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saturday, 31

Okay, I m running out of space so this will have to be brief. Today s WLOK Stone Soul Picnic in Tom Lee Park includes performances by the Williams Brothers, Mississippi Mass Choir, the Angelic Voices of Faith, and none other than the Rev. Al Green. Today s Garage Rock Blowout at Shangri-La Records is a record release party for A History of Garage & Frat Bands In Memphis Vol. II and includes performances by local 60s bands. Ty Brown and Stephanie Bolto are at Isaac Hayes . There s a Lucero CD Release Party at Young Avenue Deli. And the very special duo of Katrina & Rebecca is at Neil s.

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Sports Sports Feature

THE SCOOP ON SPORTS

SEASON OF SUCCESS LOOMS FOR TIGERS

The 2001 Tigers football season will be remembered as a rebuilding year by those Memphians who hold Conference USA football close to their hearts. After walking away from the gridiron with a loosing record of 5 wins and 6 losses at the hands of Cincinnati Bearcats at Liberty Bowl by a final score of 36 – 34 the Tigers had a better understanding of what it will take to win games.

ÒI feel if we can compete a full game with special teams, defense and offense playing together and put a complete game together than weÕll be fine,Ó says Wade Smith a senior offensive tackle from Dallas, Texas. ÒItÕs really the small things that enhance the chance of big things happening.Ó

For big things to happen in the 2002 season the Tigers may be hard-pressed not to showcase their new and improved potent offensive game which is coming along like a young Tiger Cat growing bigger, faster, and stronger while sprinting through the wild kingdom. Even the coaching staff is impressed with the players who are making to commitment to U of M football. ÒWe have come 100 miles from a talent level at skill positions on offense to the point where we are going to be the kind of team now I think that can strike at any time,Ó said Head Coach Tommy West with the eye of a tiger.

In fact, coach West is using his defensive expertise and prowess to enhance this Tiger football team on both sides of the ball and if all goes right the system will begin to pay off against Murray State when the pig skin is kicked off into the sky inside the Liberty Bowl.

ÒWeÕre a much more explosive offensive team right now than probably any I’ve been around. Defensively were inexperienced but I think were talented,Ó says West.

The elusive dream of earning a bowl appearance will be an ongoing conversation throughout the season for University of Memphis football Tigers. As far as players are concerned if they take care of business on the field then the bowl game will be the icing on the cake of success. ÒIÕm more excited about this season than any season in the past and I think this year will be the year,Ó says Wade Smith.

The so-called season tone-setting game against Murray State will be a great opportunity for Memphis to build momentum and prove those wrong who are unsold on the Tigers. The contest is a home game for Memphis which is a plus. Murray State finished the 2001 season with a record of 4 wins and 6 losses and will compete this season without 13 lettermen from last year. If any team is favored it must be U of M and if this is the case Memphis must hold serve and get the job done on both sides of the ball to be successful.

Coach West maintains this years Tigers have more confidence, and even a swagger as they walk around campus, workouts, and the weight room. ÒI feel a lot more confidence about our team. And when you ask around I think weÕve got a little bit more respect within this league this year than weÕve had,Ó says West.

Tigers football fans will get an opportunity to watch U of M play at least two television games this season. The first so-called TV game will be on Saturday, September 7th when the Tigers travel to Oxford, Mississippi to take on the Rebels from Ole Miss. This contest will be televised regionally by Jefferson Pilot Sports whom as you may know carries several SEC College football games annually. Apparently, the game will be scheduled to air around 11:30 a.m. check your local listings for details.

Another so-called TV game will be payed here at the Liberty Bowl as U of M plays host to the Visiting Defending Conference USA Champion University of Louisville cardinal. The Louisville game will be carried by ESPN2 on Tuesday, October 8th at 7 p.m. Check your local cable provider for particulars as it relates to the dates and times of Tigers football during the 2002 CUSA Season.

For Coach Tommy West and the 2002 University of Memphis Football Tigers the season opener canÕt come soon enough. ÒWeÕre excited, I canÕt wait to get started and get out on the field and do what we love to do.Ó

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Politics Politics Beat Blog

POLITICS: Rites of Passage

RITES OF PASSAGE

The dog days of summer, they used to be called, before the events of last September 11th created an aura of menace which is likely to endure for a while whenever the anniversary of that occasion comes around.

The current season, however, is still more suggestive of easeful transitions than of horrific stresses, and Monday’s meeting of the Shelby County Commission — the last one ever for five of the 13 commissioners — was as mellow as the autumnal shades that will shortly be upon us.

Presiding over a brief ceremony in the Commission’s 6th floor quarters in the county administrative building, outgoing chairman Morris Fair presented framed composite photographs of the current commission to all of his colleagues and plaques to those who were leaving.

There was lawyer Buck Wellford, for example, a poster boy for the proberbial “sadder and wiser” look after two terms during which he rarely shied away from battle — losing one early on when he challenged the findings of a disparity study in county contracting and winning a major one late in the game when he took the lead in passing a tree ordinance which imposed new restrictions on developers (but which, he lamented Monday, could not have prevented the recent landslide on Mud Island). Wellford opted not to run this year; as he cracked Monday, “I always wanted to be a public official — but I’ve got my fill of it!”

There was first-termer Bridget Chisholm, a late 2000 appointee who was much-heralded as a woman of achievement in the financial sector but who seemed unhappy with the demands — always political and often highly partisan — of the disputatious public sector and decided to bow out gracefully.

Another voluntary exile was Tommy Hart, the Collierville businessman who was a solid anchor for conservative and Republican causes but who found himself an active agent of compromise more than once and said Monday that he prided himself on never having succumbed to a sense of power during his two terms (including an eventful year as chairman) and opined, “The important thing is not to change from who you are.”

Developer Clair VanderSchaaf, badly defeated in the May Republican primary by newcomer Joyce Avery for his unrepentant support of public funding for the new downtown arena and, he acknowledged, “a few other reasons” (presumably including notoriety from a much-publicized DUI arrest) was low-profile on Monday, his still-youthful appearance belying his 60-odd years and a generation of service on the commission.

Erstwhile man-about-town VanderSchaaf kept smiling as he heard himself described fondly by colleagues, as, for example, the commissioner who “could always identify the female members of the media in the audience.” (That one came from fellow developer Tom Moss.)Fair made a point of chatting up the incoming commissioner who ousted him in a sometimes bitter primary — conservative GOP populist John Willingham, who looked unusually natty Monday in a new suit.

In the spirit of conciliaton which predominated, budget committee chairman Cleo Kirk said he hoped restaurateur Willingham would rise to the level of expertise on funding matters as had former banker and bond broker Fair, who enjoyed an unusual last hurrah Monday by shepherding through the commission several major retractions in the benefits package enjoyed by county employees.

Economic factors being what they are, downsizing initiatives of that sort will, almost certainly , be one of the hallmarks of the commission when it meets again on September 9th with five new members — Avery, Willingham, lawyer David Lillard, financial planner Bruce Thompson, and publicist Deidre Malone (the sole Democrat among the new commissioners).

Democrat Julian Bolton went against expectations Monday by predicting that the new commission, despite the more conservative cast of the new members, would be “more progressive” than the current body. “That’s because the Republican majority has been joined at the hip with the administration of Mayor [Jim] Rout,” he explained, suggesting that “things will be different” when newly elected Democrat A C Wharton takes office as county mayor next week.

  • OTHER POLITICAL NOTES: George Flinn, the businessman/physician who carried the standard of a divided Republican Party against Wharton, got a standing ovation from attendees at the August meeting of the local GOP steering committee — belatedly marking his de facto acceptance as a bona fide Republican luminary. Flinn promised to be heard from again. At the same meeting Young Republican chairman Rick Rout read a letter of apology for an email to YR board members during the campaign that had seemed to be critical of Flinn….Both Lamar Alexander and Bob Clement — the Republican and Democratic candidates for the U.S Senate, respectively — have made frequent appearances in Shelby County of late, the middle-of-the-road nature of which can best be gauged by the fact that Clement has appeared before such groups as the arch-conservative Dutch Treat Luncheon and Alexander has allowed himself to sound measurably more moderate than when he was engaged in a hotly disputed primary with outgoing 7th district congressman Ed Bryant. Though former governor Alexander is favored over Nashville congressman Clement, the two will participate in a series of debates, and Clement may find himself the beneficiary of the same expectations game which boosted GOP gubernatorial candidate Van Hilleary‘s stock in a recent debate in which he was judged to have held his own with favored Democrat Phil Bredesen (the former Nashville mayor who, however, has been a much more frequent visitor to Memphis and Shelby County than has 4th district congressman Hilleary)….A slenderized, silver-maned Bill Clinton possessed movie-star cachet in the relatively nondescript company of Arkansas political candidates and Memphis-area Democrats during visits Monday to West Memphis and Memphis, for a Democratic rally and a party fundraiser, respectively. Said the former president in West Memphis: “They [Republicans in Congress] spent $70 million trying to prove I was a sinner. And you could have told them that in the first place!”
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    friday, 30

    It s the last Friday of the month, which means it s time for the South Main Trolley Art Tour, with free rides to all the districts galleries and shops. Opening receptions in the area are at Durden Gallery for works by Steve Winn, and Mariposa ArtSpace for works by David George Hinske. Elsewhere, there are receptions at the Greater Memphis Arts Council for paintings by Michael J. Hildebrand, and a closing reception at ArtFarm Gallery of Fine Art for Eight Days in Exile, works from an artists camp at Horn Island, Mississippi. Back in the South Main Arts District, today kicks off this weekend s first Butler Street Bazaar, an open-air marketplace with a farmers market, live music, and arts and crafts. Tonight kicks off this weekend s Dingofest IV, with more than 70 bands playing at the New Daisy, the Historic Daisy, Hard Rock CafÇ, and the Budweiser Pavilion on Beale. John Mayer (yee-ha) is at Mud Island Amphitheatre tonight with Guster and The John Butler Trio. Di Anne Price is at Automatic Slim s. The Distraxshuns are at Patrick s. Jungle Room is at Casablanca. Skinny White Chick and Friends are at the Full Moon Club tonight and Sunday night. And, as always, the Chris Scott Band is at Poplar Lounge.

    Categories
    Letters To The Editor Opinion

    Postscript

    More Than Mud

    To the Editor:

    After reading your cover story (“Mudslide Island,” August 22nd issue), I just had to go look and see what all the fuss was about. I went to the bridge and didn’t see much to be concerned about, just a careless mistake by someone untrained in earth-moving. But when I looked from the north side of the bridge, I saw many things to be concerned about.

    In the story, mention was made of the possible existence of toxic waste buried under the island. What I saw was an ongoing excavation site that had exposed what appeared to be a line of very dark material. I wonder if anyone who has knowledge of toxic waste has looked at this site? Also, as I walked farther up the bridge, I noticed a corrugated pipe that appeared to be a runoff or storm-drain outlet. Just south of the pipe, I noticed where groundwater runoff had dug a small trench and caused a shift in the riverbank. I wondered, If this small amount of water could cause movement, just how stable is the bank?

    I hope that the city intends to send some knowledgeable people to look at these things.

    Robert J. Evans

    Memphis

    Big Ugly Letters

    To the Editor:

    In response to “Tear Down the Big Uglies” by John Branston (August 15th issue), I have a few suggestions: Yes, I agree, tear them all down! Heck, why renovate anything? No one should have renovated The Peabody, for example, as ugly an eyesore as this city has ever seen. The lobby gives me the creeps. It’s so old! Someone could have put up a nice Holiday Inn in its place. And why on earth did we ever try to save the train station? No one takes the train; normal people drive SUVs. The historic Evergreen district should be bulldozed for Interstate 40 so I can drive to the new Wal-Mart that could be built where the old Sears Crosstown now stands. Forget the previous article in the Flyer about how to attract creative people who can enrich a city (“Talent Magnet,” August 1st issue).

    Okay, so maybe my tongue is planted a little too deeply in my cheek. I suggest a middle ground. Instead of imploding buildings, maybe the city could pass a “use it or lose it” law. Give developers a grace period, and if work doesn’t progress, then the city takes possession.

    Bill Stegall

    Memphis

    To the Editor:

    In regard to John Branston’s recent column about Memphis needing a few good implosions: As much as it hurts me as a native Memphian to say this, he’s right, and it’s time. It’s past time. The old Baptist Memorial Hospital property downtown should be quickly and mercifully cleared. I was born in that building. My father, an aunt, and I worked there, so there’s history there for me that you could not imagine.

    Yet, I say, let’s move on and redevelop the grand old hospital’s site for today’s urgent needs, with a plaque somewhere to commemorate all that the former hospital means to us all. It’s not coming back as we knew it ever again.

    James B. Flatter

    Memphis

    SACRED LINK

    To the Editor:

    As Molly Ivins indicated in her article (“Out Of Touch,” August 15th issue), working-class and middle-class people in the United States are working harder and earning less. While Ivins says issues such as eroding wages and a woefully inadequate private-pension system are “populist” issues, they are also faith issues.

    This Labor Day weekend, speakers will be addressing the sacred link between faith and justice for workers in a dozen Mid-South congregations through the Labor in the Pulpits program, coordinated by the Mid-South Interfaith Network for Economic Justice and the Memphis Labor Council. The national problems pointed to by Ivins are vividly illustrated in Memphis. According to the Economic Policy Institute, Tennessee has the sixth-highest income inequality between the richest and poorest families of any state.

    This Labor Day weekend, we must put our faith to work for justice.

    Rev. Rebekah Jordan

    Mid-South Interfaith Network for Economic Justice

    Memphis

    White Republicans?

    To the Editor:

    I enjoyed the recent article about the Talent Magnet project. However, one of the recently published letters commenting on this project gave me pause (Letters, August 8th issue). The writer expressed dissatisfaction with Memphis, because it is a city only for “white Republican men.” Has this joker read any census reports lately? The writer then pulls at our heartstrings by telling how he was made fun of in a local high school (horrors!) for dying his hair and wearing bellbottoms! Surely such a thing could only happen in Memphis!

    If you don’t like where you live, by all means, move. Memphis is a great city that would be much better off without such “creative class” whiners.

    Tom Holland

    Memphis

    The Memphis Flyer encourages reader response. Send mail to: Letters to the Editor, POB 1738, Memphis, TN 38101. Or call Back Talk at 575-9405. Or send us e-mail at letters@memphisflyer.com. All responses must include name, address, and daytime phone number. Letters should be no longer than 250 words.

    Categories
    Opinion

    Highs and Lows

    Jim Rout won’t say yet where he’s going, but he’s happy to talk about where he’s been in 30 years of county government.

    Rout leaves office at the end of August, having completed two terms as mayor of Shelby County plus stints as a county commissioner and county coroner.

    “I don’t anticipate being on the ballot again,” said Rout, who turned 60 in June. He’s headed for a job in the private sector but doesn’t want to disclose his plans until the end of this week. He announced his retirement last year. In an informal meeting with Flyer reporters this spring, he said his — at that time –prospective new employer was not anyone or anything that would pose a potential conflict to him as mayor.

    Rout came to the mayor’s office in 1994 as a commissioner known for happily immersing himself in the details of county government. He has spent most of the last two years, however, dealing with former corporate CEOs Pitt Hyde and Ron Terry on the NBA arena and Shelby Farms.

    Friends say the long hours have taken a toll on him, and Rout doesn’t disagree.

    “No question, it has been a tougher period,” he said. “When you work as long as we all did on the arena or as long as Ron Terry and I did for almost two years only to see [the Shelby Farms proposal] go down the tubes, sure, it is not as much fun. It’s always more fun when you first start. That’s why you see a lot of entrepreneurs move on after four or five years.”

    The failure of the Shelby Farms proposal, which Rout thinks will resurface next year, was the low point of his mayoral career, he said. He blamed “bad timing,” although the proposed $20 million infusion of private money into the park failed to catch fire at the grassroots level, allowing several commissioners to safely change their yeas to nays.

    The highlight is no surprise either.

    “Less than two years ago, no one would have thought we would have an NBA team, a new arena under construction, and Jerry West living here,” said Rout. Controversy be damned, “you’ve either gotta be big-league or bush-league.”

    The enthusiasm of Rout, a Pyramid opponent, for the publicly funded arena has to run a close second to Gov. Don Sundquist’s support of a state income tax when some diehard Republicans talk about betrayals. But where Sundquist foundered, Rout succeeded, with the help of Hyde and Memphis mayor Willie Herenton as well as the commission and city council.

    Rout and Herenton had “a little brouhaha” over toy towns in Rout’s first term, but “we’ve gotten in rhythm” in the last few years. Yes, and Memphis has been having a little humidity lately. The conflict highlighted all of the fundamental problems with split government, suburban versus urban interests, and school funding which are still around five years later, despite the efforts of two special committees to resolve them. There was no open warfare, but there was no resolution either. Rout predicts there will be single-source funding for schools within the next two years. You might want to take some of that action if you run into him.

    Rout and his family know firsthand the suburban growth that is putting pressure on politicians to come up with something. They moved from Parkway Village and Fox Meadows to the Richwood subdivision in southeast Shelby County 13 years ago when it was still uncrowded, even rural in places. Today, it is surrounded by new schools and homes, and by the end of this year, it is supposed to be annexed by the city of Memphis.

    “Sprawl is a fact of life,” he said. “We probably didn’t do as well as we should have to attach appropriate fees or requirements on new development as it applies to schools. This is America, and people are going to live where they want to live. Maybe we need to tweak what we require to do development there.”

    Rout won his first election in 1972 (as coroner), but he traces his political involvement to 1967, when he helped organize his Parkway Village neighborhood in opposition to a plan to build 2,400 apartments on a site that would become the Mall of Memphis instead. He sold memberships to the upstart Cottonwood Civic Club for $3 by going door to door. When they needed a president, somebody said, “Jim, you’ve been real active. You run for it.”

    In a somewhat similar way, that’s what happened again in 1994 when good old Jim got the nod from the Republicans by a two-to-one margin to run for mayor then prevailed in a six-candidate free-for-all general election. Democrats got their act together after that and started having primaries themselves. But then, Republicans like Rout and Sundquist started occasionally acting like Democrats and supporting new taxes and public subsidies to pro-sports teams, and the lines blurred again. Mayor-elect A C Wharton, a Democrat, comes into office by the same three-to-two margin as Rout did in 1994.

    “It’s been good. I’ve had a great run,” Rout said. “I don’t mean it as a reflection on anyone else, but there will never be, at least for a long time, a campaign like 1994, when we were able to win the primary two-to-one and the general 60-40 against six opponents.”

    At least not for Shelby County Republicans.

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    thursday, 29

    On top of everything else, now I have this to contend with: After 15 years, I m suddenly convinced that my cat, whose eyes glow in the dark, is actually an extraterrestrial spy, sent down here to simply observe, monitor, and report the actions of her human back to the Feline Mother Planet from whence she came. I know it sounds odd, but trust me on this one. I can hear her now, just this morning, sending back her findings: All right, true masters, you sent me down here 15 years ago to live with this joker, and it s just getting worse all the time. And I think I m losing my control. He still keeps the water running at a certain drip at a certain place in the kitchen sink because I ve convinced him that s the only way I ll drink this water stuff they have down here, but this morning, when I refused to eat the first two plates of food he gave me, he wouldn t offer me a third, which he normally does. I actually had to eat the stuff. He s getting kind of slack in passing my tests, and he s acting crazy. Even more so than usual. Take this morning. He woke up at 3 a.m. and is in there right now in our den acting like some kind of madman. He s in there sitting on the sofa where we sleep, drinking beet root juice mixed with carrot juice, and has a cup of hot green tea in there with a huge ginger root sliced up in it. He s got Chopin on the stereo and he s reading a book about a boy and his pet raccoon, and is just laughing to himself out loud like nobody s business. I m telling you, he s not one bit right. One minute he s doing that, and the next he s listening to a disco mix remake of a song called If You Could Read My Mind, by some guy named Gordon Lightfoot, and he s dancing around the room. And just talks to himself nonstop. It s bad enough that he follows me around talking to me all the time, like I m going to answer, but when he talks to himself it s really irritating. Yesterday, he did what he always does on Saturdays, which is to go out and buy a bunch of junk from humans who put it out in their yards. Yesterday, he came in carrying a concrete statue of somebody named Saint Francis, but it doesn t have a head on it. It s in our den and is creeping me out. It s on the floor under this really bad painting of some lilies that looks like it had to have been painted by someone in her senior citizens home art class. Do you see what I have to live with? I m afraid he s going to start dressing me up again in costumes. If he tries to put that rag on my head and hauls me around the house calling me his little peasant woman and making me act like I m shopping for cabbage, I m going to go nuts myself. And he has this other painting in there. It s a real abstract painting of a place called Overton Park, and now every time he stares at it it changes. This morning he s convinced that at the end of the path in the painting that leads to a clearing in the trees, there s a huge image of Michael Jackson s face in its current incarnation. And if he s not dancing or reading that book about the boy s pet raccoon, he s pacing. Paces all over the house smoking these long white things that have almost burned the house down several times. At least he s not trying to cook. He doesn t even like eggs, but he tries to boil them all the time just before he s about to fall asleep, and they burn and stink the house up for days. Last week, he pulled that stunt and the eggs exploded all over the kitchen floor. It s a wonder either of us is still alive. Then, oh, wait a minute. Hold on. Here he comes after me. Shit. Now he has me cornered and is reciting lines from movies. At least he s over that Joan Crawford phase. She was a really nasty human who beat her kids and for some reason he used to watch her all the time and recite lines from those movies too. I can t tell you how many times he s looked me right in eyes and said, Aren t the pies bad enough? Pies, he s talking about to me. This whole deal is weird. And my human is on Paxil. You d think he d make more sense. Uh oh, hold on. Here he comes again and he has fabric in his hand. I ve got to sign off and make a break for it before I end up looking like someone from a human show called Mama s Family. More tomorrow. See? The little stool pigeon tells them everything I do. I guess I d better keep praising her when she hurls up hairballs on my new rug.

    In the meantime, here s a brief look at some of what s going on around town this week. Tonight, the Memphis Redbirds play Oklahoma at AutoZone Park. Anthony Gomes is at The Lounge. And Baseball Furies and The Subteens are at the Hi-Tone.

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    Cover Feature News

    Paper Lion

    There are a few rules to live by when you work for Angus McEachran, according to some of those who’ve lived to tell the tale: Be fair, be accurate, be compassionate, and, whatever you do, “don’t fuck up.”

    After 42 years in the newspaper business, The Commercial Appeal‘s grizzled editor and president is ready to retire. He steps down from his role as president this week and as editor at the end of the year.

    He leaves a reputation for cussing a blue streak, being a stickler for detail, and having the ability to scare the hell out of people. He has been described as someone who looks like a buffalo and acts like a drill sergeant, a man whose very breath — a barely audible snort — can motivate reporters when they feel it heavy on their shoulder.

    And then there are the stories that put McEachran into Paul Bunyan-like roles: tales of phonebooks ripped apart in anger, poorly written stories sent flying through the air as burning paper airplanes, a reporter tied to his chair with clothesline until he got the story right, a photographer dangled out the window because he had, well, fucked up.

    But these stories are only part of the picture. When you talk with those who’ve worked for him, what emerges is a hard-boiled journalist with a good heart. He’s a guy who likes to stand on top of a desk to address the newsroom, who will point out a reporter’s mistakes in front of everybody, but he also cares about his reporters and the people his reporters put in print.

    SOUND OFF: ONE, TWO

    McEachran followed the old-fashioned newspaperman’s route to the top. It was a journey composed of practical experience, grit, and ambition rather than a journalism degree. A native Memphian, he went to George Washington University and Memphis State but never got his degree. He started at The Commercial Appeal in 1960 as a copy clerk and eventually worked his way up to assistant managing editor.

    At the time, the newsroom was a noisy den housed in a converted automobile plant. Inside the institutional-green walls was a bustling mini-metropolis of reporters talking and smoking. Typewriters clacked, police radios squawked, teletype machines tapped — and Angus bellowed.

    Longtime Commercial Appeal writer Shirley Downing walked into that atmosphere as an intern after a summer spent working for First Tennessee Bank. “It was a fun place to work,” she recalls. “It was quite different from working at a bank. Angus just ruled that newsroom. He was in charge.” But everybody learned from him, Downing says. McEachran demanded accuracy and fairness from his reporters and wasn’t going to accept anything less.

    “You held your breath until Angus would get to your story to see if he would get out his bullshit stamp,” says Downing. Or if he would fold it up, set it aflame, and send it flying back to the offending reporter.

    Bruce Hight, today a writer for the Austin American-Statesman, had just graduated from the University of Tennessee when he got a job at the CA. “It was like journalistic boot camp and Angus was the drill sergeant. Sometimes, you got a pat on the back, and other times, you’d get a boot in the rear.”

    One morning, Hight came to work oblivious that his story from the day before had a grammatical error in the lede. McEachran was already in the newsroom. “He called me over and asked if I had gone to college. He knew the answer already, so I knew this was going to be trouble.” McEachran asked where Hight had gone and if he had taken a grammar class while matriculating. When Hight answered yes, McEachran said, “Why didn’t you use it when you were writing this story?”

    “Then he told me not to do it again. He said, ‘The only reason I’m not going to kill you is because your editor should have caught it, and I’m going to kill him.'”

    Hight says the awareness of details that McEachran instilled in his reporters has served him well over the years. He also jokes that it was while working for Angus that he learned the meaning of terror.

    KICKING ASS AND TAKING NAMES

    After working as executive editor for the Birmingham Post-Herald, McEachran took over the now-defunct Pittsburgh Press in 1983. At the time, the paper was a sleepy little news outfit trapped in a time warp. In the late 1970s, they were still using stem phones with separate ear- and mouthpieces, and reporters routinely napped on couches in the men’s room, snoozing under unfolded newspapers. It was 10 years after the Watergate era, when Woodward and Bernstein thrust investigative journalism into the nation’s consciousness, but the Pittsburgh Press was a polite paper, still lazily playing by the rules.

    If the Press was like a quiet china shop, Angus McEachran became the proverbial bull. He came in and was literally a wake-up call for the reporters sleeping on the men’s room couches.

    “There was a moment when — God knows if it really happened or not — there was a reporter lying there sawing logs,” says former Pittsburgh Press writer Martin Smith. “Angus walks in and snatches the newspaper and says, ‘What’s your name?’ … It must have been like looking up at the face of God, whoever the poor bastard was that was sleeping there.”

    Smith, a novelist and senior editor for the Los Angeles Times Magazine, says that McEachran came in and did the things that needed to be done.

    “It was just a place that needed someone to kick it in the pants,” says Smith. “Who better than Angus McEachran? He didn’t come in and say, ‘This place sucks.’ He went through the motions, but once he took control, he put his mark on it right away. He’s not a guy you ignore.”

    McEachran made it clear to the staff that things were going to change. No longer was this going to be a paper where you could skate by until you retire or go into public relations. The Press was going to be a newspaper. If they weren’t willing to help him do that, they would soon be out of work.

    Patrick Kiger was one of McEachran’s early hires at the Press. He compares McEachran to, among other things, Grizzlies’ president of basketball operations Jerry West for his ability to spot talent. Anyone can sign Shaquille O’Neal; it takes a special person to spot a player who has great potential but hasn’t realized it yet.

    “There were a lot of young people who started [at the Press] and they were languishing,” says Kiger. “There wasn’t a lot for them to do. They’d hang out all day and then go drinking at night. … Angus showed up and gave the place some purpose.”

    McEachran began to bring in new blood and gave the younger reporters a direction, even if it was just by giving them a longer leash to do the stories they wanted to do.

    “If you meet [Andrew Schneider], he looks like a hardcore investigative dude,” says Kiger. “But he wasn’t really a writer. … Angus found Schneider some place, brought him in, and let him go after everybody. He won two Pulitzers after being there three or four years.”

    The Pulitzers — one with Mary Pat Flaherty for a story on illegal trafficking of transplant organs and one with Matthew Brelis about the FAA’s inadequate medical screening of airline pilots — put the Press on the map. It was no longer a backwater paper but a burgeoning powerhouse. For the organ-trafficking story, Schneider and Flaherty — a young reporter who was at the paper when McEachran got there — did a world tour, flying in and out of foreign countries, taking photos of hospital documents with spy cameras. It was a story that shook things up at a global level and not the sort of thing that often came out of Pittsburgh.

    Kiger’s experience with the Press is similar to Schneider’s. Kiger had been working for the city magazine for a while but had no newspaper experience. McEachran, he says, “gave me a handshake and a $7,000 raise and then just went back to his office, allowing me to do … whatever crazy stuff came into my head.”

    That crazy stuff included spending over a month with a group of Hare Krishnas and a 4,000-word essay on the role of boredom in Western civilization. The head of the features department and the editor of the Sunday magazine — Kiger’s immediate editors — would never have hired him in a million years, he says. In fact, when Kiger had applied for a job at the Press out of college, he was unceremoniously rejected. They wanted reporters who would work their way up from suburban council meetings.

    “I drove the head of the features department — a conservative old hanger-on from the previous regime who was my theoretical boss — totally crazy,” says Kiger. “I kept expecting that I was going to come in one day and find the contents of my desk in a cardboard box by the door. But it never happened. When I think back on it now, I suspect that Angus was back there in his office, laughing hysterically at the great practical joke that he was playing on the guy.”

    Kiger credits his later successes — national magazine assignments, a book contract — to McEachran’s early indulgence of his talents. Ralph Haurwitz, a former Pittsburgh Press staffer and now a reporter at the Austin American-Statesman, echoes that sentiment.

    “He gave reporters room to do their best work. He had a traditional sense of news. Both Pulitzers were based on basic shoe-leather, hard-nose reporting.”

    In 1992, every department at the Press except the newsroom was unionized. The teamsters, representing the paper’s truck drivers, went on strike, and the resulting conflict lasted about eight months. The reporters continued going to work and continued getting paid, working on more in-depth stories in anticipation of resuming publication. There was a lot of second-guessing among staff as to how management was handling the situation. One popular saying at the time was that the staff would follow McEachran into a burning building but wouldn’t follow the paper’s general manager into a bar, even if he was buying.

    “There was a hope,” says Haurwitz, “that Angus would lead the paper back to publication. As the strike wore on, it became apparent that things had turned very sour.”

    THE ONLY GAME IN TOWN?

    But not everyone likes McEachran or his management style. It’s loud and blustery, meant to intimidate subordinates into action. Not everyone thrives under that sort of pressure. There were a number of former colleagues and employees who declined to comment for this article. And the strike in Pittsburgh was especially nasty, with lingering resentments even to this day. Despite the comment about following him into a burning building, McEachran didn’t escape unscathed.

    And he’s never been shy about the way he feels about other news outlets in Memphis. In a 1994 Memphis magazine article, he easily dismissed television news, the Memphis Business Journal, and the Flyer when he called The Commercial Appeal “the only game in town” when it came to news.

    “I’m sure he’s got just as many enemies,” says Smith. “Not everybody finds characters charming. He’s unforgettable, though. No doubt about that.”

    McEachran inspired one of the characters in Smith’s crime novels, a patriarchal police chief whom Smith actually named after another one of his former colleagues — Kiger.

    From Smith’s Time Release: “Patrick B. Kiger came to the city from Memphis, where he was known as a savvy cop within the department, and as a brutish Neanderthal with the press. … His first week on the job, he had laid out his style with roll-call meetings at each precinct: You got a problem, come to me. Be prepared to lose every argument, but I’ll listen and look you in the eye before I throw your sorry butt out of my office. … You want my attention? Work your ass off, plain and simple. Don’t fuck up.”

    For Smith, the operative part of the passage is “Don’t fuck up.” In the book, he wanted someone who would be the “go-to guy,” someone beyond reproach who would step in to make the world a better place. “I just needed someone who could come into a room with a really good bullshit detector and listen to competing voices, each one telling their version of the truth. He could figure out very quickly what was going on. That’s what I took from him,” he says.

    Otis Sanford, now the deputy managing editor at the E.W. Scripps Company-owned Commercial Appeal, has worked for McEachran in three different capacities in two different cities and calls him one of the best editors he’s ever worked for. “He is a hard-hitting news man. He’s very aggressive when it comes to news.”

    And despite, or perhaps because of, his management technique, many reporters have remembered the lessons they learned from McEachran and continued to apply them later on in their careers.

    “Some people probably didn’t respond well, but others did,” says Hight. “Well, it may be better to say some of us lived through it. … I enjoyed working for him.”

    A KINDER, GENTLER MCEACHRAN?

    When McEachran came back to Memphis from Pittsburgh in 1993, the Pittsburgh Press, the dinosaur he had molded into a Pulitzer Prize-winning publication, had been sold to its competition and the staff dispersed to other industries and other papers. In Memphis, editor Lionel Linder had died in a car accident.

    “When [McEachran] came back,” says Downing, “he was a lot more mellow. He was less hands-on out in the newsroom; he has editors that run the newsroom now. He’s still got that booming voice, though. He’s still Angus.”

    McEachran wasn’t there to fix the paper; he was there due to unfortunate circumstances in both cities.

    Some of the newer staffers at The Commercial Appeal — who asked to remain anonymous for this story — talk about feeling let down that their editor isn’t more of the flamboyant ball of energy he once was. They say meetings with McEachran in the newsroom are rare but jovial chance encounters. They’ve heard the McEachran stories but don’t ever remember being really intimidated. One likens him to a salty old sailor, all bluster and no bite. Another says she was more intimidated by the size of his office.

    He still commands respect, but his presence no longer dominates the newsroom. It seems as if he’s effectively been retired for a while.

    “Angus might have more influence than I realize,” says one current CA staffer who asked not to be identified. “Once he leaves, I might realize that the tone has changed.”

    It may disappoint those staffers, but Downing says this is usual for McEachran’s position at the paper. “He came back as the editor, and then he became the president too. We don’t see him as much, but that’s not his job anymore.”

    In his tenure as editor and president, however, he has made some changes to the paper and its policies. A few years ago, wanting to reach out more to the community, the paper doubled the space allotted for letters to the editor. Phone numbers and e-mail addresses of reporters were listed at the end of each story so readers could easily get in touch with reporters.

    In January 2000, under McEachran’s leadership, the paper launched The DeSoto Appeal. Sanford says the decision was made because they felt there was a tremendous need for it. “[DeSoto] is one of the fastest-growing counties in Mississippi and one of the fastest-growing in the South.”

    And perhaps McEachran doesn’t have to be so volatile in public anymore. He instituted the paper’s “error court,” a more politically correct forum for reporters to explain their mistakes and themselves. It’s not the public routing in the newsroom that staffers once suffered through but has been known to make more than one reporter cry.

    McEachran declined to be interviewed for this article. However, the Flyer caught up with him at a local chapter meeting of the Public Relations Society of America (PRSA) where he was the keynote speaker.

    “Three or four years ago,” he told the PRSA members, “I became so concerned with what I saw were just stupid errors in the newspaper, errors that were the result of sloppy reporting, that I came up with error court. The idea is to explore how the mistake was made and how we can rectify it in the future.”

    The walk down the corridor to error court is called the walk of shame. If reporters make too many mistakes, they can lose their beat or even their job. “Like it or not,” said McEachran, “I can tell you, in the three years we’ve been doing it, we’ve reduced errors by about half and reduced the number of stupid errors by three quarters.”

    If stupid errors are one of McEachran’s pet peeves, so are anonymous and unattributed sources. Because he’s concerned that sometimes an anonymous source is actually the reporter, McEachran’s policy is that someone other than the reporter has to know who the source is and it has to be pre-cleared through the editors. As he puts it, “It takes an act of God or the editor to use an anonymous source in this newspaper.”

    THE LEGACY AND THE LEGEND

    The legends that surround McEachran are as much a part of him as his broad shoulders and his scruffy beard. Everyone agrees that he has a temper, but it’s hard to find someone who can attest firsthand to any of the legends.

    Haurwitz says the Press staff eagerly anticipated the editor that would send flaming copy across the newsroom. “Much to our disappointment, he never did that in Pittsburgh. By then, maybe, we had graduated to electronic copy, but I’m not sure about that.”

    Smith called it McEachran’s flair for the dramatic. “I don’t doubt any of [the stories], but I can’t vouch for them either. He knows how to make his point.” And McEachran’s never discouraged any of them. Downing, for one, can verify the existence of the bullshit stamp.

    While no one who ever heard it will forget the story about the reporter tied to his desk with clothesline, there is much talk about how compassionate and funny McEachran is. And how he stands behind his reporters. It is as if, as Haurwitz put it, he’s gruff on the outside and the inside but with a pretty good dose of teddy bear on the inside too.

    “There are no sacred cows in his newsroom. He backs up his reporters,” says Schneider. “As long as you can prove the story … if you’ve got the proof, if you’ve got the attribution, you can put anything in his newspaper.”

    At the PRSA event, McEachran told a story about a star high school athlete who was being paid to stay in school and win the state championship. After the paper ran a story about the situation, the athlete sued the paper for $6.9 million.

    “On the eve of the trial,” he said, “two things happened: One, our number-one witness recanted (turns out she was back in bed with the principal who was paying [the athlete] to play); and two, they dropped the settlement from $6.9 million to $10,000. Well, I was going to spend $10,000 that day in legal fees, but I thought that if we caved in, the reputation and the integrity of the newspaper would be seriously impaired. I said, ‘No way.’ We went to trial.”

    And after a week-and-a-half trial, the paper won.

    “One of the things I learned from him,” says Downing, “is that, in journalism, we have an important role to be the eyes and ears of the community. Here I was, very shy and awkward at the time, and I learned how to stand up at a city council meeting and object if I had to. He was bold, and he taught us to be very bold by example. Just watching him was an education.”

    When asked at the PRSA meeting what he was going to do after his retirement, McEachran had this to say: “I’m going to spend probably about six months winding down and then decide how much I want to wind back up. I like to hunt and fish, and the caretaker at the place I hunt and fish is more worried than my wife about my retirement. She thinks I’ll be there every day.

    “I’m noodling around with the idea of whether I’m going to do some teaching or writing. I really don’t think I’ve got that much to say. Other than that, I’m going to sit on my butt.”

    So who’ll be the next editor at The Commercial Appeal?

    Newsroom gossip puts the torch into the hands of managing editor Henry Stokes, deputy managing editor Otis Sanford, or Timothy Gallagher, the editor and president of the Ventura County Star, a Scripps-Howard paper in California. Of those, Sanford and Gallagher are said to be the front-runners.

    John Wilcox, the current general manager of the paper, is the CA‘s new chief executive officer. Before he came to Memphis, he was publisher at the Ventura County Star.

    Mike Phillips, Scripps-Howard’s editorial development director, is part of the committee charged with finding McEachran’s replacement. “It’s very early in the process,” he says. “We’re looking for the best editor that we can lay our hands on.”

    That person, according to Phillips, will have a clear sense of vision, strong personal leadership, and an understanding of who the community is.

    “We think that newspaper could really rise to greatness over the next decade,” says Phillips. “It needs an engaged editor, someone who can be out in the community and listening to the people. We want the paper to be the central part of how Memphis confronts its challenges.”

    The company is looking throughout the newspaper industry, both inside Scripps-Howard and out, says Phillips, but they’re going to take their time.

    “It’s sad to see Angus leave,” says Downing. “He bridged the old school of journalism, where we were typing on paper, to a computerized operation. He bridged that very well. He’s been a really great editor and a great educator.”


    Angus the Terrible: A Viewpoint

    by John Branston

    Granted that it doesn’t happen every day, but Angus McEachran sure got a lot of mileage out of tying a reporter to a chair.

    Like Michael Jordan, Frank Sinatra, and Jim Rout, the editor of The Commercial Appeal announced his retirement months in advance. When he did, his staff wrote two obituary-style stories about it that were timid, bland, and deferential to the powerful, all CA trademarks during the 10-year reign of Angus the Terrible.

    They dusted off anecdotes about his reporting on James Earl Ray and, as an editor, bullying reporters, including supposedly tying one to a chair back in the day. Exactly the same tales were told in 1993 when he came here to replace the late Lionel Linder. McEachran’s passion for “news news news” apparently excludes reports of his own career. Nothing, zero, about his twin titles of editor and president, circulation, the bottom line, shrinking the size of the paper, God as source, or even the new garden section.

    His staff, we were reminded once again, won two Pulitzers while he was an editor in Pittsburgh, and the CA generously credited him with a third win on his watch by editorial cartoonist Michael Ramirez, who was hired by Linder, won the Pulitzer for work done in 1993, and left Memphis in 1997 for the Los Angeles Times.

    Retirement nears, and McEachran’s own paper has twice begged the question one of his predecessors, Mike Grehl, used to ask smug reporters: What have you done lately?

    In answering that, one reader’s opinion may well be as good as another’s. Like a buffet, it depends on what you ate. The story you skipped might have made or ruined someone’s day. My own view is colored by the fact that I worked for the pre-McEachran CA for nine years, liked it, and casually know several people there. McEachran is not one of them. So all reviews should be regarded skeptically, but review, we must. The influence of the daily paper has waned but remains as important as, say, the Memphis City Council.

    Newspapers get too much credit or blame for prizes or the lack of them. The more important and revealing thing is how they go about the labors that win readers, not prizes. The inside-baseball stuff doesn’t matter either. From time to time, someone gets canned or sentenced to the CA doghouse. Who cares? A jerk can be a great reporter or editor. A charmer can be worthless.

    In the news business, you are what you publish. Your articles are your legacy, not what other people say about you. Food can’t be better than it tastes, music better than it sounds, or a newspaper better than it reads. In my book, half a dozen CA reporters are as good as anyone. Only one of them, Geoff Calkins, was brought in by McEachran. A talent magnet, he was not. Maybe it’s those rope tricks.

    No question, the daily newspaper is a crutch for the rest of us. McEachran deserves credit for setting an example that good newspapering is not a popularity contest, even if it came naturally. I think the CA is an honest paper, although I wonder sometimes about the things it doesn’t write about. From the Neighbors section to the hardworking Nashville bureau, it gives fair value. Its news stories try to get to the truth, as far as they go.

    Unfortunately, that is often not very far. The big continuing local stories of the last 10 years were suburban sprawl in eastern Shelby County, casinos, technology, failing schools, politics, the jail and sheriff’s department, and the explosion of corporate and personal wealth. The CA shed little light on the whos, hows, and whys of most of them.

    Despite prolific veteran reporter David Flaum, the CA‘s business section is getting beaten by the Memphis Business Journal, which hired the city’s best young business reporters. The CA lost or ran off good editors and reporters like Jerry Markon of The Wall Street Journal, Roland Klose of the St. Louis Riverfront Times, and Dave Hirschman of The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. It rarely makes the connection between Wall Street and Main Street, as if the shenanigans at dot coms or Salomon Brothers have no parallels here in River City. They do, and other publications, including this one, have written about them.

    The best thing about the editorial page is the letters to the editor. Readers say the politically incorrect things that make editorial writers wet their pants. Most of the opinion and analysis columns are reruns from national newspapers, readily available on the Internet. There is only one local editorial voice, political columnist Susan Adler Thorp, who was a Linder protégée. McEachran’s contribution to column writing is religion writer David Waters, a good writer on a short leash. McEachran axed homegrown Rheta Grimsley Johnson’s syndicated column after she went to Atlanta.

    Not long after McEachran returned to Memphis, I heard him give a speech proclaiming his pains to avoid conflicts of interest, such as not owning stock in Memphis companies. This struck me as grandstanding. Editors and reporters swim in the same water as everyone else. Tell me where they own a home, where their kids go to school, and who they’re having drinks with and I’ll tell you about conflicts of interest.

    Besides, potential conflicts can come from many directions. The CA never explained that Mike McEachran, head of the gang unit, special operations, and the street-crime task force in A.C. Gilless’ Shelby County Sheriff’s Department since 1997, is the editor’s brother. It allows financial advisers and consultants to write regular columns on money and business and plug their clients and products. It regularly quotes stock analysts without disclosing that some of them are shills for investment bankers and bought the hot stocks they tout at below-market prices. It has told readers little about its nebulous partnership with WREG Television, which is owned by a different parent company. And nobody ever breathes a word in public about CA profit margins, which were once 36 percent, among the highest in the industry. The secrecy about finances may explain the newspaper’s penchant for bashing public officials for small expenses while ignoring exorbitant compensation at local corporations and nonprofits.

    For my money, McEachran pretty much rested on his laurels, which was fine with us here at the Flyer and Memphis magazine. “Now, we get Angus,” our publisher Kenneth Neill warily and accurately predicted shortly after Lionel Linder died. We expected big things. Ten years later, we’re still waiting.

    Categories
    News The Fly-By

    City Reporter

    Math Homework

    With teachers making $40,000, how much of the city schools budget is going to the classroom?

    By Mary Cashiola

    Last week during budget cuts, Memphis City Schools board commissioner Hubon “Dutch” Sandridge said that with 86 percent of the budget going to personnel, it was time to deal with management.

    The board was struggling with cutting more than $11 million from the budget to balance it at $731,341,000 for the 2002-03 fiscal year. So how much do the district’s top administrators and managers make?

    The system’s communications office said it would take an extended amount of time to find the exact figures for each of the higher-level administrators but pointed the Flyer to the district’s Web site (Memphis-Schools.K12.tn.us/index-a.html) for a good indication.

    The beginning salary for an executive director within the city schools system is $3,971 biweekly or about $103,000 a year. The top salary for that same job is almost $113,000 a year. Although it’s unclear, because of the person’s experience and background, precisely how much each executive director makes, the combined salaries of the superintendent, the associate superintendents, and the executive staff come to at least $957,000.

    The Web site does not give detailed salary information for each division coordinator and director but does give their average salaries. According to the site, a division coordinator earns an average of $75,495 a year. A division director makes $94,413. According to the communications department, the district employs 18 division directors and 42 division coordinators. Using the average salaries for those positions, that’s $3.1 million yearly for coordinators and about $1.7 million for directors.

    The grand total: about $5.75 million in salaries for 70 people.

    On the classroom side of the budget, the district had 6,850 teachers according to the 2001 state report card. At an average salary of $42,565, that means roughly $291.6 million, or about 40 percent of the balanced budget, will be paid to teachers.

    During the 2001 school year, the district had 405 administrators. Average salaries for principals range from $67,794 at the elementary school level to $81,664 at the high school level. Assistant principals are paid between $58,000 and $60,000 on average.

    The entire district has about 16,300 employees.

    Superintendent Johnnie B. Watson is expected to bring another revised budget before the board at next week’s meeting. He wanted to wait until after a commissioned study to cut administrative personnel, but board commissioners are asking that he do so this year.


    Helping the Homeless

    New plan hopes to break the cycle.

    By Bianca Phillips

    A middle-aged homeless man in a tattered black T-shirt sleeps in a wheelchair in front of St. Peter’s Catholic Church downtown. The sun is shining on the long black hair that’s hanging over his face, hiding most of his features. He’s surrounded by ragged suitcases and duffel bags of various colors stuffed to overflowing with all of his belongings.

    But he may not have to sleep outside for long. Last week, Memphis mayor Willie Herenton and Shelby County mayor Jim Rout unveiled the city’s first “Blueprint to Break the Cycle of Homelessness and Prevent Future Homelessness.”

    “This blueprint will ensure that every man or woman that is homeless will have a place to go,” said Rout as he addressed the various members of the faith-based organizations, service providers, and media representatives gathered in City Hall.

    The blueprint outlines strategies for convincing homeless people to take advantage of available resources — such as Families First and the Salvation Army’s Central Assessment/Intake/Referral project — and also includes plans to make existing services more efficient. Currently, no mechanism is available to measure the effectiveness of homeless services and housing programs or the long-term outcome of the people who have used these resources. To end this problem, the city of Memphis, Partners For the Homeless, and the Greater Memphis Interagency Coalition For the Homeless are collaborating to implement certain standards that services must meet to ensure their effectiveness.

    The blueprint also lays out a plan to ensure that homeless people with drug problems and those who are mentally ill have a place to receive treatment. It also lists strategies for providing supportive housing and planning programs for these people after release from mental-health facilities and/or jail.

    Finally, the blueprint points out that none of the above goals can be met without more support from area faith-based organizations, more financial help from local businesses and corporations, and improved flexibility of existing programs.

    The project is the result of a year’s worth of research and planning by the appointed members of the Mayor’s Task Force On Homelessness, a group responsible not only for outlining these strategies but seeing to it that they’re actually implemented.

    The groups involved realized that the problems won’t be solved overnight. “[The blueprint] doesn’t tell anybody that we’re going to leap from tall buildings in a single bound. We think it’s very realistic and manageable,” said Pat Morgan, executive director of Partners For the Homeless.


    Fill ‘Er Up

    Developers to build new gas station downtown.

    By Janel Davis

    Residents of downtown, HarborTown, and Mud Island will no longer have to travel long distances for gasoline and other items once a new convenience center is completed next spring.

    Uptown Place, developed by Jim Curtis of Tri-State Contractors and built by Guy Payne & Associates Architects, will offer many of the conveniences of everyday life. The mixed-use building, planned at 150 Auction Avenue between Main and Second streets, will contain a ground-floor convenience store with a BP/Amoco gasoline island and retail outlets, including food chains like Subway and a drug store. The second level will consist of 10 loft-style apartments.

    “We are trying for a quality development with this project,” says Curtis. “We’re trying to set a standard in downtown for high-scale developments.”

    “The Center City Commission [CCC] is delighted to see the project, which is a larger part of the Uptown Memphis development project,” says Jeff Sanford, CCC president. “This will change a dilapidated area into a vibrant, mixed-income area.”

    The 25,000-square-foot development is a $3 million project that Sanford describes as “more than your usual strip shopping center.” The CCC’s finance corporation has issued Uptown Place an 18-and-a-half-year property-tax abatement initiative.

    “Many people have a misconception about tax abatements,” says Sanford, referring to questions that have been raised about what are usually called freezes for developers. “Since 1979, there are only 141 active downtown abatements, and there are 6,000 total commercial projects in the district. Every project does not receive an abatement, only those projects the [CCC] knows will be completed with or without the tax freeze.”

    With the CCC’s support, Payne says there should be no problem leasing the retail and residential spaces. Curtis says construction is scheduled to begin in early October.


    Reaching Out

    City launches official Spanish-language Web site.

    By Bianca Phillips

    The digital divide in Memphis is about to shrink as the city launches its first Web site written entirely in Spanish and plans to offer a site catering to the city’s Vietnamese community.

    On August 30th, the Spanish version of CityOfMemphis.org will be accessible by clicking a “Spanish” link on the site. The site will contain new information specifically targeted to the Hispanic community here, such as how to get a Social Security card, how to register children in school, even what to do if stopped by a police officer. It will also contain general information about safety and health issues, education, and immigration.

    “We hope not only to narrow the gap between these citizens and the city government but to provide pertinent information pertaining to the city of Memphis,” said Mayor Willie Herenton at the site’s unveiling.

    The site’s comprehensive A-to-Z guide of city services, containing information on everything from abandoned cars to zoning-ordinance amendments, will be translated into Spanish. The site will also contain a section with answers to the questions most frequently asked by the city’s immigrants.

    “We are serving a different kind of Hispanic community in Memphis. They’re brand-new. It’s not like Chicago, where they’ve had a Hispanic community for a long time,” said Naquenta Sims, manager of the Office of Multicultural and Religious Affairs (OMRA).

    The new site has been in the works for nearly a year. It began when Kroger volunteered to set up Hispanic informational kiosks in its stores to serve as a pilot program. The program was a success, so OMRA linked Quilogy, the company contracted to design the city’s English site, with a local certified Spanish translator. OMRA also hosted focus groups attended by Spanish-speaking members from various professions to determine what the Hispanic community needed from the site.

    “[Hispanic] children are getting this information in schools, but the adults don’t have access to it. We want to take that mystery away,” said Sims.

    Plans for another foreign-language site are in the works. The city hopes to launch its Vietnamese site by 2003. A pilot program will be offered sometime in September at the Kroger store at 1366 Poplar.

    Categories
    Book Features Books

    In Short

    From the “So What?” category of contemporary fiction — the question comes from readers, not from practitioners — see After the Quake (Knopf), Haruki Murakami’s new six-story collection. Written in response to the Kobe earthquake of 1995, Murakami sets out to study the effect of that disaster on a cross section of Japanese — an abandoned husband, an aimless twentysomething, a publisher’s underling, a successful pathologist, a hallucinating loan officer, a frustrated author — and ends up with stories that are as flat as can be. Or is that precisely what an earthquake can do to stories as unmemorable as these? The strong strain of mysticism that runs through them only makes matters worse.

    No need for mysticism on the part of V.S. Naipaul — just a smart head and a mastery of the written word — and The Writer and the World (Knopf) shows him in possession of both in this major collection of travel pieces from the past 40 years. Sample brilliance: Naipaul’s hundred-page “Argentina and the Ghost of Eva Perón, 1972-1991,” an essay on South American history and a testament to the power of good eyewitness reporting that is as timely today as it was 10 years ago. “New York with Norman Mailer,” Naipaul on Mailer’s run for NYC mayor in the late ’60s (a final wilting of flower power), is, on the other hand, more like ancient history.

    More journalism, more truth-telling in the first of Vintage Books’ new anthology series, Best American Crime Writing. Nicholas Pileggi (Wiseguy, Casino) is the guest editor; Otto Penzler of the Mysterious Bookshop in New York and true-crime expert Thomas Cook are the series editors. Sample small-town murder mystery: “The Cheerleaders” by E. Jean Carroll. Sample police-force exposé: “Bad Cops” by Peter J. Boyer. Sample good-guy-as-outcast profile: “The Chicago Crime Commission” by Robert Kurson. Sample court-case drama (and summary of the bestseller Trial By Jury): “Anatomy of a Verdict” by D. Graham Burnett. In short, an excellent anthology to remind you not to throw out your unread back issues of Spin, The New Yorker, Esquire, and The New York Times Magazine, the periodicals that first ran the above articles.

    Of local note and/or interest:

    Ex-Flyer intern Craig Aaron, currently managing editor of In These Times, has put together Appeal To Reason: 25 Years In These Times (Seven Stories Press), and if you’re not already familiar with this muckraking biweekly, one look at this book’s chapter headings will be clue enough whether you’re for or against its progressive, leftist politics: Chapter 2: “Know Your Enemy: Right-Wing Extremism and the Politics of Our Time”; Chapter 4: “Doing It For Ourselves: Can Feminism Break Through the Class Ceiling?”; Chapter 10: “Color and Criminal Justice: America’s Incarceration Epidemic”; Chapter 13: “Beyond Anti-Capitalism: Notes For a Future Manifesto”; Chapter 17: “Shifting Sands: The Myth of Islam Vs. the West”; and a closing piece by Slavoj Zizek: “Love Thy Neighbor,” which dares to put the screws to easily the emptiest assertion of the past year: “Nothing will be the same after September ll.” The list of articles that Aaron has collected is comprehensive. The overview/updates per chapter are good instruction. And the bylines are courtesy the usual suspects: Terry Southern, Barbara Ehrenreich, Martin Duberman, Noam Chomsky, Edward Said, in addition to the publication’s steadier contributors fighting to keep liberalism, antiglobalism, and near-socialism alive. Example: In These Times‘ founder James Weinstein, whose terms of solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict are as humane today as they were when he wrote in 1978.

    Without Covers (Purdue University Press), co-edited by Lesha Hurliman (herself a former Flyer intern and currently with Contemporary Media, the Flyer‘s parent company) and Numsiri C. Kunakemakorn, comes with this year’s subtitle of distinction: literary_magazines@the_digital_edge. Which is to say its 18 essays focus on the question and future of the small literary magazine. Does it stay bound but read by a loyal audience, or does it move unbound online to win a wider readership but one with the ESC key one stroke away? The book’s opening essay by R.M. Berry is titled “What Is a Book?,” and if you think that’s a no-brainer, think again, if by “book” we mean our very definition of the word “literature.”

    No philosophical issue raised, no political side taken, no crime committed/mystery solved, and no earthquake disaster (yet) but some travel required inside the Insiders’ Guide To Memphis (Globe Pequot Press) by Nicky Robertshaw. One quibble. The newsstand price for Memphis magazine is $3.50, not the $5 Robertshaw writes. Which makes that publication even easier to afford in order to enjoy its fine restaurant reviewer — Nicky Robertshaw.