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THE FIGHTIN’ SIDE OF BRENT

The Fightin

Side of Brent

According to Rebekah Gleaves, the Flyer s city coun cil reporter, council member Brent Taylor has a personal bone to pick with Osama bin Laden. Speculating that the tragic events in New York and D.C. will delay Senator Fred Thompson s retirement, thereby delaying any sitting congressman s race for the Senate, further delaying Taylor s own hopes of becoming a congressman when he grows up, the councilman said, They could send me and David Kustoff over to Afghanistan and we d hunt down bin Laden. He messed up our plans. Gosh, Brent, do you think he did it on purpose?

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HOW IT LOOKS

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Politics Politics Beat Blog

‘THE CHILD IS FATHER OF THE MAN’

From ÒDoing One Thing Well: Who is State Senator Steve Cohen, and How Did He Get That Way?” (Memphis Magazine, October 2001)

…When he was five years old, the age at which, Freud says, the psyche is achieving its first complete sense of itself, young Steve Cohen had an experience which is bound to have had an incalculable effect on him. Perhaps it even explains why his father, Dr. Morris Cohen, changed medical courses in mid-career, from pediatrics to psychiatry.

In 1954, when Dr. Jonas Salk was developed the first successful vaccine to end the once endemic scourge of polio (a.k.a. infantile paralysis), Dr.Cohen was given one of the first batches of the vaccine to administer to his patients on a trial basis.

“I don’t know if he volunteered, or how it came about, but in 1954 they gave him the Salk vaccine to give to second-grade students for testing. And he gave the shots to my brother [Michael], who was in the second grade. He didn’t give me the shots. I was in kindergarten. He had the vaccine, and he apparently thought about it and didn’t give it to me. I don’t know whether it was honor, a sense of responsibility, or whether it wasn’t his issue – his purpose. Or I’ve also heard there was some concern that some people might get the polio from the vaccine. Maybe he was concerned,you know, what if that happened? I didn’t know. But anyway, I got polio that fall. I was one of the last people to get it. And my father could have given me the vaccine. He didn’t.”

One doesn’t need an amateur psychologist’s license to read in this the possible origin of some ambiguity towards authority and authority figures.

“It didn’t cause any stress between us,” Cohen insists. “But it did cause my father a lot of angst. He goes on. “One good thing about polio: I’ve read this, that polio survivors tend to max themselves out, they tend to be over-achievers. ”

When he wears shorts, which is frequently around his house in the warm weather months, it is apparent that Cohen’s left leg is thinned and attenuated from the ravages of his childhood disease. That didn’t stop him, however, from playing football in high school — at the position of center, no less, one which results in about as much hard banging as you can expect on a football field.

As Dr. Cohen shifted jobs and specialties, he also shifted locales, from Memphis to Florida to California, back to Florida, and then back to Memphis. (ÉStranger in a strange land, man without a countryÉ.,” indeed.)

One of the ways in which the young Steve Cohen connected with the shifting world about him was through the appurtenances of popular culture: sports, Top 40 musicÉand politics. To go through Cohen’s house on Kenilworth, adjoining Overton Park, is to walk through a theme park of the aforesaid personal artifacts.

The button collection, for example, enchased here and there on his walls: There are campaign buttons for virtually every presidential campaign and every state political campaign of consequence, sports buttons, movie buttons. There are photographs of sports and music celebirities of every stripe, and photographs of Cohen with many of those selfsame celebrities.

Notable among these is Orestes “Minnie” Minoso, the Chicago White Sox great from the ’50s. When Steve Cohen was five years old, recuperating from the first ravages of polio and attending an exhibition game at Memphis’ old Russwood Park, leaning on crutches, a White Sox player came over and handed him a ball, then pointed to Minoso, who was standing some distance away.

“He wanted you to have this,” the player said, and then explained that Minoso, a Latino black, was nervous about approaching a white child himself.

“That was how it was in the ’50s,” Cohen remembers. “It gave me my first insight into the insanity of segregation.”

(It also, after the passage of some time, gave Cohen his email moniker, a variation on the name Minnie Minoso.)É

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Politics Politics Beat Blog

GIBBONS FORMS MAYORAL EXPLORATORY COMMITTEE

District Attorney General Bill Gibbons stirred the pot and thickened the plot of the forthcoming Shelby County Mayor’s race Monday by announcing the formation of an exploratory committee, headed by Attorney David Kustoff, to look into the race.

Gibbons becomes the first name Republican candidate to take even this semi-official step, and his action will presumably be sufficient to keep at bay other GOP possibilities — like former city councilman John Bobango and current councilman Jack Sammons, both of whom have indicated they would run only if Gibbons didn’t.

Gibbons’ statement reads as follows:..

“Today I am filing the necessary paperwork to form an exploratory committee for the upcoming

campaign for mayor of Shelby County.

“Attorney David Kustoff will serve as chairman and treasurer of the exploratory committee

David has served as chairman of the Shelby County Republican Party and was Tennessee

manager of the Bush-Cheney campaign in 2000. I value greatly his advice. I have also retained

the services of the Ingram Group, a statewide public affairs firm to assist during the exploratory

phase.

“Our county faces many challenges m the coming years. It is essential that we have a county

mayor who is focused on reducing crime, improving schools and strengthening our

neighborhoods. If’ we build a reputation as a safe community with good schools and strong

neighborhoods, we will be a community where residents want to remain and others will want to

live, we will be a community where existing businesses want to stay and expand, and new

businesses will want to locate.

“While we have made significant progress in the fight against crime, our crime rate remains far

too high Those on the front line lack the necessary resources to ensure a dramatic reduction in

our crime rate.

“We must have a county mayor committed to a dramatic reduction in crime. The mayor is in a

position to take the lead in ensuring enough prosecutors to quickly and effectively hold criminals

accountable and in providing the necessary treatment dollars to move non-violent drug addicts

away from crime and into productive lives

“More than 60 of our public schools have been officially rated as failures, The status quo in our

schools is not acceptable. We must be open to new, innovative approaches such as increased

public school choice, which would promote healthy competition among our schools. We must

have a strong county mayor who is willing to tie support for increased funding to a commitment

to fundamental changes and to high expectations for the children of our community, especially

disadvantaged children whose only hope is a good education.

“We must have a mayor who is committed to revitalizing existing inner city neighborhoods while

at the same time insuring the proper kind of growth through the development of new, well

planned neighborhoods with long-term stability.

In the coming weeks, I will be considering very carefully what I could do as the next county

mayor to deliver less crime, better schools and stronger neighborhoods. I will also consider what

I feel I can accomplish by remaining district attorney. I will make my decision based upon a

careful look at how I can have the strongest positive impact on our community.”

— JACKSON BAKER