and Nineties. Until Judge McCalla came along, no one was willing to deal with it in a systematic fashion, and nobody but Harold Hays was willing to speak out against the corruption in the sheriff’s department.”

Sales practices at Covington Pike Toyota, 2001: “It took guts for The Commercial Appeal to run that story about an advertiser.”

Categories
Music Music Features

local beat

I demand a recount. The non-attending B.B. King may have won Entertainer of the Year at last week’s W.C. Handy Awards — the definitive annual awards given by the blues industry — but for anyone who was actually at the ceremony Thursday night at The Orpheum it was pretty clear that soul-blues icon Bobby Rush was the real entertainer of the year. Rush’s roughly 20-minute set, which kicked off the second half of the show, was the night’s highlight. Ribald, funny, soulful, and flashy, Rush’s chitlin’ circuit stage show may not have been exactly dignified, but it presented blues as a living music more forcefully than any other performance at the Handys. With five “hoochie mamas” backing that azz up and a crack band featuring a brilliantly suave guitar player, Rush owned the night. They should have just canceled the rest of the awards and let him keep playing.

Unfortunately, that peak quickly devolved into the night’s low point, when Rush brought out Kentucky Headhunter guitarist Greg Martin for a deflating anticlimax to his set. No offense to Martin, but he was about a fourth as skilled and entertaining as Rush’s own house player, and to have Rush reduced to pimping for this great white savior (and trying to coax the crowd into a standing ovation that Rush himself and his great guitarist didn’t receive) was pretty much a travesty.

Outside of Rush’s set, the night belonged to Shemekia Copeland and B.B. King, who each took home the biggest awards but weren’t there to claim them, and Memphis’ younger generation of blues players. The North Mississippi Allstars won the Best New Artist Debut Award, with bassist Chris Chew accepting for the band, and International Blues Challenge winner and local club regular Richard Johnston delivered one of the night’s most memorable performances, winning over the large crowd with his one-man-band traditional blues. Other notable performances came from Corey Harris and Henry Butler, who did two songs from their great Vu-Du Menz album in a set that was slightly marred by sound problems, and Eddy “The Chief” Clearwater, who closed his brief set with the rousing Chuck Berry homage “I Wouldn’t Lay My Guitar Down.”

The night ended with Rufus Thomas and the great Ruth Brown giving the Entertainer of the Year Award, proving, as the Premier Player Awards did a couple of months ago, that Rufus Thomas plus a Memphis audience equals a standing ovation. And rightly so.

The complete list of winners: Blues Song of the Year: Rick Vito — “It’s 2 a.m.”; Blues Band of the Year: Taj Mahal & the Phantom Blues Band; Traditional Blues Album: Son Seals — Lettin’ Go; Acoustic Blues Album: Robert Lockwood Jr. — Delta Crossroads; Historical Album: Otis Spann — Last Call; Soul Male Artist of the Year: Little Milton; Comeback Blues Album: Mel Brown — Neck Bones & Caviar; Soul Blues Album: Irma Thomas — My Heart Is In Memphis; Blues Album of the Year: Shemekia Copeland — Wicked; Contemporary Male Artist: Eddy Clearwater; Traditional Female Artist: Koko Taylor; Acoustic Blues Artist: Keb’ Mo’; Blues Entertainer of the Year: B.B. King; Contemporary Blues Album: B.B. King/Eric Clapton — Riding with the King; Contemporary Female Artist: Shemekia Copeland; Soul Female Artist of the Year: Etta James; Traditional Male Artist: James Cotton; Best New Artist Debut: North Mississippi Allstars — Shake Hands With Shorty; Blues Instrumentalist Guitar: Duke Robillard; Blues Instrumentalist Harmonica: Charlie Musselwhite; Blues Instrumentalist Bass: Willie Kent; Blues Instrumentalist Drums: Chris Layton; Blues Instrumentalist Horns: Roomful Of Blues Horns; Blues Instrumentalist Keyboard: Pinetop Perkins; Blues Instrumentalist Other: Clarence “Gatemouth” Brown (fiddle).

You can e-mail Chris Herrington at herrington@memphisflyer.com.

Categories
Politics Politics Beat Blog

Trial Heats

The 2002 Tennessee gubernatorial race is shaping up as a dead heat, according to the Mason-Dixon polling organization — which, however, has so far only polled instances matching either of two Democratic candidates — ex-Nashville mayor Phil Bredesen, who is already announced, and Nashville congressman Bob Clement, whose candidacy is now a moot issue — vs. the likely Republican nominee, Rep. Van Hilleary of Tennessee’s 4th District.

Clement’s long-rumored announcement Tuesday afternoon that he would not be a candidate confirmed reports that the congressman had been able to recover from the announcement last month of Bredesen, who sewed up common sources of money and support.

Two other Democrats — former state party chairman Doug Horne of Knoxville and former state senator Andy Womack of Murfreesboro — were not included in the poll, although their candidacies seem all but certain.

A gubernatorial rundown:

The “Try-Harder” Candidate

Womack, a visitor to Memphis last week, plans to make his official announcement of candidacy for the 2002 Democratic gubernatorial nomination this week in Nashville.

The State Farm insurance agent and 12-year legislative veteran, who retired from the General Assembly just last year, can calculate the odds. He not only knows what the line is, he knows what his line is.

“I’ve just got to work at it a little harder,” he said Friday morning at a stop at The Peabody, making only a modest variation in the vintage phrase which Avis Car Rental used in its efforts to catch up with industry leader Hertz.

In Womack’s case, the presumed leaders are named Bredesen, Horne. An obvious underdog, Womack is nevertheless prepared to compete all the way to next year’s primary election date against his two well-heeled opponents.

Some of Womack’s backers insist their man can raise $2 million for a governor’s race — a sum that would seem both to tax the former legislator’s capacity and to be only a pittance compared to what multimillionaires Bredesen and Horne can come up with.

No matter.

“I’m prepared to wear out a lot of shoe leather,” Womack says. “I never have run in an election in which I wasn’t outspent.”

As the 55-year-old Womack discourses on such past experiences as being a platoon sergeant in Vietnam, when he not only faced enemy fire but worked closely with civilians in numerous friendly villages, it is clear he has confidence in both his leadership ability and his affinity for the grass roots.

“I’m not going to have the big lick contributors, but I’ll have lots of ordinary people, and that’s who I’m running for,” he says. “I think Tennesseans are tired of the same old names. They want to shift gears a little bit.”

Which is Womack’s way of acknowledging that he isn’t exactly a household name. He is well known to followers of the legislature, of course, having served for six years as chairman of the Senate Education Committee and having sponsored the 1992 Educational Improvement Act which effected the reforms called for by former Governor Ned McWherter.

Womack thinks it’s time for more focused attention on education, both at the K-12 and higher-ed levels, which is one reason why he’s running. He also thinks that, as someone familiar with the practices of the insurance industry, he is well equipped to pursue the overhaul which he thinks TennCare needs.

He professes concern that, in these two areas, and in that of taxation as well, state government has for too long followed a “laissez faire” logic.

“I think my experience in the legislature gives me a pretty good grounding in how to fix that,” he says. Unlike many in state government, he does not shy away from the prospect of making unpopular choices. On taxes, for example, he says, “We can’t afford to take anything off the table.” That means looking at both the sales tax and the income tax, each of which has evoked strong opposition.

“Mainly, though, what we’ve got to do is establish what we’re going to do in government, then determine how we’re going to pay for it,” says Womack, who has a good many specific proposals in mind — involving changes in TennCare’s underwriting basis, for example, or instituting “dual-institution” credit for high-schoolers taking college-level courses.

How much campaign money does the Try-Harder candidate have on hand right now?

Womack grins. “My mother told me never to tell how much money I make.”

At some point in the future, when he’ll have to ‘fess up in the form of financial disclosure statements, we’ll know, of course, and that will be some gauge of how serious Andy Womack’s chances are.

There’s no doubt, in the meantime, that his intentions are quite serious indeed.

Bredesen Touches All Bases

As reports first began to percolate that Clement, his presumed chief Democratic rival for the governorship, would announce his non-participation in the 2002 race, Bredesen came, saw, and conquered at a Democratic Party fund-raiser here last Tuesday night.

The fund-raiser, at the East Memphis home of former Shelby County Democratic chairman John Farris, was kept scrupulously neutral in the intra-party sense by both Farris and state Democratic chairman Bill Farmer, who also attended, but virtually everyone on hand privately professed support for Bredesen’s gubernatorial bid. Included were Farris himself, Memphis mayor Willie Herenton, and former Shelby County mayor Bill Morris.

The accessions of Herenton and Morris to Bredesen’s cause were especially interesting in that the Memphis mayor went through the entire 1994 gubernatorial campaign without endorsing Bredesen, then the Democratic standard-bearer, and Morris was the then Nashville mayor’s chief primary opponent that year.

Not only that, it is generally believed that political activists friendly to Bredesen made sure that Morris became the subject of investigative focus that year, resulting in his brief indictment on charges of improper use of county prisoners at his campaign events.

Although Morris was able to clear himself and to resume campaigning, his campaign suffered a loss of momentum which could not be recouped. Reminded of those circumstances Tuesday night, Morris said, “I’m not thinking of the past. I’m looking to the future.”

Herenton’s decision to back Bredesen not only contrasted with his reluctance to support his then mayoral counterpart in 1994, it was further evidence that he finds himself increasingly able to make common cause with his erstwhile political rival, former congressman Harold Ford Sr., who, in his turn, would meet with Bredesen last week and promise to support him as he had in 1994.

(Eight years ago the then congressman found Bredesen a handy medium through which to inflict some payback on Morris, who — Ford thought — had, early on, frozen him out of the Clinton-Gore campaign of 1992 and had shown a reluctance to give financial aid to the legal fund which helped Ford, ultimately with success, to acquit himself of federal charges of conspiracy and bank fraud.)

The Farris fund-raiser was only the latest Bredesen visit to Memphis over the past several weeks. Much of the previous weekend had been spent here as well — the candidate schmoozing with Herenton and other local dignitaries of the political and business worlds.

Bredesen had also touched bases, not only with former congressman Ford and his son and successor, U.S. rep. Harold Ford Jr., but with members of the family political organization. Former county party chair David Cocke, a longtime Ford ally, recalled Monday that he had received a friendly telephone call prior to Bredesen’s visit here last week, asking for Cocke’s support.

“He was making the same call to lots of other people, too,” Cocke said. “Nobody else was that active.”

Clement’s Departure

In the immediate wake of the Mason-Dixon poll, which showed him edging Hilleary by 38 to 37 percent — Rep. Clement managed a statement that sounded upbeat.

“I am encouraged by such positive numbers, in both favorability and support, particularly since my name has not been on a statewide ballot in 23 years,” Clement said. “These numbers are consistent with the very positive response I have received from Tennesseans from all regions and all walks of life during the past few months.”

But on Tuesday, just after noon, the Nashville congressman released a statement which said in part: “Since there appears to be no shortage of quality Democratic candidates for governor, I have decided that an expensive and divisive primary is not in the best interest of the Tennessee Democratic Party. I wish the best for all Democratic candidates for governor … I will be returning the money I raised for the Bob Clement for Governor Committee and will continue to focus my time and energy on serving the people of the 5th Congressional District and Tennessee.”

For the record, the Mason-Dixon poll had Bredesen doing marginally better than Clement against Hilleary — winning by 40 percent to 37 percent. And the poll’s match-up of the two Democrats, along with former Tennessee education commissioner and Board of Regents chairman Charles Smith, came out: Bredesen, 33 percent; Clement, 28 percent; Smith, 3 percent; and the rest undecided.

· Horne, meanwhile, made it clear that only Clement’s involvement in a gubernatorial race would keep him out. With the Nashville congressman now a dropout, Horne is sure to enter himself, as he insisted last week.

That set up the prospect of an inevitable Battle of Millionaires — an intensely fought one between Bredesen, a former health-care executive, and Horne, whose various interests run from publishing to trucking, but one kept free of rancor.

Farris noted last week that it was important for Bredesen (and presumably for Horne also) to raise significant grass-roots money for the race. “People don’t want to get the idea that anyone is trying to buy the office,” he said.

· Bartlett alderman Mike Jewell, who is head of the sheriff’s department prisoner-transfer unit, formally declared his candidacy for the Republican nomination for sheriff last Thursday night at the Bartlett Performing Arts Center on Appling Road.

Blaming the current administration for an unclear agenda and an undesirable “image” (though declining to criticize personalities by name or to cite specifics), Jewell pledged to restore public confidence if elected. ·

Breaking Out Of the Box

As the deliberations of the Tennessee General Assembly turned into what members hope is the home stretch, each of the legislature’s two chambers late last week appointed a 15-member committee. The two groups together constitute a joint conference committee and will attempt to resolve a budget impasse which, unless resolved, would threaten the state with a $1 billion deficit by next year.

Several Memphians are prominent in the effort.

State senator Jim Kyle (D-Frayser, Raleigh) was named chairman of the Senate contingent, which also includes Sen. John Ford (D-South Memphis).

The House group includes both Rep. Joe Kent (R-Southeast Memphis) and Speaker Pro Tem Lois DeBerry (D-South Central Memphis). · — JB

Categories
News News Feature

NBA SHOWS IN FORCE, SAYS LITTLE

The NBA brass took Memphis by storm Tuesday, taking tours of The Pyramid, Beale Street, the Civil Rights Museum, the Memphis Cook Convention Center, St. Jude Research Hospital, Peabody Place, and potential sites for the proposed NBA arena.

Included in the group were NBA Commissioner David Stern, NBA Deputy Commissioner Russ Granik, NBA Executive VP of Legal and Business Affairs Joel Litvin, NBA VP and General Counsel Rick Buchanan, NBA Senior VP Bob Criqui, and Joe Leccese, an NBA attorney with Proskauer Rose, LLP.

Also with the executives were members of the NBA Relocation Committee which included the owner of the Indian Pacers and Chairman of the Board for the NBA, Herb Simon, owner of the L.A. Lakers, Dr. Jerry Buss, Chairman/CEO of the Phoenix Suns, Jerry Colangelo, Chairman of the San Antonio Spurs, Peter Holt, and Co-Chairman and principal owner of the New Jersey Nets, Lewis Katz.

Though there were many meetings between the NBA officials and members of the city, county, and state governments, as well as both Mayors Herenton and Rout, most were handled as private meetings. Late in the day, Stern and Granik held a press conference at the Peabody hotel. However, the exercise proved to be less than informative, with the major players giving a good smile but otherwise keeping their cards close to their vests.

Good feelings were in abundance. “From my personal point of view,” Stern said, “this was very positive. The Pyramid is a fine temporary facility.”

In response to which aspects of the visit particularly impressed the commissioner, he said “Number one, we’ve seen the development downtown that has happened in the last couple of years — the ongoing developments and the planned developments. We’ve learned about the investments made in Memphis over the last several years and the increase every year which seems to set a record each time. [Second] is the enthusiasm of various folks that we have met with. I don’t know if I can say that I have seen any more of an engaged population.”

However, Stern was also quick to point out that the deal is not yet done. “We just want to make sure that the critical path is laid out,” he said. “That whatever can happen prior to the recommendation being made does happen and that we understand exactly what the other benchmarks will be for moving this along.”

Stern was able to clarify a couple of points. One major issue concerns the time frame of the deal. According to Stern, the NBA needs to make a decision within the next two weeks in order to accommodate the logistic demands of getting the team and team officials here to Memphis, creating schedules, and continuing ticket sales. “We are working in a very compressed time schedule,” Stern said. “We are trying to be consistent with logic, reason, and documentation and move as fast as we possibly can.”

Stern said that a time-consuming public referendum would potentially hurt Memphis’ NBA bid. “If I were a politician, I would say that is what government leaders are supposed to do — to lead,” he said. “But I’m not so I am going to say that we have a time problem on our hands and we have to decide this or not. The luxury of time is not something we have right now and to some measure, the access to that luxury, I think, presents the special opportunity to Memphis and we are trying to accommodate that opportunity as fast as we can rather than slow it down.”

Stern also shed some light into the potential arena locations. “We were shown two very good sites, next to Beale and next to Union,” Stern said. “And they both look to be extraordinary sites with access to downtown. One of the things that tends to happen is that if a site isn’t exactly downtown, then downtown moves to the site.”

The commissioner or deputy commissioner said little else that has not been previously reported in the past weeks. However, Stern did give the strongest recommendation from the NBA to date, saying “I must tell you that in our view, with the exception of trying to tie down as best we can the arena situation, that we are favorably impressed in almost every aspect of what’s gone on here. The committee has been reviewing history and statistics that suggest that one-franchise towns have a particular way of skewing far above other communities that have two or three or in some cases four sports franchises. We are also focusing on the context of corporations per citizen and corporations per team and teams per capita. Those come out pretty well for Memphis.”

Stern also made special note of the J.R. “Pitt” Hyde-led pursuit team. “I have been in this sport more or less since 1967 and I don’t think I have ever seen anything as well organized in any better way than I have seen this most recent effort,” Stern said.

Categories
News The Fly-By

SUMMER READING

The most recent issue of Rhodes (formerly Rhodes Today), a quarterly magazine published by Rhodes College, includes a summer reading list put together by members of the school s esteemed faculty. Assistant Professor of Mathematics and Computer Science Eric Gottlieb recommends The 85 Ways to Tie a Tie. Gottlieb describes the book, saying, Two physicists tell all about ties and how to knot them. The book includes a history of ties, a mathematical analysis of the number of tie knots smaller than a specified size, an illustrated compendium of instructions for tying those ties, [and] lots of photos of famous men in ties. Sounds great, but we ll wait for the movie.

Categories
We Recommend We Recommend

wednesday, may 30th

A good day to try Mayuri, the newest Indian restaurant in town. What makes Mayuri unique among Indian eateries in Memphis is their full menu of South Indian cuisine — dosas, vadas, and thali dinners. Located in the Villager Lodge at 1220 Union Avenue (the site of the old Admiral Benbow). A treat, especially for vegetarians.

Categories
We Recommend We Recommend

tuesday, may 29th

Memphis Redbirds vs. Oklahoma City at AutoZone Park.

Categories
News News Feature

FULL TEXT OF THE MLGW MEMO

The full text of Herman Morris’ 1995 memorandum to Bill Crawford

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Categories
News The Fly-By

POO-POOL

News USA, a publication containing a number of finely written feature stories that newspaper editors can include in their publication free of charge, is always chock full of fascinating information. The most recent issue included the following helpful hint: Please wash your child thoroughly (especially his or her rear end) with soap and water before swimming. We all have invisible amounts of fecal matter on our bottoms that end up in the pool. P

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monday, may 28th

Spend time with friends and family. Happy Memorial Day!