Categories
Politics Politics Beat Blog

A COMEBACK RESUMES

NASHVILLE — The national tragedy which began happening on the morning of Tuesday, September 11th put a temporary end to the political resurfacing of former Vice President Al Gore, which had been proceeding apace right up until that time.

Since then, Gore had relapsed into the virtual silence which had governed his actions after the turbulent Florida vote recount and his concession to Republican George W. Bush in early December.

Gore returned to public consciousness in Nashville Saturday, making apperances at several meetings during a weekend of state Democratic Party events. Still bearded, he told his fellow Tennessee Democrats that he backed the president unresevervedly and urged that they do the same.

Bush had put a call in to Gore in the aftermath of the terrorist attacks of September 11th, but, in the swirl of events, the two never made their connection. Gore dismissed that fact as unimportant, treating the president’s call as a political courtesy.

Categories
News News Feature

LIST OF SCHOOLS ‘ON NOTICE’

The following schools have been put “on notice” by the state Education Department as falling short of standard on the basis of a complex evaluation scheme involving three years’ performance. Of the 98, 64 are from the Memphis city system.

1. Campbell Stony Fork

2. Claiborne Clairfield Elementary

3. Davidson East Middle School

4. Davidson Kirkpatrick Elementary

5. Davidson Maplewood High School

6. Davidson Pearl Cohn High School

7. Davidson Shwab Elementary

8. Davidson Stratford High School

9. Davidson Warner Elementary

10. Davidson West End Middle

11. Davidson Whites Creek Comprehensive High

12. Fayette Fayette Ware

13. Fayette Jefferson Elementary

14. Fayette Northwest Elementary

15. Fayette Somerville Elementary

16. Fayette Southwest Elementary

17. Hamilton Calvin Donaldson Elementary

18. Hamilton Chattanooga Middle

19. Hamilton Dalewood Middle

20. Hamilton East Lake Elementary

21. Hamilton Hardy Elementary

22. Hamilton Howard Elementary

23. Hamilton Howard School Academics and Technology

24. Hamilton John P Franklin Middle

25. Hamilton Orchard Knob Elementary

26. Hamilton Orchard Knob Middle

27. Hamilton Woodmore Elementary

28. Hardeman Grand Junction Elementary

29. Hawkins Clinch School

30. Knox Lonsdale Elementary

31. Knox Maynard Elementary

32. Knox Sarah M Greene Elementary

33. Memphis Airways Middle

34. Memphis Booker T. Washington High

35. Memphis Brookmeade Elementary

36. Memphis Carver High

37. Memphis Chickasaw JHS

38. Memphis Corning Elementary

39. Memphis Cypress JHS

40. Memphis Denver Elementary

41. Memphis Dunbar Elementary

42. Memphis East High

43. Memphis Fairley Elementary

44. Memphis Fairley High

45. Memphis Fairview Jr High

46. Memphis Frayser Elementary

47. Memphis Frayser High

48. Memphis Geeter Middle

49. Memphis Georgian Hills Elementary

50. Memphis Georgian Hills JHS

51. Memphis Graceland Elementary

52. Memphis Hamilton High

53. Memphis Hamilton Middle

54. Memphis Hawkins Mill Elementary

55. Memphis Hillcrest High

56. Memphis Hollywood Elementary

57. Memphis Humes Middle

58. Memphis Kingsbury High

59. Memphis Lanier JHS

60. Memphis Larose Elementary

61. Memphis Lester Elementary School

62. Memphis Levi Elementary

63. Memphis Lincoln Elementary

64. Memphis Locke Elementary

65. Memphis Longview Middle School

66. Memphis Manassas High

67. Memphis Melrose High

68. Memphis Middle College High School

69. Memphis Mitchell Road High

70. Memphis Northside High

71. Memphis Oakhaven High

72. Memphis Orleans Elementary

73. Memphis Raineshaven Elementary

74. Memphis Raleigh Egypt High

75. Memphis Raleigh Egypt Middle

76. Memphis Riverview Middle

77. Memphis Shannon Elementary

78. Memphis Sharpe Elementary

79. Memphis Sheffield Elementary

80. Memphis Sheffield High

81. Memphis Sherwood Middle

82. Memphis South Side High

83. Memphis Spring Hill Elementary

84. Memphis Springdale Elementary

85. Memphis Treadwell Elementary

86. Memphis Treadwell High

87. Memphis Trezevant High

88. Memphis Vance Middle

89. Memphis Westhaven Elementary

90. Memphis Westside High

91. Memphis Westwood Elementary

92. Memphis Westwood High

93. Memphis Whitehaven High

94. Memphis Whitney Elementary

95. Memphis Winchester Elementary

96. Memphis Wooddale High

97. Perry Perry County High

98. Rutherford Holloway High School

Schools-on-Notice by School System:

Campbell, 1

Claiborne, 1

Davidson, 9

Fayette, 5

Hamilton, 11

Hardeman, 1

Hawkins, 1

Knox, 3

Memphis, 64

Perry, 1

Rutherford, 1

Categories
News News Feature

A SOLDIER STORY

They don’t wear dog tags. Their families don’t know where they’re going, when they’ll be back, or the circumstances of their death — if and when the worst should occur. Often, the only way they even know when another group has been on a mission is by an eerie and unmistakable sign: a pair of empty combat boots resting outside of the base chapel, signifying the death of a soldier.

This is the life of military Special Operations or Special Ops, as they’re often called.

In the mid-’90s, I watched my boyfriend go from grunt Army infantryman to an elite Airborne Ranger. I watched him go from an 18-year-old, na•ve Tennessee boy to a trained killer who would spend the next few years of his life flirting with foreign soil, parachuting into danger, belly-crawling in trenches, and tracking war criminals. To say it changed him would be a gross understatement. It changed him so much that I called off the wedding.

Make no mistake, we both knew we were too young to get married, and I don’t think either of us really even wanted to — it just seemed like the right thing to do. Maybe it was all the WWII movies we’d seen.

Our engagement was never real to me anyway. We got engaged the day he learned he was being sent to Bosnia, a country neither of us had ever heard of — we had to look at a map to know where in the world it was. Chris was going on his first Special Ops mission, his first time to face death. His commanding officers told him up front that there was a good chance that he would never come home, that this first trip could be his last, that there was no turning back, no room for cowardice — that this was the big show.

Despite his bravado and his extensive training, Chris was scared — so scared that he proposed. We took a bunch of pictures of each other, said many good-byes, sat around in silence, and cried.

He wrote me some letters while he was over there, but I didn’t get any of them until he had already made it back home safely. Truthfully, I had already resigned myself to thinking he would die. So when he came back and was so very different from when he left, neither of us knew what to say or do. I was a light-hearted, 17-year-old high school student; he wouldn’t answer me when I asked if he had to kill anyone over there.

That was it. The wedding was off. I walked away from it and back to my world of soccer games and proms, and he went back to his life as a government-approved assassin. We had some brushes after that, actually some damn scary ones (you don’t want to jilt someone who knows 35 ways to kill a person without leaving a mark). But mostly that was it. We’re friends again now, and he’s moved on to a new career — training military Special Ops in hand-to-hand combat.

After seeing that change in Chris, you’d think I would have learned my lesson about Special Ops soldiers. Hardly. For the first few years after Chris, I found myself drawn to these elite soldiers — men who live off adrenaline, danger, and the blood of strangers.

For a short time I dated Brad — another Ranger who was so friendly, jovial, and stable that I sometimes forgot that he was military, and then I’d see that screaming eagle tattooed on his neck.

I studied hap ki do with a Navy SEAL and he taught me how to stab a man with the man’s own knife, while he’s still holding it. I also learned pressure points and how to throw a man in a way that causes him to break his own neck. Once, on a first date with a Green Beret, that Special Op soldier taught me how to gut a man — over dinner, explicitly demonstrating with his steak knife.

A few years later I got drunk in a Florida bar with two other Navy SEALS who spoke of swimming several miles in the ocean with boots on in hypothermia-inducing water. They joked that the swim was just to get to the target, that the real work began ashore.

From a Delta Force member I learned a little jujitsu — Army-style: how to sneak up behind an enemy and choke him to sleep or to death; how to use the strength in my hips and legs and abdomen to kill a person in under a minute; how to break a bone so that it will either puncture the skin or cause internal bleeding. Fortunately, the night that I hung out with four Night Stalkers — Army reconnaissance helicopter pilots — I didn’t learn much of anything. It’s hard to teach someone how to fly a helicopter when you’re all sloshed on tequila.

I don’t know if any of these boys I ve known are in Afghanistan now. Probably not — they’ve probably all finished their tours. I do know that their comrades are over there. Special Ops have already been sent to the Middle East to do our first bit of dirty work for us. Some of them may have been there all along. These forces will likely suffer the greatest casualties — almost all they do is ground fighting. They ll go in first, and we’ll never know about it. They’ll die first, and we’ll never hear about it. And when our infantrymen get captured and taken as POWs, Special Ops will sneak in and try to rescue them to bring our boys home again.

These men — boys themselves, really — are extremely well-trained and devoted to the job in a way that makes them lousy boyfriends, great drinking buddies, and exceptional soldiers. In the next few months, we’re all going to come to realize that we owe them for our lives and the lives of our other fighting men. Say a little prayer for them today, some of them may be parachuting into some desolate region right now.

Categories
We Recommend We Recommend

sunday, 23

Theatre:

THE DIXON GALLERY AND GARDENS. 4339 Park. A one-woman show about the life of
the only American and only female who exhibited her work with the
Impessionists. Mary Cassatt and the Impressionists. $5. 2 p.m.

THEATREWORKS, 2085 Monroe at Florence. Playwrights Present will read FIRSTS, a
selection from first plays by Memphis playwrights. Free. 4:45 p.m.

Categories
Sports Sports Feature

GOOD START, UGLY WIN

For one quarter, the University of Memphis Tiger football team looked unstoppable.

For the rest of the game, they looked like their normal selves.

The Tigers (2-1) scored on three of their first four possessions, taking a 17-0 first quarter lead over the South Florida Bulls (1-2) on the strength of a three yard TD reception from QB Travis Anglin to running back Sugar Sanders, a 45 yard FG by kicker Ryan White, and a one yard TD run by running back Dante Brown.

And that was it.

In the second quarter, the Tigers inversely echoed their offensive output with turning the ball over three out of their next four possessions. The Tigers had to rely then on both a stiff defense as well as a combination of South Florida turnovers and penalties to hold on for a 17-9 victory.

Anglin once again turned in a solid all purpose performance, throwing 12 times with nine completions for 94 yards and his TD pass to Sanders. Anglin also ran the ball 10 times for 49 yards and even caught one reception during a trick play reverse that resulted in a 45 yard gain. Anglin would later leave the game for X-Rays on a hurt throwing shoulder. His status was unknown at the time of this writing.

Backup QB Neil Suber finished the game for the Tigers, throwing five completions on seven attempts for 25 yards and an interception. Suber also ran the ball eight times for 15 yards.

Running back Dante Brown provided ground support, rushing 17 times for 79 yards and his one TD. Brown also received two passes for 37 yards.

The Bulls scored nine unanswered points on a fifteen yard fumble recovery run for a touchdown by Bulls defensive end Shurron Pierson at the end of the first half and then on a 27 yard FG by Bulls kicker Santiago Gramatica.

Characteristic of their win over Pittsburgh two weeks ago, the Bulls looked to the air for their offense. Bulls QB Marquel Blackwell threw 61 times but for only 25 completions. Blackwell did, however, toss the ball for 276 yards. The Tigers secondary gave Blackwell fits all day, intercepting three of his passes, and not allowing a passing touchdown all day. In the most critical series of plays of the night, the Bulls marched the ball down the field from their own 11 yard line with only 1:06 left on the clock. 87 yards and only 1 minute, five seconds later, the Bulls found themselves on the Tiger 2 with only a second left. However, Blackwell could still not find wide receiver Huey Whitaker as time expired on yet another missed pass.

The Bulls also had some success running the ball as they amassed 124 yards on 23 carries.

However, where the Bulls hurt themselves the most was in their penalties, amassing 13 yellow flags for 93 yards. Two of those penalties called back Bulls TD scores.

The Tigers travel to Kentucky next week to face CUSA champ Louisville at Louisville on Saturday, September 29, at 2 p.m.

Categories
News The Fly-By

CRYSTAL GAZING, LUCK AMAZING

“In the year of the millennium the bear will travel down from the northland
and take up residence n the new city of pharoahs.” Nostradamus never said
this. Still, there is at least one eerie omen predicting the relocation of the
Vancouver Grizzles to Memphis. The second and third pages of the team’s
2000/2001 yearbook are devoted to a full-color ad for the film 3000 Miles
to Graceland
starring Kevin Costner and Kurt Russell as Elvis-
impersonating bad guys. Vancouver is exactly 2,492 miles from Graceland.
Coincidence? We think not.

Categories
News News Feature

A SOLDIER STORY

They don’t wear dog tags. Their families don’t know where they’re going, when they’ll be back, or the circumstances of their death — if and when the worst should occur. Often, the only way they even know when another group has been on a mission is by an eerie and unmistakable sign: a pair of empty combat boots resting outside of the base chapel, signifying the death of a soldier. This is the life of military Special Operations or Special Ops, as they’re often called.

In the mid- 90s, I watched my boyfriend go from grunt Army infantryman to an elite Airborne Ranger. I watched him go from an 18-year-old, naive Tennessee boy to a trained killer who would spend the next few years of his life flirting with foreign soil, parachuting into danger, belly-crawling in trenches, and tracking war criminals. To say it changed him would be a gross understatement. It changed him so much that I called off the wedding.

Make no mistake, we both knew we were too young to get married, and I don’t think either of us really even wanted to — it just seemed like the right thing to do. Maybe it was all the WWII movies we’d seen.

Our engagement was never real to me anyway. We got engaged the day he learned he was being sent to Bosnia, a country neither of us had ever heard of — we had to look at a map to know where in the world it was. Chris was going on his first Special Ops mission, his first time to face death. His commanding officers told him up front that there was a good chance that he would never come home, that this first trip could be his last, that there was no turning back, no room for cowardice — that this was the big show.

Despite his bravado and his extensive training, Chris was scared — so scared that he proposed. We took a bunch of pictures of each other, said many good-byes, sat around in silence, and cried.

He wrote me some letters while he was over there, but I didn’t get any of them until he had already made it back home safely. Truthfully, I had already resigned myself to thinking he would die. So when he came back and was so very different from when he left, neither of us knew what to say or do. I was a light-hearted, 17-year-old high school student; he wouldn’t answer me when I asked if he had to kill anyone over there.

That was it. The wedding was off. I walked away from it and back to my world of soccer games and proms, and he went back to his life as a government-approved assassin. We had some brushes after that, actually some damn scary ones (you don’t want to jilt someone who knows 35 ways to kill a person without leaving a mark). But mostly that was it. We’re friends again now, and he’s moved on to a new career — training military Special Ops in hand-to-hand combat.

After seeing that change in Chris, you’d think I would have learned my lesson about Special Ops soldiers. Hardly. For the first few years after Chris, I found myself drawn to these elite soldiers — men who live off adrenaline, danger, and the blood of strangers.

For a short time I dated Brad — another Ranger who was so friendly, jovial, and stable that I sometimes forgot that he was military, and then I’d see that screaming eagle tattooed on his neck.

I studied hap ki do with a Navy SEAL and he taught me how to stab a man with the man’s own knife, while he’s still holding it. I also learned pressure points and how to throw a man in a way that causes him to break his own neck. Once, on a first date with a Green Beret, that Special Op soldier taught me how to gut a man — over dinner, explicitly demonstrating with his steak knife.

A few years later I got drunk in a Florida bar with two other Navy SEALS who spoke of swimming several miles in the ocean with boots on in hypothermia-inducing water. They joked that the swim was just to get to the target, that the real work began ashore.

From a Delta Force member I learned a little jujitsu — Army-style: how to sneak up behind an enemy and choke him to sleep or to death; how to use the strength in my hips and legs and abdomen to kill a person in under a minute; how to break a bone so that it will either puncture the skin or cause internal bleeding. Fortunately, the night that I hung out with four Night Stalkers — Army reconnaissance helicopter pilots — I didn’t learn much of anything. It’s hard to teach someone how to fly a helicopter when you’re all sloshed on tequila.

I don’t know if any of these boys I’ve known are in Afghanistan now. Probably not — they’ve probably all finished their tours. I do know that their comrades are over there. Special Ops have already been sent to the Middle East to do our first bit of dirty work for us. Some of them may have been there all along. These forces will likely suffer the greatest casualties — almost all they do is ground fighting. They ll go in first, and we’ll never know about it. They’ll die first, and we’ll never hear about it. And when our infantrymen get captured and taken as POWs, Special Ops will sneak in and try to rescue them to bring our boys home again.

These men — boys themselves, really — are extremely well-trained and devoted to the job in a way that makes them lousy boyfriends, great drinking buddies, and exceptional soldiers. In the next few months, we’re all going to come to realize that we owe them for our lives and the lives of our other fighting men. Say a little prayer for them today, some of them may be parachuting into some desolate region right now.

Categories
Politics Politics Beat Blog

HELL YES, HE IS GOING!

Two weeks ago, 26-year-old Drew Pritt, a political science major at the University of Memphis and president of the university’ College Democrats, was standing in a Q-and-A line at a campus “town meeting” on the subject of campaign-finance reform, which just that little bit of time ago was a prime point of contention among political junkies and poli-sci students. The panelists at the meeting, all of whom had come to Memphis on behalf of the McCain-Feingold bill, were illustrious members of Congress — Sen. Russ Feingold of Wisconsin himself, Rep. Marty Mehan of Massachusetts, Rep. Chris Shays of Connecticut, Rep. Harold Ford Jr. of hometown Memphis, et al., et al. Pritt had lined up in order to balance and, if possible, refute the highly organized claque of College Republicans who had gotten in the Q-and-A line to ask leading, unfriendly questions of the panelists.

That was then, this is now. Pritt will shortly be lining up with other Republicans and Democrats and independents — not to ask questions at all but to follow orders. As soon as he heard of the atrocities perpetrated in New York and Washington, D.C., on September 11th, Pritt, a member of the inactive Army reserve, began to petition his local Memphis reserve unit to go on active service. He now has his wish, having been shifted to the active reserves and subsequently called up. He’ll be leaving within two weeks to be attached to a unit destined for parts unknown.

At some point in the period immediately following the terrorist attacks, Pritt had taken part in a candlelight vigil on campus in honor of the victims of September 11th and on behalf of national unity. There were speakers at the vigil — from the Christian, Jewish, and Islamic faiths and from the ranks of secularists as well. One of the latter was a woman who espoused a Noam Chomsky-like line of military non-intervention and heatedly condemned in advance any potential warlike response to events on the part of the United States.

Pritt was offended and told the woman that he was trying as hard as he could to take part in just such a response “so that people like you may continue to have the right to say what you just said.”

Days later a fellow Democrat routed along on his e-mail network a Salon.com article (“Hell No, They Won’t Go — Yet” by Janelle Brown and King Kauffman) which clearly shared in the skepticism which the article had documented at San Francisco State Unviersity concerning the prevalent patriotic response in America at large. Pritt was offended all over again and responded along the same network with his own e-mail message (appended).

“I come from a family with a military tradition,” said Pritt, both of whose brothers are also in military units that will likely see duty in whatever kind of military conflict ultimately develops. (Brother David is a Master Sergeant with the Army’s 82nd Airborne Division, already deployed; brother Paul is a captain in the Army reserves and is also seeking activation.) Drew Pritt’s father, an Episcopal clergyman, is also a military veteran. “Plus,” says the bespectacled, buzz-cut Pritt earnestly, “I intend to have a political career, and I can’t see voting for anybody to do military service if I’m not willing to do it myself.”

So gung-ho was the young Pritt who volunteered for the Army reserve in 1997 that he would end up in a training unit at Fort Knox known as the “Mad Dogs” for its collective zeal and efficiency in inter-unit competitions.

Pritt, a Specialist holding the pay grade of E-4, counts himself a liberal Democrat and is aware that, by various stereotypes and standards, he’ a statistical freak. By way of accounting for his place in the scheme of things, he likes to quote a mantra which he picked up — believe it or not — from his first drill sergeant but which he thinks derives from Socrates: “Democracy is a hungry beast that must constantly be fed.”

Interestingly enough, Pritt is just one of two called-up reservists who had been serving on the campaign staff of state rep. Carol Chumney, who seeks the 2002 Democratic nomination for Shelby County Mayor. (The other is Chumney’s press secretary, Bert Kelly, an officer in the Naval Reserve who is even now on duty in New York.)

Pritt’s written response to the Salon.com article (http://www.salon.com/letters/daily/2001/09/19/won_t_go/index.html) follows:

“While I enjoy the spirit of Freedom of Speech and the ideas of one individual, in fact, I literally fight for them, the reality of this article is the complete opposite is actually true. I can attest that recruiters statewide are reporting a marked increase of 30%-60%, depending where they are, in Tennessee. Nationwide, it’s an average jump of 35% from what usually happens. That’s an average of 4-5 individuals every two weeks joining.

“Furthermore, I have been activated by the U.S. Army, as I am a reservist. I join my brother Paul, Captain Tennessee Army Reserves, and my brother David, TSgt. 82nd Airborne, who are going off to defend freedom.

“I am also one of four University of Memphis students whose status has changed from inactive to active since Tuesday’s atrocities.

“So, no, this article is one individual, who apparently does make an interesting point. That point is that it’s unsure if they are fight-worthy. Well, take it from someone who passed Basic Training (Fort Jackson, SC) and ROTC Officer Basic Training (Fort Knox, KY), if these young people, as I suspect, have a desire to join, to give it their all, and to fight for the basic freedoms we all enjoy, then, trust me, we will see the marked increase [in enlistments].

“One other point, Afghanistan is not a contemporary war. The bad news is that Ghengis Khan, the British Empire, and the Soviet Union all had to call the colors and retreat. Secondly, conventional, high-tech weapons that were a mainstay of Desert Storm are not effective here in this rocky, mountainous, dangerous land. There are massive tunnel systems.

“This is not a partisan issue. This is as Senator Hillary Clinton (D-NY) said in her speech to the Senate floor, ‘This is the time for the world community to say either you are with us or against us. There is no in-between.'”

Categories
We Recommend We Recommend

saturday, 22

EGYPTIAN WORKSHOP. The University of Memphis Institute for Egyptian Art and
Archaeology will host the second workshop allowing families to tout the
exhibit “The Gods of Ancient Memphis,” University of Memphis Art Museum. Free.
10 a.m. – 3 p.m.

And, need we remind you: THE MID-SOUTH FAIR!