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ELECTION 2002: WHO’S ON FIRST?

Note: This is an expanded version of the Election Preview in the current print issue of the Flyer. It will be updated, both grapically and textually, up until Election Day.

SHELBY COUNTY MAYORÕS RACE: No getting around it. The favorite, both in TuesdayÕs Democratic primary and in the ultimate August showdown, is Shelby County Public Defender A C Wharton., a personable, respected longtime public figure who has served in positions of authority on boards and commissions dealing with mental health, education, and criminal justice.

He is, moreover, an African American at a time when demographics arguably favor blacks in Shelby County voting, but one who is uncommonly unthreatening to whites. Add the fact that he has substantial support, financial and otherwise, across party as well as racial lines.

Skeptics criticize WhartonÕs reticence in this campaign to take specific positions, but his reluctance to spell out a credo or a program goes beyond any penchant for waffling.

The fact is, he has always maintained a sturdy independence from causes, even when fully saddled up to them in an institutional way

A case in point was his service as Shelby County chairman of former 4th District congressman Jim CooperÕs 1994 race for the U.S. Senate. As the race between Cooper, the Democratic nominee and early leader, and Republican nominee Fred Thompson, heated up, Wharton was asked about his candidate on the then widely watched WKNO-TV talk show, Informed Sources.

With the wry grin that he assumes when he is telling a home truth, Wharton said about his mild-mannered candidate, ÒHeÕs not the most exciting fellow.Ó Observing Cooper in action, he said, was Ò kind of like watching a man eat a mashed-potato sandwich.Ó His fellow panelists guffawed in astonishment. How many votes could that have been worth for good ole Jim? Yet the remark merely articulated what many friends of the relatively bashful Cooper had long believed.

And there was his summing-up, on another installment of the same program, of the reason for Senator Jim SasserÕs defeat by Nashville doctor Bill Frist in the 1994 election. ÒI didnÕt see him much in recent years,Ó Wharton said drily of the influential Sasser, who had been promised the position of Majority Leader if the Democrats held on in the Senate (they Ð and he Ð did not). ÒOh, I would see his name in the New York Times and read about him in Time, but I never [brief , almost imperceptible pause for effect] got to touch the hem of his garment.Ó

Among the qualifications boasted in the Shelby County Public DefenderÕs campaign literature was his chairmanship of the Tennessee Higher Education Commission (THEC). True enough, but it omitted reference to a bizarre occasion from several years back when WhartonÕs fellow commission members had first elected him chairman, only to see Wharton, who had not been at the meeting, publicly repudiate his election and decline to serve. Not enough available time, he explained plausibly, but it was the independence, even brashness, of his gesture that stood out.

Wharton has certain things in common with another consensus Democratic favorite, ex-Nashville mayor and current gubernatorial candidate Phil Bredesen, whose desertion of a key element of his partymatesÕ credo -Ð notably, their conviction that a state income tax is called for by the present fiscal crisis -Ð has frustrated many of them and enraged others.

The main party shibboleth being spurned by Wharton is the belief in city-county consolidation which is taken for granted by many Ð perhaps most -Ð local Democrats. It is certainly a major article of belief for Memphis Mayor Willie Herenton, the man whose reelection campaigns Wharton has served twice as campaign chairman.

The reality is that the joint Òtask forceÓ on consolidation which Herenton created and which has just issued its first report Ð on “single-source” funding for city and county schools Ð is a procedural cover for the mayorÕs unrelenting support of consolidation, a support he has urged unremittingly since his first election as the cityÕs mayor in 1991.

For Wharton, however, the task force has been cover of another sort Ð the excuse, some would maintain, for avoiding having to take a position on the controversial issue. When asked about consolidation, the Public Defender always carefully explains that he Òsupports,Ó not it, but the task force study of it. And he goes on to explain that there are several different models of consolidation and enough complexities associated with all of them to merit a good deal of study indeed.

A C Wharton is a patient and cautious man, one who is not about to be moved until he sees that a goal is attainable and knows precisely how to advance to it.

In 1995, word was getting out that longtime Memphis congressman/power broker Harold Ford Sr. (the patronymic suffix is something we have learned to add in retrospect) intended to vacate his seat, and to bequeath it, more or less, to his oldest son and namesake, long since celebrated but then an untried 25-year-old law school graduate

Whether being prescient of just being careful, Wharton declined some persistent entreaties to become an establishment-supported alternative.

A number of Old School Memphians saw their opportunity to put an end to the Ford dominion, and, at Mayor HerentonÕs annual Christmas part at The Peabody, one of them, National Bank of Commerce executive Gus Denton relentlessly hotboxed Wharton to run as a rival candidate Through it all, Wharton kept smiling, but you could almost see the common-sense mantra of No Way running through the mind behind those mild but calculating eyes of his.

Contrast that with his reaction in July of last year when Bobby Lanier, the right-hand man of county mayor Jim Rout (as of Mayor Bill Morris before him), confided to Wharton that Rout would not be running again. Though for proprietyÕs sake Wharton let a little time pass before announcing his intentions, he in effect had already made his mind up: He would run.

It made sense, especially since WhartonÕs first round would be fought in the Democratic primary, where two-thirds of the electorate would be black, and where race-consciousness would not be a decisive factor among the rest of the population.

It was hard to see how Wharton could lose, and the well-credentialed Harold Byrd Ð former legislator, Bartlett banker, and civic booster nonpareil Ð found out as much from his pollster in early March, and, after more than a year of intensive preparation and fundraising, had to Ðpainfully, reluctantly, but realistically Ð fold his hand.

A C (the unpunctuated initials which were his entire given name and which, instead of his last name, he would run by) had other primary opponents Ð the black contractor C.J. Cochran, who wore a cowboy hat to forums and proposed some intriguing (if impractical) ideas, like a countywide light rail system; and C.C. Buchanan, an African-American minister who spoke for Òthe peopleÓ and who deprecated both himself (lightly) and (with suspicious regularity) Wharton, whom he denounced as a tool of Republicans and special interests.

A C’S LAST REMAINING SERIOUS OPPONENT IN DEMOCRATIC RANKS, State Representative Carol Chumney, took up these latter themes systematically and with surprising effectiveness. Especially at candidate forums, where she could sometimes do a virtual one-on-one with Wharton (with an assist from Buchanan), Chumney pumped for her major themes Ð consolidation, a curb on reckless development, and a two-year freeze on the property tax Ð and scourged Wharton for his Republican support (generally from moderates like County Commissioner Buck Wellford), for being too partial to the developers, for refusing to commit himself on consolidation, and even for the clients he had taken on in his private law practice, notably the Madisons, proprietors of one of the more troubled day-care operations.

Chumney had made a name for herself as the author of legislation that attempted to reform the day care operations (many of the fly-by-night variety) which had proliferated in the wake of TennCare and state and federal welfare reform measures. It was characteristic of a career which had seen her alternate between poles of outsider and insider She had also served as chairperson of the legislatureÕs joint special committee on children and, for a spell, had been a ranking member of the state House Democratic leadership.

She was voted out of her leadership post a couple of sessions back, and the consensus was that she was ultimately not the species of team player that was called for in that role, that Ð for better or for worse Ð she had more than her share of personal independence.

Once she had set her sight on a goal, Chumney seemed driven and highly focused, as even apparently trivial incidents from her career would indicate. A former University of Memphis student body president, who was also editor of the law review at the universityÕs Law School, Chumney faced down a raft of opponents in 1990 (including then Mayor Dick HackettÕs main man, Paul Gurley) and won election with relative ease.

A day or so after her victory, she rewarded herself with an ice cream cone and was concentrating on enjoying it when she took an awkward step off a curb, taking a pratfall and breaking an arm. Her main thought going down Ð one which contributed to her misfortune Ð was,I must not drop this cone.

The same single-mindedness has showed up throughout her subsequent career. In 1994 Chumney lost a devoted ally, Memphis feminist Paula Casey, when she attempted to wrest control from Casey (who had supplied the idea and much of the organizing energy) of a newly created state Suffragist Commission. In the ensuing fight, which ended with a compromise Ð Casey and an ad hoc legislative ally of ChumneyÕs, Nashville state Senator Thelma Harper, sharing power Ð Chumney would alienate her erstwhile friend Casey, who believes to this day she was slandered and who this year emailed her network of allies in the womenÕs movement messages detailing her determined opposition to ChumneyÕs candidacy.

Not that Chumney is an iron-willed curmudgeon. While her determination to stay on message has vexed many an interviewer (especially TV reporters looking for something beyond a canned sound bite), she also owns an infectious giggle and some pop-culture enthusiasms which give her, like Wharton, a rounded personality.

And, in the judgment of a growing number of observers, the case she has made against Wharton as a codependent of special interests, notably developers, has gathered some resonance.

WHATEVER THE JUSTICE OF HER CHARGE AGAINST Wharton Ð who, in this instance, as in others, would prefer to appear the thoughtful surveyor of multiple options Ð Chumney makes a plausible case that pell-mell development has forced Shelby County government to hasten after it and create the widely dispersed new schools and utility infrastructure that are major factors in the countyÕs current $1.4 billion-dollar debt.

An especially complicating factor is the state-mandated formula, based on Average Daily Attendance (ADA), which distributes capital construction funds to city and county in a 3 to 1 ratio which is a hot-button issue for all candidates running this year for commission posts outside the city and which was a target for eradication by Mayor HerentonÕs special task force on school funding. (Ironically enough, the ADA formula has, because of the very disproportion which so alarms its critics, resulted in finally getting even some of the more dilapidated city schools air-conditioned and otherwise up to snuff.)

Opponents of the impact fee on developers which Chumney says she favors (and which Wharton, typically, is reserving judgment on) point out that some 60 percent of new development is outside Shelby County and that such fees might increasingly drive developers into adjoining counties

Representatives of the very suburbs which were created by developers working overtime during the last couple of decades have now developed their own aversions to more-of-the same. They particularly fear the kind of Òcookie-cutterÓ projects which locate relatively low-income houses in the vicinity of newly established mid- to upper-scale residences

There are two bottom lines to the suburbanites’ reaction: Ð anxiety about declining property values, and, in the case of those motivated by Òwhite-flightÓ considerations, a sense that the troubling diversities of Memphis might be catching up with them.

Mayoral candidate Larry Scroggs emerged late last year as a consensus candidate for a Republican Party whose better-known public figures (including outgoing incumbent Mayor Jim Rout himself) seemed to doubt the partyÕs chances in the new demographics of Shelby County.

District Attorney General Bill Gibbons (who seems legitimately to have not wanted the job) said No, then respected former city councilman John Bobango, then businessman/sports figure Allie Prescott. Along the way, County Trustee Bob Patterson, Probate court clerk Chris Thomas, and various others also demurred.

A bid for party support had been made by radiologist/radio mogul George Flinn, politically inexperienced but personally ambitious and, after significant success in two widely divergent fields, confident of his ability to handle the job of running Shelby County. But party luminaries kept looking for someone already versed in the arcana of politics and government (or, as Dr. Flinn and various GOP dissidents saw it, someone from the partyÕs established Good Ole Boy network, who Ð among other real and imagined sins Ð had been hand-in-hand with the more rapacious of the developers).

Though no particular friend of the development community, Scroggs, who had already deliberated on possible races for Congress and the governorship, otherwise fit the bill. Polite, studious, and disciplined, he was a fiscal conservative and reliable party man who could also work amicably with Democrats. (Ironically, Scroggs had seemed most inconvenienced in recent years by a long-term association with Governor Don Sundquist, who had helped him in two bitter primary struggles with Democratic-turned-Republican David Shirley and who for years employed ScroggsÕ wife Pat as his field representative in Memphis.)

Eventually, late last year, Scroggs got the party regularsÕ nod, and Flinn was left on the outside, but not for long. After simmering for a while, first filing for the mayorÕs race as a Republican, then withdrawing to consider running as an independent, Flinn eventually took the leap and filed a second time in the GOP primary, this time for keeps.

The two men are more contrasting even than the two main Democrats — the chief difference being that Scroggs is an insider, Flinn an outsider, in both cases for better and for worse. Scroggs knows the ropes; sometimes his display of knowledge is impressive, at other times, he treads on the edge of pedantry. For his part, Flinn often seems confused and uncertain about some of the issues of the mayoral debate, but he makes a plausible case that his background equips him to bring innovative thinking into the task of resolving them.

While Scroggs more or less has a monopoly on support from other key Republicans (he was unanimously endorsed by his fellow Republicans in the legislature, and he also got the backing of suburban Shelby CountyÕs mayors), Flinn Ð made wealthy by his ultrasound patents and business success Ð has a huge advantage in financial resources.

Consequently, the two men have waged the war their means have equipped them for Ð Flinn spending prodigiously on radio and TV spots (so far focusing on his own positive attributes) and on mailouts (at least one of which nails Scroggs for his purported Ð and, in some cases, clearly exaggerated Ðsupport of various tax measures). Scroggs, hoping to husband his comparatively meager resources for a summer campaign, has responded with press conferences in a frank bid for free media.

At bottom, though, there is not much ideological difference between the two GOP candidates. Both are opposed to consolidation and express doubt that it would actually offer either savings or efficiency to taxpayers. Both are for fiscally strict policies that would assign highest priority to education spending. And both stress the pre-eminent importance of job development.

Whichever one of them wins the Republican primary may not be the doomed loser that appeared, some months ago, to be the inevitable fate of the GOP standard-bearer. Since then, the likelihood of a disproportionately high Republican turnout for the August general election has been raised by hard-fought contests for the U.S. Senate and the 7th District congressional seat. Democrats have no such races to drive their vote.

Speaking of turnout, most observers reckon that next weekÕs will be moderately light Ð somewhere in the range of 10 to 15 percent of eligible voters. Early voting has gone slightly higher than in the county-primary season of four years ago, according to sources at the Election Commission.

Beyond the mayoral level, this may be what Democratic activist David Upton calls a Òmailout election,Ó one in which the voting precincts can be carefully targeted. And, indeed, mailboxes are beginning to fill up with flyers.

AMONG THE STANDOUT RACES:

County Commission, District 1, Position 2 (Republican): Incumbent Linda Rendtorff faces a challenge from winsome but untested newcomer Karla Templeton, who stresses the tax issue and that of public funding for the proposed NBA arena. (The commission has voted Ð most recently in a special meeting last weekÐ to hold off final voting on bonds for the arena project until May 8th, the morning after the election). Verdict: Rendtorff should be safe.

County Commission, District 1, Position 3 (Republican): Current commission chairman Morris Fair faces the same sort of challenge as does Rendtorff, and from TempletonÕs father, restaurateur John Willingham, a lynchpin of the internal GOP opposition. Verdict: Fair has better-than-fair prospects.

County Commission, District 2, Position 3 (Democratic): One of the more deserving political activists around is youngish veteran Deidre Malone, an established public relations adept and activist who bridges several of the local Democratic Party factions. She already looked strong when when appointed incumbent Bridget Chisholm was stillin the field but became the prohibitive favorite when Chisholm dropped out. Opponent Reginal Fentress is fighting a stout and somewhat impressive campaign of his own, but he may end up, like Malone before him, going through several different enactments before his own show gets to center stage. Renita R. Scott-Pickens is also in the race. Verdict: Malone.

County Commission, District 3 Position 3 (Democratic): In a race which, like the independent candidacy of Isaac Ford for mayor, signifies that the political Fords no longer constitute a monolith, two siblings, former city councilman Joe Ford, the interim appointee, and his sister Ophelia Ford vie for the seat their late brother, Dr. James Ford. formerly held] Verdict: ItÕs so, Joe.

County Commission, District 4, Position 1 (Republican): Longterm incumbent Clair VanderSchaaf, pilloried for purported sins that include collaboration with Democrats and wrong votes on taxes and the arena, faces a stout challenge from conservative activist Joyce Avery. Verdict: Who knows?

County Commission, District 4, Position 2 (Republican): Appointed incumbent Tom Moss, who calls himself a homebuilders and is called a developer by challenger Jim Bomprezzi, is under the same kind of attack as VanderSchaaf, especially as he was the beneficiary of some of the intraparty collaboration, but he has the advantage that former Lakeland mayor Bomprezzi has a nemesis n the field, erstwhile Lakeland alderman Mark Hartz. Newcomer Deandre Forney is impressive, but much too young (and African American) to have a realistic chance. (An ironic feature of Moss’ race: he is guided by the same consultant, Lane Provine, who is also steering the fortunes of nsurgent candidate Avery.) Verdict: Moss may get lucky.

County Commission, District 4, Position 3 (Republican): David Lillard, the lawyer and election commissioner who was aced out by the aforesaid collaboration, tries again for a seat vacated by Tommy Hart. He faces maverick David Shirley and newcomer Mundy Quinn. Verdict: LillardÕs long party background wins for him.

County Commission, District 5 (Republican): Lawyer and veteran party activist John Ryder carries into this contest for the seat vacated by Buck Wellford prestige, political IOUs, and recognized ability. He is being given a run, however, by Bruce Thompson, a well-financed, impressive young financial manager. The GOPÕs Grand Old Maverick, contractor Jerry Cobb Jerry, is also in the race. Verdict: Ryder, but by not as much as heÕd like.

County Commission, District 5 (Democratic): Zelda Hill is the cipher in this showdown between party regular Guthrie Castle, a two-time loser for Congress, and veteran political figure Joe Cooper, who has lost more often than that but who used to be a County Squire. Verdict: a tossup.

NON-COMMISSION RACES:

Probate Court Clerk (Democratic): Vying for the right to challenge GOP incumbent Chris Thomas are Sondra Becton, Boris Combest, Jim Brown, and Cheyenne Johnson. Verdict: hard to figure, but former School Board member Brown may have a slight edge.

County Clerk: After Republican Jayne CresonÕs job are Janis Fullilove, Jennings Bernard, and Michael Williamson. Verdict: Former media personality Fullilove should win on name-recognition.

Register (Democratic): A grudge match between 2000 nominee John Freeman and Otis Jackson, whose independent candidacy foiled FreemanÕs bid against the GOPÕs Tom Leatherwood two years ago. Verdict: Jackson, as an African American, may have a demographic edge over former Ford lieutenant Freeman, who, however, has all the endorsements that count.

SHERIFFÕS RACE:

(Democratic): Insurance man Henry Hooper, a former Secret Service agent and ex-Marine, has an impressive background but an unimpressive prior record as a candidate. Departmental deputy administrator Randy Wade has better and more long-term connections overall. Verdict: Wade, but things could hinge on who has the best last-minute mailouts.

(Republican). County corrections commissioner Mark Luttrell has waged an impressive outsiderÕs race with insidersÕ support against Chief deputy Don Wright, who is well-financed and supported but has to carry the baggage of a troubled current administration. The sleeper here is Field Commander Bobby Simmons, whose money and careful cultivation of voters give him a chance to split the difference. Verdict: a three-way, too close to call.

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News The Fly-By

THE KING IS DEAD (AGAIN)

If you thought the Jungle Room was tacky, check this out. Sounding just like a pre-’68 Comeback rock critic, London Times writer Christopher Goodwin has declared an official end to Elvis Presley’s posthumous reign as the Emperor of Pop Culture. Noting that diehard fans are getting a little long in the tooth, he touts the 25th anniversary of Elvis’ death as a sort of last hurrah for Graceland. He also thinks that EPE’s Jack Soden should perhaps reconsider a business venture pitched to him a few years back: a chain of Elvis funeral homes where “deceased fans could lie in rest listening to the King’s music 24 hours a day.” According to Goodwin, “In the next few years, that could become a huge money spinner.”

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We Recommend We Recommend

thursday, 2

There is something in this week s This Week that reminded me of a very strange thing that happened tome a long time ago. Not that there weren t plenty of those. How often did you as a child, try to brush your Chichuahua s teeth with glue, only to have it bite you in the eye, and then have your father shoot and kill it? Or break your leg trying to crawl through a window that happened to have a huge window-unit air condition in it? There are man. But this one involves a stripper I once knew and a lesson she taught me, and I think this may solve a bit of the problems going on in the world right now. By the time I met this stripper whose name was a mere two vowels off from the same as a very famous televangelist who was known for beating young people over the year with their own crutches to heal them she was a bit long in the tooth to be stripping. Seems the peak of her career as a burlesque queen had been in Iceland. So she was selling beaded turbans and vitamins. Somehow, we became friends (I was also friends with another stripper who danced with a prosthetic legt and a boa constrictor,but that s another story for another day), and she paid regular visits to fill me in on the latest news in the vitamin world. And during one of those visits, she gave me a gift. She had peeled the label off a Le Sueur green peas can and placed a large picture of an eyeball in its place. And then she told me: Whenever you are faced with a challenge you re not sure you can handle, you just take this out and say, Eye Can! I think it may have somehow had something to do with her vitamin philosophy, but I never forgot it. Who could? So I think there are many people in the world right now who could use this little trick. Take the Middle East. Sharon, when you think it s impossible for you to call for peace and give the Palestinians back their land and concentrate more on your citizens well-being than winning the next election, which is your real agenda, you just pull that thing out and say, Eye Can! Same for you, Arafat. When you think you can t be the kind of leader who will actually help your people rather than harm them, pull it out and say, Eye Can! To President Bush: When you think you can t form a sentence that makes sense or keep yourself from making stupid remarks about the axis of evil to keep yourself from doing something as ridiculous as declaring that we will be attacking Iraq but not until 2003 (this is not a wedding or party you re planning), you just whip it out and say, Eye Can! And don t screw it up by getting mixed up and saying, Can Eye! And Tonya Harding, when you think you can t go out at night without getting hammered and ramming your pickup truck into a ditch and getting a DUI like you did a couple of weeks ago, you pull it out and say, Eye Can! Mike Tyson, when you come here from the Assault on the Fault (my name for the right; couldn t help jumping on the bandwagon), if you think you can t keep yourself from molesting women and biting off ears, just say, Eye Can! And there you have it. Just a little positive-thinking lesson that might work with the help of a little Valium for al lthe aforementioned folks and everyone else.

Now, there s a brief look at some of what s going on around town this week. Tonight, the Memphis Cancer Foundation a nd Wonders Gala at The Pyramid pairs the foundation with the W0nders series for a party that celebrates the exhibit. Czars: 400Years of Imperial Grandeur and honors eight men wit the Spirit of Life award for their battle with cancer. At saddle Creek West, there s a reception for Spring Into the Arts, a festival for the visual and performing arts. The Memphis Redbirds play Omaha tonight at AutoZone Park. Musiq is at the New Daisy. Cory Branan is at the Hi-Tone. Bobby, Fred and Hunky Rusty are at Alex s. And last, but certainly not least, Sense Field is playing at the Peabody. Rooftop Party during happy hour.

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News News Feature

IN MEMORIAL: C.H. BUTCHER JR.

C. H. Butcher Jr. was the most famous non-witness in the most famous trial in recent Memphis history.

Butcher died this week at the age of 63 after a fall in his home near Atlanta. He and his brother Jake, the Democratic candidate for governor in 1978, built a Southern banking empire from Knoxville on corruption and fraud. It collapsed in 1982 and 1983, and both brothers did prison time. A notable offshoot of the Butcher banks was the indictment and trial of then-congressman Harold Ford of Memphis, who was charged with receiving hundreds of thousands of dollars in loans from the Butchers which he did not repay in exchange for political favors. Ford was acquitted in 1993.

Four years earlier, the government brought Butcher and Jesse Barr to Memphis to testify in the first Ford trial, which ended in a mistrial due to juror misconduct. But only Barr was called to the stand to testify. Butcher was too unpredictable or, perhaps, too predictable in his loyalty to Ford and his codefendants.

“He’s their friend,” said prosecutor Dan Clancy when asked why Butcher didn’t testify.

Butcher and Barr spent the days before and during the trial locked up in a jail in rural Arkansas. When I went to interview them for a newspaper story, they were wearing the standard issue blue chinos and white t-shirts and, I swear, peeling potatoes over the jailhouse stove. I could not detect an ounce of self-pity, depression, or remorse in either of them. Barr was going to testify as an expert on bank fraud, which he had already done many times in rehearsals, debriefings, and even a television interview. When he got done with all this business, he said, he planned to write a book called “Pussy and Politics,” which came out as “Sex and Southern Politics” in my story the next day.

Butcher, amiable and smiling, with hands as big as hams, played straight man to Barr’s rogue, feeding him set-up lines and laughing at his jokes. He would have made an interesting witness, but wasn’t called at the second Ford trial either. Apparently he was considered too dangerous to the prosecution, which wound up losing the case anyway. After the trial, some of the jurors said they wanted to hear from him. (It was erroneously reported in The Commercial Appeal’s Butcher obituary that the trial was held in Jackson, Tennessee. It was held in federal court in Memphis with a jury picked from the Jackson area.)

Butcher was an irrepressible optimist. In the Arkansas jailhouse, he shrugged and said he did not mind hard work one bit because he had done plenty of it as a boy growing up in East Tennessee. He served most of his six years at the federal prison in Atlanta with the hard guys. When inmates rioted and tore up their cells, I was not at all surprised to hear that he had volunteered for clean-up duty in exchange for a reduction of his time.

It pained Butcher that so many people who had grown up like him lost their savings in the collapse of his banks and savings-and-loans, but, of course, it pained the investors even more. Nashville attorney James Neal, who represented Jake Butcher and, briefly, C.H. Butcher, had a simple explanation for Jake’s guilty plea.

“The facts,” he told me, “were so much worse than the indictment.”

Twenty years ago, the Butchers and their buddy Bobby Ginn had big plans to develop Mud Island, where they owned an option on a big chunk of property. But there was no bridge from downtown, only the causeway at the north end of the island. The publicly funded Auction Street Bridge was designed and approved in 1982 on the mistaken assumption that it would connect to an interstate highway link on Mud Island. Ford was accused of using his influence to get it built as a favor to the Butchers.

The Mud Island property wound up in the hands of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, which sold it to Jack Belz, Henry Turley, and Meredith McCullar for $2.3 million. They developed Harbor Town which, like every other private development on Mud Island, could not have happened without the Auction Street Bridge.

In a bit of political patronage, the city administration under former Mayor Dick Hackett gave the bridge an honorary name after A. W. Willis Jr., a good man and a civil rights leader who had nothing to do with it.

In a different kind of world it would be named for C.H. Butcher Jr., a good bad man or a bad good man, who had a lot to do with it.

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Sports Sports Feature

MEMPHIS SPORTS SCENE

IT’S GOOD TO BE A KING

For lack of better reference, think of the Central Hockey League like a Double-A baseball club. The guys on the team might have played in college, come from all over the known world, and — realistically — only a fraction have a chance to move up to one of the larger hockey leagues, including the NHL.

But the CHL is definitely a league, and the Memphis RiverKings, for the first time in its ten-year franchise history, are the CHL-league champions on the strength of Michal Stastny’s goal at 5:48 into overtime. That game-winning shot lifted the King’s 4-5 over the Austin Ice Bats. The Bats had home-ice advantage, and the better league record. The Kings beat the Bats 4-1 in a best of seven series, at home.

The final game of the series had everything any sports lover could want — except a capacity crowd. The DeSoto County Civic Center sported a meager attendance of little over 4,000. But the acoustics of that newly furbished round dome and the interest of the fans made the place feel full. In all sections one could see heads painted red and green, jerseys for the Kings and for their NHL affiliate the Toronto Maple Leafs, taped hockey sticks with multiple player signatures, and even teenagers sporting large black wigs in honor of one of the team’s mascots, Thing.

There was also the play on the ice. These teams had not met each other during the regular season, but were old “pals” by the time Game Five rolled around. The trash talk was endless, the body checks were relentless, and no punches were pulled.

Alternately, both teams showed the skill that got each to the finals. Shifts flowed on and off the benches without falter, multiple substitutions flickered past the score table. The crowd could barely tell who was on the ice since the players moved on and off so fast. Like a human chess match at lightning speed, the Kings and the Ice Bats skated across the ice, waiting for that one moment to score.

In the second period, when the Kings went up 3-2, the Memphis squad formed a tight wedge down the right side, found numbers on the defense, and then shot the goal by Don Parsons (his 14th of the playoffs) to put the team up by one. The Ice Bats rallied with two of their own to start the third period, and the Kings would be heading back to Austin if not for King Kahlil Thomas, evening the score at four apiece.

Then came sudden-death overtime. No shoot-outs, no flip of the coin. Just out and out, whoever scores goes home a winner. For the Ice Bats, their backs were on the wall. For the Kings, this shot was their last to close the President Cup Finals at home.

“I just said, hey, if we lose the game, we had our second chance,” Kings coach Doug Shedden said after the game. “Let’s not sit on our heels. Let’s go for it.” Shedden, moments after winning his third CHL title, stood in his small office 20 feet from the ice rink, and next door to the sweat and champagne-drenched Memphis locker room. With a couple reporters in the room, Shedden had no problem ripping off his shirt and tie, and pulling on his championship tee-shirt. He then (and with as much enthusiasm) pulled out a Miller High-Life Beer from the fridge under his desk.

As any champ coach, Shedden was reflective. “When you look back, the problem is that time flies and you don’t remember when you last won. But it just gets sweeter. No one gets tired of winning, that’s for sure. It’s not easy going into a championship series and winning, you know? That was a great team that we played. We were short of hands, Holy Christ, we lost a lot of players, and we just kept going. We had a chance to win every night É I just said to our guys between the two periods that somebody in white was going to be a hero, and it’s going to be a goal you’re never going to forget.”

One reporter asked coach what he had to say about the condition of the ice. Shedden’s response was heart-felt, if not politically correct. “It was playoff hockey, what are you going to do?” he asked in return. “The ice was bad tonight, there were a lot of bouncy pucks. I don’t know what to say. I’m just fucking happy we won.”

Outside, his players each celebrated by holding the President’s Cup overhead, and the crowd cheered each in turn. Parsons had traded his cup for his baby daughter, who slept in his arms. Stastny, bewildered by his game-winning goal but still professional with the press, said all the right things. “I shot from the right side,” he said in accented but good English. “I could have made the pass, but I decided to send it in. It was a good decision. When it goes in, it’s always a good decision. There are a lot of things in life. In sports, this is the greatest thing in my life.”

Stastny was ever the gracious hero. “I want to thank my coach, my manager, my trainer, everybody,” he said. “Without them, I couldn’t be scoring that goal.”

Outside of the DeSoto County Civic Center, SUV’s and trucks took their sweet time rolling through the parking lot. Fans held hockey sticks in juxtaposition to three-hundred years of Southern history like victorious swords after battle. And everyone — everyone — pressed on horns, and drove slowly. These moments — no matter how minor league — make the strong into a sports fan, and the weak into a sports junkie. Last Sunday night, everyone who watched at the DCCC was definitely a King.

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News The Fly-By

BEAUTY TIPS

“For Spring 2002, there is just no question about it — ‘big hair is back.'” At least that’s what the press release claims, announcing the Memphis debut of Charles Worthington’s Big Hair products. “On the runways and red carpets,it is definitely a ‘big hair’ moment,” the release continues, listing sexy celebs and sexier supermodels who’ve been spotted of late sporting “big beautiful curls” and “Shakespearean-like ripples.” Worthington, whose top-drawer clientele include Thora Birch and Rob Lowe, claimns that the difference between the big hair of today — as opposed to the big hair of previous “big hair moments” — is that “this time around hair is not eased from the crown; the volume is on the side, making hair appear more spontaneous, carefree, and vibrant.” Regardless of the cranial location from which the hair is teased, once this news gets out, you can bet your power-blue eye shadow that every trash-talkin’ Tammy from here to James Road will be on hand to say, “We told you so.”

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We Recommend We Recommend

wednesday, 1

It’s Trust Night in the M Bar at Melange with DJs Stylus and Saturna. And now I must disappear, for everyone’s sake. As always, I really don’t care wht you do this week, because I don’t even know you and unless you want to buy me one of those MINI Coopers, I’m sure I don’t want to meet you,which I probably wouldn’t remember doing anyway. Besides, it’s time for me to blow this dump and go…uh,I forget.

T.S.

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News News Feature

TRANSLATION: MEMPHIS

SPARE CHANGE or THE ART OF THE SCROUNGE

Once upon a time there was a cash-strapped girl transplanted in MemphisÑoh wait, that was me!

Anyhow, here in the city and freshly juxtaposed from Floridian couch-surfer to Tennessean change-in-the-couch hunter, I spent an evening in my now former apartment perfecting the art of the “scrounge.”

The “scrounge” would be the process wherein said penniless individual with little inclination towards housework proceeds to clean like a beast spawned from Mr. Clean himself, but with a distinct goal. The quest is for any and all forgotten dimes or dollars holed up amidst the crevices of a less than Martha Stewart-esqe organizational system.

On this particular humidity drenched evening things were going pretty well. There were quarters in the couch, a dollar swept under the rug, and even a plethora of pennies on what my roommates and I affectionately referred to as our “pretty stuff shelf.” This was a recycled wicker contraption, ugly as sin itself, that we scored during a Memphis moving weekend.

A moving weekend is really just the last weekend in every month, during which people at the larger apartment buildings downtown throw all sorts of great things out to the curb. Along with the shelf, we had also amassed a keyboard, an orange wheelchair eventually used in the courting of my former roommate’s now wife, some end tables, and all sorts of other miscellaneous nonsense.

But getting back to the point, I was digging and searching my home like the daughter of a South African archaeologist, determined to mine the food-purchasing potential of whatever cash might be found in the neglected canyon of my home.

I remember as a kid, my Mom would perform these same rituals, and she would almost always have a musical accompaniment. Oftentimes it was that song by the Doobie Brothers, the one that goes Jesus is just all right with me… Mom would vacuum like a bat out of heaven, dancing the machine to and fro like an angel. (I know, I know, I sort of just threw that in. But Mother’s Day is coming, I had to work it in somehow.)

I think I had on Faith No More, which was on the cranked side of quiet.

Covered in sweat and copper-fingered from the sticky pennies rescued from the void, I suddenly heard a knock at the door.

The very fact that there was a knock was in and of itself an anomaly. Our friends don’t knock. We prefer, I suppose, to keep things more like a sitcom, where the knocking and subsequent opening of doors takes too much time away from the plot at hand, which is in turn struggling against the lack of time it has to develop fully due to the commercials. But anyway…

Cranking down the stereo, and sweating like the aforementioned beast of housework that I was, I cracked the door and laid eyes on a man who certainly wasn’t part of our normal cast of characters. Nor was he a member of the rave nation upstairs, who occasionally sent their trip-hop friends to our door to impart some random shard of wisdom upon us.

He was an older man, weather-worn and with kind eyes that I only see in retrospect.

“You like it loud, huh,” he quipped, eyes darting toward my tempered stereo and the piles of miscellaneous booty amassed during my hunt.

I didn’t initially notice the man’s eyes because my own eyes were magnetic toward the bucket of change and dollar bills that he clutched to his side. Here we go, I thought, though I wish that I didn’t feel that way.

Amidst a plethora of panhandlers, men and women who followed me through my daily routine regularly, I admit that I may have become somewhat hardened. It’s kind of hard not to be, unless you’re the genetic hybrid of a human and an ATM.

It’s difficult sometimes to be a person that tries to have a conscience, especially when said conscience is picked at and tugged upon continually. The chorus of got a dollar, got a cigarette, got some change can get amazingly overwhelming. When I have something to give, I’m happy to do my part, but that’s just not always the case.

“What we’re doing,” the man began, “is collecting money for our church youth program.”

I sort of nodded, with my money-scrounging face of questionable wealth, and my brain fully doubting the story.

“We’re trying to help the kids off the streets,” he continued, “to give them a positive alternative.”

Enter Jenn’s mental conflict. It fits neatly into the encapsulating equation of conscience plus hard times equals moral confusion.

I explained to him that I was actually digging for change myself, and asked him what church he was with. He looked at me strangely, or so I imagined, and said the name of some congregation on South Parkway.

Then, mind over matter, I dipped into my own bucket, grabbed a few dollars, and tossed it into his hand. I’m a sucker for things that benefit kids, I can’t help it. It almost makes me cry to tell the Shriners that I can’t send any children to the circus, I swear.

The man thanked me, handed me a religious pamphlet, and went on his merry way.

After he left, I turned the stereo back up, flopped down on the couch and began to perfect the art of sulking. I was convinced that I had just allowed myself to be ganked, as it were, and angry since on that particular day, the few dollars was worth way more than usual.

It looked like it would be another week of ghetto gourmet. For those of you unfamiliar with this style of cuisine, which includes such marvels as the exalted potato and carrot burrito, keep your eyes on the Food network. A friend of mine may be on-air to explain it soon.

It was then that the little pamphlet fell from the back of the couch and on to the seat next to me.

Lo and behold, as they say, marked on the bottom was the address of the very congregation the man had claimed as his own.

Which made me feel a whole lot better about the world, and about Memphis as well.

If there’s one thing I’ve noticed in the time that I have been here, it’s that there are a lot of kids who could use some assistance in making good choices and avoiding the vices that go along with a city whose bars stay open 24 hours a day.

Helping in that endeavor is certainly worth an extra day eating Ramen noodles and beans.

I think I’m still a bit fuzzy on the real meaning of that phrase “the Bible Belt.” Initially, I thought it might be another way of referring to Getwell Road, which seems as close to fitting that description as anything else around the city.

But maybe it’s actually people like that kind-eyed old man, spending time going door-to-door in both the heat and the dark to try to give the kids around here a shot.

That’s what I prefer to think it means, anyway.

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News News Feature

HOW IT LOOKS

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News News Feature

JERRY WEST MEETS MEMPHIS

Damn, it really is Jerry West. In The Peabody. In Memphis. What next? Mark McGwire to the Redbirds for a comeback? Gordie Howe to coach the River Kings?

In the press conference to introduce him as the new president of basketball operations for the Memphis Grizzlies, West talked about visions and dreams and community and role models and family and, of course, basketball. But it was the whole package, the “darns” and “Mr. Heisley” for owner Michael Heisley and the sight of West’s son in a Shane Battier Grizzlies jersey that won the crowd and made it clear Memphis has a new hero.

“That’s the one thing that I would tell everyone that I work with,” West said in his modest, talkative way. “Let’s have some darn goals around here that are a little bit more lofty. Because loftier goals make you reach farther.”

Why Memphis? West said his first year away from basketball and the Los Angeles Lakers was “probably the best year of my life” but last year he was restless and eager for a new challenge.

“Two nights ago was the first night I have slept through the night in Los Angeles,” he said. “The other nights were fitful sleeping, up four or five times. When I slept through the night I said, Ôyou know something?’ I’ve done the right thing.’ “

West is coming to Memphis as the front-office mastermind who lured Phil Jackson out of retirement to coach the Lakers, saw Kobe Bryant’s potential when he was a junior in high school, and brought Shaq to L.A. But to a generation disillusioned with the current NBA, West will always be the player, Number 44, the guy in short pants and high socks with the flattop haircut and flat jump shot you tried to imitate. In the 1960s, there were 10 million male basketball players in the USA, and every one of them would have given the keys to his car, his Chuck Taylor Converse All-Stars, Lettermen albums, and a can of Desenex to be Mr. Clutch.

West averaged 27 points a game during his career, and if he ever dunked I never saw it in 100 televised games. He drove past the big men and layed it off the glass. Or he flicked that jump shot from way out. If you weren’t a Lakers fan, he was the last person you wanted to see with the ball at the end of the game. More than a few times he won or tied big games with shots from well beyond half court at the buzzer.

He retired in 1974, and the game promptly changed. The next year began the infusion of high-schoolers and foreigners like Darryl Dawkins of Planet Lovetron into the NBA. West was as good in the front office as he was on the court, directing the Lakers to six titles and nine appearances in the finals. He helped put together the Magic Johnson/Kareem Abdul-Jabbar dynasty and much of the current Laker championship team. In 1998 West was named one of the NBA’s 50 greatest players of all time. He was the only one besides the late Pete Maravich who did not attend the ceremony.

The West-to-Memphis announcement was big news across the Mid-South, where the Grizzlies hope to expand their local base into a regional one.

“I think that this, more than the arena or anything else, is real ratification of Memphis as big-time,” said Michael Rubenstein, executive director of the Mississippi Sports Hall of Fame and Museum and a sports broadcaster in Jackson for several years.

For all of West’s accomplishments, it is surprising that as a player he won only one NBA championship Ñ that came in 1972 with Wilt Chamberlin and Gail Goodrich. The Lakers won 33 straight that year and were possibly the best team ever, but the dominant team of West’s era was the Boston Celtics. One key member of the Celtics was former Mississippi State All-American Bailey Howell.

Howell, who lives in Starkville, Mississippi, played against West for 11 years as a member of the Celtics and the Detroit Pistons.

“He was the total package,” said Howell. “Of course he was a guard and I was a forward so we didn’t guard each other although occasionally you might get switched on him. In the big games, playoff games especially, he was at his best. Most great players make the game easier for their teammates, and, of course, he did that.”

On a trivia note, let the record show that Bailey Howell and Jerry West both scored their 10,000th NBA career point on the same night in the same game. West went on to score 15,192 more. If the NBA had put in the three-point shot back then, it would have been more like 20,000. Or, then again, he might still be playing.