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PAT KERR TIGRETT: STUCK IN NEW YORK

From her vantage point on the Triborough Bridge, a vantage point she would be forced to keep for a solid six hours, Memphian Pat Kerr Tigrett watched the Twin Towers crumble to ash.

In New York for work with her fashion company, Pat Kerr Incorporated, she was scheduled to fly out Tuesday and actually watched the first plane hit the World Trade Center as her taxi made its way to the airport. Late Wednesday afternoon, Tigrett called the Flyer from her cell phone to tell of what she saw.

“I saw the first plane hit on the way to the airport, but I didn’t realize what happened,” said Tigrett. “I turned to the cab driver and said, ‘Oh my God, look at that building!’ He looked and then said, ‘That’s the Twin Towers!'”

When Tigrett arrived at the airport she learned that her Northwest Airlines flight had been cancelled, not because of the attacks but just a normal airline cancellation. While she waited to board a US Air flight, she saw, from a distance, one airline supervisor mouth to another that the airport was about to be closed. Tigrett says she grabbed all of her bags and dashed outside to catch a cab before the news of the closure was released and all the cabs were gone.

“We got back on the Triborough Bridge and from there I saw the first building collapse. I can’t even explain what that looked like. I was just trying to get back to the Carlisle [Hotel] ÐÐ it’s like a second home ÐÐ but they weren’t letting anybody into Manhattan.”

Tigrett, who now says that she won’t travel anywhere again without a map, told the Flyer that her cab got stuck in the Bronx and that neither she nor the driver knew where they were. Using her cell phone, she contacted friends and family who helped her navigate a way out.

“My taxi driver and all the drivers around us were screaming into their cell phones that all the tunnels and bridges were being closed, but here we were stuck on the bridge. We were only moving, like, an inch an hour. Eventually we were able to inch north. I’m north of the city now, in White Plains, New York.”

Tigrett says that she then called another Memphian, Federal Express’ Fred Smith, whose daughters Molly and Kathleen were also in Manhattan.

“One of the girls was at NYU and the other was at Saks. I told Fred that if he could talk to them and just get them to me then they could stay with me. So they’re with me now.”

Though Tigrett, Molly, and Kathleen all say that they’re fine, they don’t know how long it will be before they are able to return to Memphis.

“We’re fine and we’re really in no hurry to go anywhere. It’s all just so unreal. It’s just now starting to settle in. Everybody is walking around in disbelief. There’s just this eerie calm that’s taken over the whole city. But what I experienced was so incidental– so zero– compared to what others have gone through.”

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THE NAMES OF AMERICANS

In the wake of tragedy, I’ve fallen in love — with my country and my fellow Americans.

Last night I found an American flag T-shirt, given to me years ago by a relative. I’ve never worn the shirt because it always seemed so quaint, so hokey. But I’m going to wear it tomorrow.

When I read the accounts of the remarkably brave passengers on that flight doomed to destruction in a remote Pennsylvania field, I want to hug and thank every single one of them. They truly are heroes.

When I see the bravery of the rescue workers, putting their own lives on the line — some losing them — just to help strangers, I remember why we stand to salute our flag.

Even news reporters — and people in my profession are rarely called “honorable” — have covered this story with dignity and sensitivity. They’ve kept all of us informed without forgetting our common humanity and horror. I’m proud of every single one of them.

But mostly, when I read the names of the dead, the only names we know right now, I want to put my arms around their families and raise my fist to the enemy. It just isn’t right. Like the San Francisco Examiner‘s simple, poignant headline on Wednesday, “BASTARDS!” I want to scream at these perpetrators.

Though I’m a lifelong pacifist and opponent of the death penalty, I want to personally pull the trigger in a firing squad, I want to drop the bomb on the enemy. I want to shoot now and ask questions later. I want the swiftest, harshest punishment for anyone who even had thoughts of helping these evil men commit this unthinkable act. I want medieval justice — I want someone’s head on a spike. How dare they use our people as weapons against us!? How dare they kill innocent Americans quietly working at their desks!?

But then I read those names again. Doug Stone, Wilson and Darlene Flagg, Joe Lopez, Lisa Frost — names as American-sounding as any I’ve ever heard. Ruben Ornedo, Dora Menchaca, Yenench Betru, Mark Bingham, Lauren Grandcolas — these are all “American” names too. Alona Abraham, Touvri Bolourchi, Dorothy Dearaujo, Tim Ward, James Roux — these people might have been our neighbors, might have thumped melons in the grocery store with us, might have coached our children’s soccer teams. Carolyn Beug, James and Mary Trentini, Kris Bishundat, Daniel Caballero, Patrick Dunn, Jamie Fallon, Matthew Flocco, Daniel Getzfred, Martin Panik, Joseph Pycior Jr., Allan Schlegel, Dianah Ratchford. There are many more names that should be here and thousands more that we don’t even know yet.

My point here is simple. In our haste for revenge, let’s not turn knives on ourselves. There is no “American” identity, no “American” look. Not one of us is any more or less “American” than any other. That’s what makes us so lovable. We are everyone. We come from everywhere. We look like people all over the world. We have names derived from every nation. My own name is of mixed ancestry, as are the names of most of my friends. In our bloodthirst, let’s not victimize any more Americans.

In America we assimilate and congregate. Yes, assimilate. We open our arms to welcome and hug neighbors we joke about being “fresh off the boat.” If those of us not of Arab descent are shocked and angry at this week’s attacks, those of Arab descent are that much more shocked and angry. Unlike many of us, they also feel shame for their heritage and, some, for their religion. They too have lost loved ones. They too are scared. They too feel vulnerable.

How much stronger can we be against our enemy if we welcome all of our brothers into the fight? Consider the most basic of facts: Many of the Arab Americans now being targeted in instances of racist backlash left their homelands so that they could become Americans. They abandoned all that was familiar so that they could join with us. Now is not the time to harm our own countrymen, now is the time to unite against the enemy.

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Q&A: THE SENATOR GOES TO WHITEHAVEN

State senator Roscoe Dixon (D-Memphis, District 33) recently involved himself in the ongoing redevelopment of the Whitehaven area. The Flyer took him aside for a few moments for a conversation about those efforts.

Flyer: Tell me about your visit to Whitehaven, its purpose, and its results.

Dixon: Well, one of the things is that many of the people I represent want me to be involved in trying to redevelop Whitehaven, even though I’m at the state level. I figured I had better do that since my constituents were telling me I needed to be involved in it. I’ve worked very closely with Tajuan Stout Mitchell, the Memphis City Council person for that area, on the many different projects she has been working on and assisting her where I can. I decided to have the Commission of Economic Community Development to come get a look at the area and also to familiarize myself with what is going on. We came in and spent time the first day at the Southland Mall with Pat Jacobs, the general manager.

I was pleasantly surprised with the briefing that he gave us. He’s running an 80% occupancy rating at this time, with some new tenants on board. For example, there’s an International House of Pancakes coming in where the First Tennessee [bank] is. First Tennessee will be building a new facility at Southland Mall. [Jacobs] informed us that Southland Mall is doing extremely well and is expected to do better because he has prospective tenants on the drawing board.

We met with TVA, hoping to add whatever resources they could add to Whitehaven. The next day we met with Jack Soden. I am working now with getting a handle on cleanliness on the streets and right-of-way in Whitehaven. Presently the state contracts with the city for all of that. I want to look at those contracts and see what can be done to do a better job of keeping Elvis Presley Boulevard clean. So we have that contracted out to the city of Memphis. I want to talk to the city and find out if they will be doing a better job and, if not, it may just be in the best interest for the state to take that function back over.

We went over to Smith & Nephew. They are a story that needs to be told. They are doing expansion as we speak. They are intensely hiring 400 to 450 employees. These employees make anywhere from 17 to 25 dollars an hour. I was surprised to find that this is the largest manufacturing facility in Shelby County. I didn’t know that, with all that lease space that they have. I was really impressed. We have a jewel in Smith & Nephew. We then went on to Metronics, [which wants to move its] headquarters to Memphis [and Whitehaven]. They’ve already acquired the land. But they do have a problem that we are trying to resolve regarding state taxes. So we’re looking into that also.

So, man, I tell you I was just really, really pleased. There’s still a lot that has to be done, but Whitehaven is not dead by a long shot. Ironically, I met with Richard Greg, who is the leasing agent for Whitehaven vacancies. He cannot reveal what is about to happen, but, let me tell you, he is on the job. He has a game plan, and, if all of this comes about, we are all going to see something we are going to like in Whitehaven. I’m not at liberty to talk about that. He’s working on that.

Any negatives?

I am disappointed at Southbrook mall. So I’m going to try to find the owners of those properties. It is embarrassing. They have potholes that a truck would fall off in. The state has pulled its lease out of there and I don’t blame them. I want to find who owns that and condemn [it]. It’s an absolute embarrassment. That’s the only negative I saw there. It’s owned by some company out of Pennsylvania.

Are you asking them to put up or shut up so that new businesses can come in or are you asking them to redevelop what is there?

I think they have to make a commitment. It is just absolutely horrendous for the parking lot to be in the condition it is in. I cannot envision a businessperson asking to patronize that facility with it looking like it is. It seems to be an absentee landlord not looking at his facility. They need to know we are not going to tolerate that. Whatever we can do to change the way he does business, we’re going to do that. It’s a safety hazard. It creates a legal liability for him. And that’s why he’s losing tenants like the state of Tennessee. I am going to encourage other tenants to come out of there too if he doesn’t fix that place to an acceptable level.

How important are the cosmetics in this reconstruction process?

[Cosmetics] are the most important thing of all, because Whitehaven is the gateway of our city, since we have so many tourists [visiting Graceland]. It’s kind of like when I went to Disney World. What impressed me was the upkeep of the facility. You are either turned on or turned off once you hit the area, and we have to turn people on.

What other sorts of things are happening in Whitehaven now?

[Mitchell] is working on getting us a convention and visitors center. We have the commitment. We just can’t work it out right now because the land [prices] are just so high. But Kevin King is working with [Mitchell] and I’m putting pressure on him as well. The mayor has feverishly put together a plan with Robert Lipscomb where they are doing a survey with the Chesapeake group. So there is just a lot of activity going on right now. The Whitehaven Levi Corporation, which is part of the Whitehaven Community Development Corporation, is holding a luncheon this Friday at the Holiday Inn Select. Joe Webb is really picking up the pace with the Whitehaven Community Development Corporation. They’ve brought on a new acting executive director. So there’s a lot of activity. Things are turning around, but we have a long way to go. But it’s not as bad as I thought it was.

How bad did you think it was?

I thought Whitehaven was going downhill, from what I heard.

What’s next?

I will continue to meet with just as many people as possible. I’ll be going on the road to sit in some people’s offices. For example, I’m going to Dillard’s, which is just across the bridge in Little Rock. I’ll just be pleading with them to come to Whitehaven.

With Memphis’ downtown renaissance, much of the governmental focus has been on that area. Do you feel in some ways that that exacerbated Whitehaven’s decline or that the lack of support gave the perception of decline?

I think it gave the perception. The mayor had to focus on that. As you know, the downtown is a heartbeat of a city, and, if you don’t have a vibrant downtown, then the rest of town suffers. But at the same time, some of us should have continued to focus on Whitehaven. We may be late to the table, but we’re there at the table now. I think that’s happening now, and I think you will see some of the resources from the mayor’s office coming that way. I think he will be looking at Whitehaven after breaking away from the gravity of downtown.

What role can you play at the state level?

I want to bring the toolboxes that we have, the incentives, particularly the manufacturing facilities, so they know about those incentives and use those incentives to make new jobs. And I will be working with the DOT to work on transportation and roads, job training, things like that. We have a few tools. I want to make sure they know they can use them because they can impact the area.

What sort of role do the citizens of Whitehaven play to get this thing rolling?

That’s the role I want to play. I want to talk to the citizens of Whitehaven about rebuilding Whitehaven. We have nobody to blame but ourselves. It is the highest income-level [area] for African Americans [in Memphis]. It has a significant number of whites in the area. It has a number of pluses going for it. We’re probably the only real mixed community. The demographics are at least 15% white, if not more. Maybe 20%. And for American Africans, it is the highest income [area] for its size in the city. There are just so many people in it. And it has a strong, strong, strong middle class. Memphis First Bank told me they located there instead of Hickory Hill because when they did their survey, that’s where people had equity. That’s where the money in the African-American community was. The citizens have a responsibility. Part of the fault is that– maybe because of selection [of businesses]– people do not shop in their neighborhood. We have to get people to shop in their neighborhood. If you don’t shop there, then you can’t put the pressure where it needs to be. We must use the economic power of Whitehaven to say, Hey, we have money and we want to spend it. But you have to locate some of your stores here, whether it’s Home Depot or whatever. We are just not going to travel miles away from our neighborhood just to spend money.

But if you have to get something from Home Depot, you have to go to Home Depot. How do you get people not to go there?

Well, if Home Depot doesn’t come, we’ll get Ace Hardware to come. If Ace doesn’t come, we’ll get Joe Toolbox. But we have to have someone show that the people of Whitehaven have money. To give an example, at Southland Mall, I will be talking to Goldsmith’s in particular. I want to buy my suits there, but they don’t sell suits [at that location]. It’s kind of like [they only carry] leftovers. I want to talk to Goldsmith’s about outfitting that store like they outfit Oak Court and ask them to give us a chance to buy suits and shoes there. Now, they refer us to Oak Court.

It seems that in African-American communities, the retail is second-rate and retailers consciously move their inventory away from those areas.

Absolutely. And it has to stop. I don’t wear yellow suits, I wear pin-stripes like everyone else. Now there’s a place for that, don’t get me wrong. But I need a pin-stripe suit like they have in Oak Court Mall.

Do you think then that Whitehaven could become the model for this sort of middle-class, economically stable African-American community? Could it show that it can support the same sort of businesses that white suburban America can support?

Absolutely. It can do even better, if given the chance. I’ll give you a classic example: If you go down Holmes Road toward Third Street, you’ll see all the homes being built. After Dr. [Mayor Willie] Herenton decided to live in the African-American community, others tried that. David Walker is developing all of that. This is what I like, the partnership with white builders. They are building homes like mad, even in this soft economy. All up and down Holmes road you have bustling home-building activity. Housing permits are being [issued] probably at the same rate as other communities in Memphis. If you’d look and see what is happening in the southwest community, it would surprise you.

Well, if the numbers are there, why is growth difficult?

It’s difficult because we live in such a mobile community. You have people living in Whitehaven shopping in Southaven, shopping at Wolfchase. Don’t get me wrong. I’m for all of that because I live in Memphis. But I think [residents] have a responsibility to strengthen the commercial sector in Whitehaven. We love all of Memphis, but we want to have a strong commercial base. But the only way we will have that is to make a commitment to shop and get people competing for the business. We have taken the attitude that we will just go wherever they put the store.

What haven’t I asked you that you would like to address?

Well, what’s so good about Whitehaven is that it has a strong white base as well. That’s the beauty. It’s not all-black. It is probably the most mixed community in Shelby County. We have poor people now because of all the housing projects that shut down. Half of them moved to Whitehaven to live in those vacant apartments. We have poor people, we have a strong middle class, we have white people. We are a true replica of Memphis and Shelby County.

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A STOP TO THE LAUGHTER

Stewart Bailey, the 35-year-old supervising editor of the Comedy Central channel sendup The Daily Show, knew that his world had changed as soon as he learned that the first plane had slammed into the first World Trade Center tower — only blocks from the Greenwich Village apartment he shares with his wife Jen, a Vogue editor.

Even before he got the word from the star of the cutting-edge show, Jon Stewart, that all production would cease for the time being — until, at least, the next week — Bailey knew that he had likely heard the death knell of an ironically distanced view of the world which had held sway in his end of the media since the advent of David Letterman.

“We’ll meet on Monday and take stock, but Jon made it clear that we’ll have to seriously evaluate what it is that we can do — and ought to do — going forward.”

A show whose bread and butter was tongue-in-cheek scorn of all convention and established authority and mockery of ongoing news events and the way they were covered in the media would now have no appropriate targets.

“We know we can’t say anything critical about the president or anybody in government. We never talked about Columbine or JFK Jr., and this beats all of them by an incomparable margin. We’ve always made fun of the pomposity or pretentiousness of the news business, but how can you criticize anybody for covering this? Or the way they’re covering this? We might have a show on Tuesday, but we just don’t know what kind of a show we can do.”

Noting that CNN had broadcast an erroneous early report Tuesday that American bombs were falling in Afghanistan in retaliation for the New York and Pentagon disasters, Bailey said, “The bombs-on- Afghanistan thing, normally we could play with something like that, but I think we’d be thrown off the air if we tried something that was in such bad taste. And we should be. We’re owned, ultimately, by Time-Warner, but we’ve always had virtual self-governance. No limits. I think if we went too far, we might find out we aren’t as autonomous as we think we are.

“Reality has always been the subject of satire for us. Now the nature of reality has changed. Even Howard Stern is doing straight news!”

As Bailey noted, “A lot of our jokes and other people’s jokes were based on the fact that people don’t really care about politics -Ñ that nobody really cared about Bush or Gore, for example. Now people have to care.”

The pervading “sense of irony” that may have overnight achieved its obsolescence derived from cutup Letterman, Bailey said. “What he was saying was that ‘all of this is phony, all of this is fake.’ Things were pretend-important, self-important, not really important. They didn’t really matter. Now things do matter.

“Early in the last century we had two world wars and a depression. Then we had a long period in which things didn’t seem as important. Already, that’s gone. Things are significant again, things are important. We’re going into a long, deadly serious period. To pretend that things don’t matter any more or to laugh at people who are serious won’t fly any more … .”

One of Bailey’s duties is to supervise the preparation of The Daily Show‘s performance tapes that were entered in competition for the prestigious Peabody Award, won by the show this year. The show was up for further honors at the Emmy Awards, which were scheduled for Sunday and have now been postponed indefinitely.

“Comedy will have to adapt to all that has happened. It won’t be the same again,” Bailey said.

Even as Bailey was commenting on Thursday about what would or wouldn’t “fly any more,” F-14s had been soaring conspicuously over his head and over the whole of Manhattan all day.

“This used to be the most secure place in the world,” he said. “Now we have surveillance aircraft full-time.” Bailey observed one practical way in which the two twin towers of the World Trade Center will be missed: “When some of us would be out at night walking in the Village we might wander into some corner of a strange neighborhood and lose our way. We could always get our bearings by looking at the Empire State Building for due north and at the towers for due south. Now we can’t do that.”

When Bailey first heard of the ongoing tragedy Tuesday, he knew he could climb to the roof of his building and see it firsthand, and many people did. But he couldn’t. “I’ve always had trouble dealing with that kind of pain. I don’t have the ability to deal with real tragedy,” he said. So he watched on TV and apprised himself of things via a weird form of stereophonic imagery. On screen terrible things were happening, while he heard the real, live moans and groans of people reacting outside his very window.

“It was so hard to deal with. I was physically paralyzed. The same thing happened a month ago when I was in a theater and somebody collapsed. I knew I should go get help or try to provide it, but I couldn’t move.”

Ultimately, Bailey was able to galvanize himself. “Instinctively, before I heard anything about it, I knew I wanted to give blood. I felt so helpless.”

Bailey spent the next several hours Tuesday being shuttled from one place to another and waiting, just waiting, to do something helpful. His itinerary started at St. Vincent’s hospital in the Village, where he joined the masses of victims and people like himself, New Yorkers of all stripes conscripted into the common human support service, people bearing signs with their blood types on them.

Next stop was the New York Blood Center, up near Lincoln Center, where, some 10 hours after he had volunteered himself, he was ultimately able to get accepted as a Red Cross auxiliary, to give such aid as he was allowed to. He busied himself at first bringing food and juice to survivors and people waiting in line either for help or to give help.

Because he had once provided some backup help for his mother, a psychiatric head nurse back home in Topeka, Kansas, Bailey is slated to be a Red Cross adjunct for mental-health services related to the anguish of the catastrophe and its aftermath.

In such a way have the talents of a young professional in the American comedic industry been adapted. So it was, in one form or another, this week.

(For the record, Stewart Bailey is my sister’s son and my oldest nephew. When I was in New Hampshire early in 2000 covering the presidential primary there, he and the Daily Show crew played host to me for a memorable day spent shadowing the candidates. —JB)

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TO RISE AGAIN

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Q&A: THE SENATOR GOES TO WHITEHAVEN

State senator Roscoe Dixon (D-Memphis, District 33) recently involved himself in the ongoing redevelopment of the Whitehaven area. The Flyer took him aside for a few moments for a conversation about those efforts.

Flyer: Tell me about your visit to Whitehaven, its purpose, and its results.

RD: Well, one of the things is that many of the people I represent want me to be involved in trying to redevelop Whitehaven, even though I’m at the state level. I figured I had better do that since my constituents telling me I need to be involved in it. I’ve worked very closely with Tajuan Stout Mitchell, the Memphis City Council person for that area, on the many different projects she has been working on and assisting her where I can. I decided to have the Commission of Economic Community Development to come into the area to get a look at the area and also to familiarize myself with what is going on. We came in and spent time the first day with the Southland Mall with Pat Jacobs, the general manager.

I was pleasantly surprised with the briefing that he gave us. He’s running an 80% occupancy rating at this time with some new tenants on board. For example, There’s an International House of Pancakes coming in where the First Tennessee is. First Tennessee will be building a new facility at Southland Mall. [Jacobs] informed us that Southland mall is doing extremely well and is expected to do better because he has prospective tenants on the drawing board.

We met with TVA, hoping to add whatever resources they could add to Whitehaven. The next day we met with Jack Soden. I am working now with getting a handle on cleanliness on the streets and right of way in Whitehaven. Presently the state contracts with the city for all of that. I want to look at those contracts and see what can be done to do a better job of keeping Elvis Presley Boulevard clean. So we have that contracted out to the city of Memphis. I want to talk to the city and find out if they will be doing a better job and if not, it may just be in the best interest for the state to take that function back over.

We went over to Smith & Nephew. They are a story that needs to be told. They are doing expansion as we speak. They are intensely hiring 400-450 employees. These employees make anywhere from $17-25 an hour. I was surprised to find that this is the largest manufacturing facility in Shelby County. I didn’t know that, with all that lease space that they have. I was really impressed. We have a jewel in Smith & Nephew. We then went on to Metronics who is desiring to moving their headquarters to Memphis [and Whitehaven]. They’ve already acquired the land. But they do have a problem that we are trying to resolve regarding state taxes. So we’re looking into that also.

So man, I tell you I was just really, really pleased. There’s still a lot that has to be done but Whitehaven is not dead by a long shot. Ironically, I met with Richard Greg who is the leasing agent for Whitehaven vacancies are. He cannot reveal what is about is about to happen but let me tell you he is on the job. He has a game plan and if all of this comes about we are all going to see something we are going to like in Whitehaven. I’m not at liberty to talk about that. He’s working on that.

Flyer: Any negatives?

RD: I am disappointed at Southbrook mall. So I’m going to try to find the owners of those properties. It is embarrassing. They have potholes that a truck would fall off in. The state has pulled its lease out of there and I don’t blame them. I want to find who owns that and condemn. It’s an absolute embarrassment. That’s the only negative I saw there. It’s owned by some company out of Pennsylvania.

Flyer: Are you asking them to put up or shut up so that new businesses can come in or are you asking them to redevelop what is there.

RD: I think they have to make a commitment. They is just absolutely horrendous for the parking lot to be in the condition it is in. I cannot envision a business person asking to patronize that facility with it looking like it is. It seems to be an absentee landlord not looking at his facility. They need to know we are not going to tolerate that. Whatever we can do to change the way he does business, we’re going to do that. It’s a safety hazard, it creates a legal liability for him. And that’s why he’s losing tenants like the state of Tennessee. I am going to encourage other tenants to come out of there too if he doesn’t fix that place to acceptable level.

Flyer: How important are the cosmetics in this reconstruction process.

RD: [Cosmetics] are the most important thing of all because Whitehaven is the gateway of our city since we have so many tourists [at Graceland]. It’s kind of like when I went to Disney world. What impressed me was the upkeep of the facility. You are either turned on or turned off once you hit the area and we have to turn people on.

Flyer: What other sorts of things are happening in Whitehaven now??

RD: [Mitchell] is working on getting us a convention and visitor’s center. We have the commitment we just can’t work it out right now because the land [prices] are just so high. But Kevin King is working with [Mitchell] and I’m putting pressure on him as well. The mayor has feverishly put together a plan with Robert Lipscomb where they are doing a survey with the Chesapeake group. So there is just a lot of activity going on right now. The Whitehaven Levi corporation, which is part of the Whitehaven Community Development Corporation, are holding a luncheon this Friday at the Holiday Inn Select this week. Joe Webb is really picking up the pace with the Whitehaven Community Development Corporation. They’ve brought on a new acting executive director. So there’s a lot of activity. Things are turning around, but we have a long way to go. But it’s not as bad as I thought it was.

Flyer: How had did you think it was?

RD: I thought Whitehaven was going downhill, from what I heard.

Flyer: What’s next?

RD: I will continue to meet with just as many people as possible. I’ll be going on the road to sit in some people’s offices. For example, I’m going to Dillard’s, which is just across the bridge in Little Rock. I’ll just be pleading with them to come to Whitehaven.

Flyer: With Memphis’ downtown renaissance, much of the governmental focus has had to be on that area. Do you feel in some ways that lent toward Whitehaven’s decline or that the lack of support lent toward the perception of decline?

RD: I think it gave the perception. The mayor had to focus on that. As you know, the downtown is a heartbeat of a city and if you don’t have a vibrant downtown, then the rest of town suffers. But at the same time, some of us should have continued to focus on Whitehaven. We may be late to the table but we’re there at the table now. I think that’s happening now and I think you will see some of the resources from the mayor’s office coming that way. I think he will be looking at Whitehaven after breaking through gravity on downtown.

Flyer: What role can you play at the state level?

RD: I want to bring the toolboxes that we have. The incentives, particularly the manufacturing facilities so they know about those incentives and use those incentives to make new jobs. And I will be working with DOT to work on transportation and roads, job training, things like that. We have a few tools. I want to make sure they know they can use them because they can impact the area.

What sort of role do the citizens of Whitehaven play to get this thing rolling?

RD: That’s the role I want to play. I wan to talk to the citizens of Whitehaven about rebuilding Whitehaven. We have nobody to blame but ourselves. It is the highest income level for African Americans [in Memphis]. It has a significant number of whites in the area. It has a number of pluses going for it. We’re probably the only real mixed community. The demographics are at least 15% white, if not more, maybe 20%. And for American Africans, it is the highest income for its size in the city. There are just so many people in it. And it has a strong, strong, strong middle class. Memphis First Bank told me they located there instead of Hickory Hill because when they did their survey, that’s where people had equity. That’s where the money in the African American community was. The citizens have a responsibility. Part of the fault is that, maybe because of selection [of businesses], people do not shop in their neighborhood. We have to get people to shop in their neighborhood. If you don’t shop there, then you can’t put the pressure where it needs to be. We must use the economic power of Whitehaven to say hey, we have money and we want to spend it. But you have to locate some of your stores here, whether its Home Depot or whatever. We are just not going to travel miles away from our neighborhood, just to spend money.

Flyer: But if you have to get something from Home Depot, you have to go to Home Depot. How do you get people not to go there?

RD: Well, if Home Depot doesn’t come, we’ll get Ace Hardware to come. If Ace doesn’t come, we’ll get Joe Toolbox. But we have to have someone show that the people of Whitehaven have money to buy. To give an example at Southland Mall, I will be talking to Goldsmiths in particular. I want to buy my suits there but they don’t sale suits [at that location]. It’s kind of like leftovers. I want to talk to Goldsmith’s about outfitting that store like they outfit Oak Court and ask them to give us a chance to buy suits and shoes there. Now, they refer us to Oak Court.

Flyer: It seems that in African American communities, the retail is second rate and that retailers consciously move their inventory away from those areas.

RD: Absolutely. And it has to stop. I don’t wear yellow suits, I wear pin-stripes like everyone else. Now there’s a place for that, don’t get me wrong. But I need a pin-stripe suit like they have in Oak Court Mall.

Flyer: Do you think then that Whitehaven could become the model for this sort of middle-class, economically stable, African American community? Could it show that it can support the same sort of businesses that white suburban America can support?

RD: Absolutely. It can do even better, if given the chance. I’ll give you a classic example. If you go down Holmes Road toward Third Street, you’ll see all the homes being built. After Dr. [Mayor Willie] Herenton decided to live in the African American community, others tried that. David Walker is developing all of that. This is what I like, the partnership with white builders. They are building homes like mad, even in this soft economy. All up and down Holmes road you have bustling home building activity. Housing permits are being let probably at the same rate as other communities in Memphis. IF you look and see what is happening in the southwest community, it would surprise you.

Flyer: Well, if the numbers are there, why is growth difficult?

RD: It’s difficult because we live in such a mobile community. You have people living in Whitehaven shopping in Southaven, shopping at Wolfechase. Don’t get me wrong. I’m for all of that because I live in Memphis. But I think [residents] have a responsibility to strengthen the commercial sector in Whitehaven. We love all of Memphis, but we want to have strong commercial base. But the only way we will have that is to make a commitment to shop and get people competing for the business. We have taken the attitude that we will just go wherever they put the store.

Flyer: What haven’t I asked you?

RD: Well, what’s so good about Whitehaven is that it has a strong white base as well. That’s the beauty, it’s not all black. It is probably the most mixed community in Shelby Community. It’s a mixed community. We have poor people now because of all the housing projects that shut down. Half of them moved to Whitehaven to live in those vacant apartments. We have poor people, we have a strong middle class, we have white people. We are a true replica of Memphis and Shelby County.

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PAT KERR TIGRETT: ‘STUCK IN NEW YORK’

From her vantage point on the Triborough Bridge, a vantage point she would be forced to keep for a solid six hours, Memphian Pat Kerr Tigrett watched the Twin Towers crumble to ash.

In New York for work with her fashion company, Pat Kerr Incorporated, she was scheduled to fly out Tuesday and actually watched the first plane hit the World Trade Center as her taxi made its way to the airport. Late Wednesday afternoon, Tigrett called the Flyer from her cell phone to tell of what she saw.

“I saw the first plane hit on the way to the airport, but I didn’t realize what happened,” said Tigrett. “I turned to the cab driver and said, ‘Oh my God, look at that building!,’ He looked and then said, ‘That’s the Twin Towers!'”

When Tigrett arrived at the airport she learned that her Northwest Airlines flight had been cancelled, but not because of the attacks, just a normal airline cancellation. While she waited to board a US Air flight she saw, from a distance, one airline supervisor mouth to another that the airport was about to be closed. Tigrett says she grabbed all of her bags and dashed outside to catch a cab before the news of the closure was released and all the cabs were gone.

“We got back on the Triborough Bridge and from there I saw the first building collapse. I can’t even explain what that looked like. I was just trying to get back to the Carlisle [Hotel] – it’s like a second home – but they weren’t letting anybody into Manhattan.”

Tigrett, who now says that she won’t ever travel anywhere again without a map, told the Flyer that her cab got stuck in the Bronx and that neither she nor the driver knew where they were. Using her cell phone, she contacted friends and family who helped her navigate a way out.

“My taxi driver and all the drivers around us were screaming into their cell phones that all the tunnels and bridges were being closed, but here we were stuck on the bridge. We were only moving like an inch an hour. Eventually we were able to inch north. I’m north of the city now, in White Plains, New York.”

Tigrett says that she then called another Memphian, Federal Express’ Fred Smith, whose daughters Molly and Kathleen were also in Manhattan.

“One of the girls was at NYU and the other was at Saks. I told Fred that if he could talk to them and just get them to me then they could stay with me. So they’re with me now.”

Though Tigrett, Molly, and Kathleen all say that they’re fine, they don’t know how long it will be before they are able to return to Memphis.

“We’re fine and we’re really in no hurry to go anywhere. It’s all just so unreal. It’s just now starting to settle in. Everybody is walking around in disbelief. There’s just this eerie calm that’s taken over the whole city. But what I experienced was so incidental – so zero – compared to what others have gone through.”

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A DISTANT NIGHTMARE, CLOSELY SEEN

DANA KEETON, THE SPOKESPERSON FOR the Department of Safety in Nashville, was on her way Tuesday morning to the Tennessee Tower, one of downtown Nashville’s looming monuments , for a Spanish class at the Tennessee Foreign Language Institute. She planned to go to work immediately afterward for what was expected to be an uneventful day.

Her language study was partly out of personal interest and partly a response to the complications that ensued from last year’s run on Department driver’s-license venues . Many of the applicants were Hispanic immigrants drawn by the temporary easing of various residence restrictions on the issuance of licenses.

“I just talked to so many Spanish-speaking people back then,” Keeton said. “I thought it would be useful to know the language.”

She was listening to the radio and, when she heard the first news broadcast of a plane hitting the first of the two World Trade Center towers in far-off New York, she had no reason to think it was anything but a freak accident. Then, about the time she reached the Tennessee Towers building and was about to park her car, she received a phone call from a colleague at the Department. “You’re starting to get some calls,” she was told.

Nevertheless, she went to class, but when the calls from workmates — relayed messages from news media wanting to know about Tennessee’s emergency plans — kept coming, she realized, “There was no point in trying to finish.” The full gravity of events — which now included another kamikaze attack on the Pentagon near Washington — was dawning on her, and, as her foreboding grew, she knew that she would spend the rest of the day, and perhaps much of the night, fielding the persistent questions of a needy state media. There would be no telling when she would get home that night.

Up in Lexington, Kentucky, meanwhile, where the Southern Governor’s Conference had ended that morning (after a speech earlier in the week by Vice President Dick Cheney) Tennessee’s governor Don Sundquist, his chief policy aide Justin Wilson, his main spokesperson Alexia Levison all were grounded and had to commandeer a car to get back to Nashville.

*IT TOOK A WHILE FOR THE SENSE OF EMERGENCY to get around. Even though there had been a partial and temporary blockade of a portion of downtown Memphis by police — for what purpose it was hard to say — the men of Engine Co. No. 2, hard by the National Civil Rights Museum, , might have been doing what they were doing on any given day. It was some two hours after the first impact of the first hijacked airliner upon the first of the twin towers in New York and no more than thirty minutes after the collapse of both towers had occurred.

Three men in black regulation/casual T-shirts were busy washing a huge fire engine parked peacefully on the fire station’s broad concrete lot. A Fire department officer and an inspector stood nearby. “Business as usual,” one said. “Of course, I don’t think you’ll see any of us going out for groceries and heading off to do routine inspections of buildings. We’ve been told to stay close,..” But, despite the sawhorse obstacles that had blocked a street or two earlier, only blocks away, there had been no reported emergencies in the downtown area or anywhere else.

Inside two fire lieutenants — Pat Pearl and Bill Shelton — had sat down to a makeshift lunch. Both had seen the events of the morning on the firehouse TV

. Pearl, a stout, mustachioed man, at first hazarded an observation that, huge as the circumstances in New York and Washington were, they amounted to little that he had not seen over and over again. “Keep in mind that death and destruction is something we see all the time in our work as firefighters,” he said.

He and Shelton began to speculate, more or less dispassionately, on the physics of the morning’s horrors — explaining, for example, that the destruction of the upper portions of the two towers would have created enough dead weight to cause the ultimate total collapse of both buildings, without any need for further sabotage. “Hold your two fingers up,” he suggested, and was clearly about to undertake a physical demonstration. “I get the point,” I said.

But at some point — probably about the time their speculation carried them into wondering how many firefighters had perished in the disasters — affect crept into the voices of Pearl and Shelton, after all. After a spell of trying to talk about the New York rescue effort in terms of “stairwell logistics, if you will,” Pearl developed what sounded for all the world like a catch in his throat — one that deepened when he was asked to estimate casualties.

Grimly, Shelton gave the final pronouncement. “There could be as many as 100,000 dead when they finally count ‘em all,” he said.

*IN 1950, WHEN HE WAS STILL A TEENAGER, Jim Brown was a Marine private involved in the march northward of United Nations forces in Korea. He was on the Yalu River — ready with his unit, as he remembers it, to make a leap north across the Yalu into China. That all changed when a huge Chinese invading force surrounded the Marines in North Korea and forced them to cut an escape route some hundred miles to safety in the dead of winter. “From November 27th, when the trap was sprung, until December 13th when I was on board a rescue ship eating pancakes, I had no meals at all,” Brown says. He went from 165 pounds to 90.

And, though his experience in Vietnam a decade and a half later never became quite so dire, Brown — a master sergeant by then — had a couple of narrow escapes there, too, at Da Nang and at Chu Lai.

All that was behind him, so he thought, at 7:45 a.m. Tuesday morning, Memphis time, when the retired city schoolteacher –having suffered nothing worse in the intervening years than the rude treatment he got from some School Board colleagues and then from the voters who turned him out of office last year — sat down at table for coffee. “Then my wife, who was watching television in the next room, yelled at me, ‘My gosh, a plane hit one of the World Trade towers!’ So I went in and was watching myself when we saw the second plane hit the second tower.”

Brown — who, like many viewing these events from the supposed “cool” medium of television, was powerfully affected — summed up his reactions later on. “My first impression was that they planted a bomb. What bothers me when I think about it is that they used our plane and our material to bomb us. That’s really scary and makes us realize how vulnerable we are.” And for Brown it was like that sniper-plagued three-week retreat through frozen Koreans hillsides or like the entirety of the Vietnam experience. “.Dealing with an enemy we can’t see and can’t understand!”

* THE REV. BILL ADKINS NEVER THOUGHT TWICE when he became acquainted with the facts of Tuesday morning’s catastrophes in New York and Washington. Though his church, Greater Imani Baptist Church, has moved to Raleigh, in the very north of Memphis, in the last year, Adkins still lives in Whitehaven, in the city’s south, where Imani, until an intermediate move to Mditown some years ago, had originated.

But he decided early on to hold a prayer vigil and, after instructing his assistants to start preparing for it, headed north on a route that took him by Memphis International Airport.

It was there, at mid-morning Tuesday, that he saw a shocking sight — planes, rows and rows of them, pulled up and parked. “And I don’t mean just on the apron,” he said, recalling the moment hours later. “I mean on the runways! I’ve never seen anything like that. It looked like a scene out of wartime!”

As Rev. Adkins noted, the planes — all commercial airliners — included many which did not service the city but were routed here once the Federal Aviation Authority had shut down all domestic flights Tuesday.

Once into his service, before several hundred people, Adkins chose to preach from Psalm 27, which contains the key words, “When the wicked, even mine enemies and my foes, came upon me they stumbled and fell./Though an host should encamp against me, my heart shall not fear, though war should rise against me, in this will I be confident.”

During the service, Rev. Adkins said a fifteen-minute prayer, during which he asked the Lord to “send a mighty wind to New York City, to blow away the soot and dust,” to send “a breath of air” to clean the lungs and souls of the afflicted.

After the service, he stood in the outer lobby of his church and declared emphatically, “You have to respond. God says we do not have to suffer heathen attacks and heathen rage. There are times to fight, and this is one of those times!”

As Adkins explained, many, many of his congregation were members of military units or reservists and had already been called up to deal with the emergency that morning.

“We may be on the eve of World War Three,” Adkins said solemnly.

*TODD COOPER, A 32-YEAR-OLD NATIVE MEMPHIAN whose early upbringing was in Memphis and Florida, has lived in New York for the last two years, working as an “event producer” from a high-rise home office in midtown Manhattan. His brother Trent, a record producer, phoned him about 9 o’clock EDT to tell him that a plane had slammed into one of the two World Trade towers (the “North tower,” as every coach potato learned very quickly to call it).

Inasmuch as Todd Cooper had a balcony window that had a clear line of vision to the downtown New York skyline, he put down the phone and stepped out onto it. It was from there, minutes later, as he looked at the smoldering tip of the North tower, at a distance of some two miles, that he saw, to his horror, its mate impacted by yet another airliner.

“I had complete visibility. It couldn’t have been a clearer day. I couldn’t feel it or really hear it, but I saw it perfectly,” Cooper said. And he watched stupefied as the subsequent events unfolded –the collapse of both towers, the incredible storm-like clouds of smoke which rolled from the destruction and filled the horizon, the sense — even at that distance — that the affected masses of humanity were helpless, as before some implausible and unexpected cosmic plague

.Or like something out of Hollywood. “It was like watching a movie,” Cooper said, hours later. “ I kept thinking of Deep Impact from two or three years ago, the one where a comet was aimed right at the Earth, and people were helpless to do anything about it.”

That sense of helplessness was as evident in Midtown, where Cooper — whose stock-in-trade is arranging Super Bowl parties, awards ceremonies, and the like — found his fellow New Yorkers wandering about aimlessly in a crippled, shut-down city, as it was from the more terrified versions of it seen on his TV set from the chaos in downtown.

“I’ll tell you, “ said Cooper (whose father Joe Cooper is a familiar figure in Memphis politics) “my business is big events, good times, parties. None of that seems very important right now.” He paused.” We need to pull together right now, show the world what we’re made of.” And paused again. “Our world will never be the same.”

*THERE HAD BEEN REPORTS all day Tuesday that gasoline retailers here and there — whether on their own or at the direction of their governing corporate enterprises was not made clear — had raised their price-per-gallon to outrageous levels. The effect of such price-gouging was to victimize their already demoralized customers, whatever the rationale for it might have been, whether fear of a curtailed supply or greedy exploitation of a public somewhat inclined to panic.

But was it so? Late Tuesday night, I stopped in on a Union 76 Snack Shop around the corner from my residence in Raleigh.

One of the two attendants, who identified himself as Brian Jones, pointed out proudly that his station had kept its prices down to the previously prevailing rate. OH, there was gouging all right, over in Arkansas, or in Mississippi, or even in Cordova to the upstart suburban east, at all of which places the rate-per-gallon had allegedly climbed to as high as $4.00 a gallon.

“The boss did call today to ask what the guys across the street were charging. We always try to stay just behind them.” Jones said.

Across the street, at an Exxon station, the prices shown on the pumps had held stable as well, and they were, indeed, only a mite more than those of the Snack Shop: $1.399, $1.499, and $1.599 for the three basic grades, compared to the Union 76 station’s $1.379, $1.479, and $1.579. So far, so good .p>

* HUNDREDS OF PASSENGERS — MAYBE thousands — and not all of them on flights that were destined for stopovers in Memphis in the first place were routed by the FAA to permanent stops at Memphis International Airport. So a relatively huge number of people became involuntary tourists in the Bluff City, and, whether assisted by their airlines or by local authorities or on their own they filled up the city’s hotels — some 200 at the Ramada Inn on Brooks Road, very near the airport, for example, and 59 at the prestigious Peabody, some distance away in downtown Memphis

Two travelers who ended up at the famous downtown hostelry with its equally famous resident ducks were Peter McCabe and Ron Rothstein, two Chicago lawyers who had been on a Delta flight to Atlanta when their plane was directed by the FAA to land at Memphis and go no further.

McCabe and Rothstein had to cancel a noon meeting in Atlanta that might have, they implied, settled a case that seemed to be of some urgency. They sat in the lobby of The Peabody late Tuesday night, their bags packed, waiting until it was time to go down the street a bit to the Amtrack station, where they would board a 1 a.m. train back to Chicago, mission unaccomplished and perhaps even in ruins.

Rothstein shrugged. “These things are relative” McCabe explained that their Chicago flight had left at 8:10 a.m., at roughly the time that the second of New York’s twin towers had, unbeknownst to them, been slammed into. Theirs was the last flight allowed to leave O’Hair, and they learned in-light of what had been happening in the outside world.

“But we didn’t fully understand the enormity of it until we disembarked here in Memphis,” said Rothstein..

On top of everything else, there was a reported gas leak at The Peabody at 3 p.m. that forced the hotel’s temporary evacuation. So McCabe tried to make the most of things. He headed, as so many tourists had before him, toward the legendary home of Elvis Presley. “That’s the main thing I regret, that Graceland was closed.,” he said. “They shut it down at 4 p.m., and I never got in. But I did see the Lisa Marie [Elvis’ airplane], and that was really something.”

Things are relative, all right.

*EPILOGUE: Two years ago I spent a golden week in New York with my wife and two daughters, then aged 8 and 10 and fully deserving, as I saw it, of first-hand experience with some of the monuments of their great country. On the second or third day, we got to the top of the Empire State Building (or to the main observation deck, anyhow.). To our disappointment, there was such a fog that morning that literally nothing could be seen in any direction — a flash here and there of what looked like river, or a momentary glimpse of a nearby building. But there was no chance of showing the girls the two great towers that were due south at the tip of Manhattan Island — on top of one of which their parents had stood on a memorable day back in 1983..

We waited and waited, and the fog never lifted. So, after an hour or so, Linda, Julia, and Rose were all inside the gift shop trying to buy souvenirs –little miniature Empire State Buildings that had caught the girls’ eye.

It was then that, waiting outside with stiff-necked determination for the haze to clear, I caught a break. The two twin shapes in the distance began to materialize through the thick mist, even to gleam a bit, and I rushed inside to the gift shop and demanded that Linda and the girls come out and see.

Tell you the truth, Julia and Rose were probably annoyed at having their shopping interrupted But they came, and they saw. There was perhaps a ten-second window of opportunity before the vapors closed in on the buildings again, and they were gone — for good, as it turned out, forever to remain in the unseen distance, dissolved in the mist of memory.

.

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Getting Things Done

If you live in the suburbs long enough, sooner or later you realize that you need to become productive. Get some chores done. Fix up the holes in the den ceiling, clean the yard, repair the dishwasher, reupholster some furniture. That sort of thing.

Recently, I looked at our house and decided that productivity was definitely in order. The linoleum in the kitchen is worn through, the appliances (in their original, auto-gag avocado green) are not working properly, the dog has ruined the carpet in every room (at least once), the roof needs replacing, the siding needs painting, and the storage room in the garage is so full of old street-hockey sticks, skateboards, bicycles, and gardening tools that you can’t even get the door open.

So I went and found a copy of Getting Things Done: The Art of Stress-Free Productivity by David Allen, who is dubbed “the personal productivity guru” right there on the cover. The book is tremendously popular with the business audience, but it’s also finding a surprising following among those of us who have been slobs long enough and are intrigued by this notion of productivity and relaxation all rolled into one.

Allen’s got a method which, he claims, will lead to productivity in even the most stubborn sluggard. Basically, you just need a big box — or file folder, or desk drawer — to serve as the repository for all your fleeting ideas, plans, goals, and dreams. Just write them down and toss them in.

Once a week or so you go through this repository and figure out the steps you need to take to accomplish these items. If something takes two minutes or less, you do it immediately. If it takes longer, you decide whether to delegate it (make the kids do it), defer it (my standard modus operandi), or toss it (my fallback M.O.).

If you don’t believe it’s this simple, Allen has a splendid Web site — www.davidco.com — where you too can learn about setting up the various calendars, notebooks, and file folders you’ll need to become productive and relaxed.

For my part, folders weren’t enough. I went whole hog and complicated the equation by purchasing a Palm Vx (which Allen actually endorses). This ideal little organizer wasn’t sufficient, though, because I soon needed to “sync” my Palm Vx to a Personal Information Management program on my computer. This entailed buying a new computer (Pentium IV, of course), a 17-inch LCD monitor, Klipsch THX-certified computer speakers (300 watts, with a subwoofer!), and — well, let’s just say I’m wired for action.

All the while, the ceiling remained unfixed, the bedrooms needed painting, the dog needed his shots, the dishwasher still made its typical belching noises, and the car still needed a brake job.

Then I happened upon the missing techno element: When I got to page 93 of Allen’s book, I found that he advocates the use of a Brother P-Touch labeller, a device which I have wanted for years but for which I could never work up a good rationale for purchasing. I went and bought one right off, and it changed my life. The P-Touch is the high-tech spawn of the old Dymo punch labellers — you remember, the spinning wheel of letters and the squeeze handle that embossed them on a piece of plastic tape. The new P-Touch labellers are much smoother — there’s a keyboard, and they’ll produce laminated labels with five lines of type, and several different fonts — and are capable of withstanding either freezer or microwave.

If you think I’m alone in my enthusiasm, hear what Allen has to say: “Thousands of executives and professionals and homemakers I have worked with now have their own automatic labellers, and my archives are full of their comments, like, ‘Incredible — I wouldn’t have believed what a difference it makes!’ The labeller will be used to label your file folders, binder spines, and numerous other things.”

Thousands of executives and professionals and homemakers, just like me. Labelling everything. The sugar bowl: SUGAR. The pantry: FOOD. The fridge: CLOSE DOOR. The toilet in the kids’ bathroom: FLUSH. It’s endlessly useful, as you can see.

The trouble is, I got just a bit involved in the technological side of my system and sort of forgot the productivity part. I realized this when I found myself in the den with a dirt rake, scooting all the file folders and computer boxes and software manuals into a spare closet. There, in the heap, lay the tiny Palm Vx, forlorn and unused. Rather than let a labelling opportunity slide, I got out the P-Touch and printed a label — DO WHAT? — and stuck it on the screen so I’d know, next time, just what kind of trouble I was making for myself.

You can e-mail David Dawson at letters@memphisflyer.com.

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THE AFTERMATH