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News News Feature

MAKING TRACKS

Tired of getting stuck in traffic when a train is stalled on the tracks? According to a proposal from the Tennessee Department of Transportation (TDOT), that may not be a problem in the future.

TDOT has outlined a new rail plan for West Tennessee that will reroute the five major rail lines that currently run through Memphis to a superterminal located at Frank C. Pigeon Industrial Park in southwest Memphis.

Each of the five lines has its own yard where the trains stop to load and unload freight, but this new plan would allow construction of about 140 miles of double-track to reroute all the lines to the superterminal.

“It would divert traffic around the eastern and southern edges of the city, providing safer intercity traffic,” said Ben Smith, director of public transit, rail, and waterways for TDOT.

The existing track that runs through the city would still be used as a light-rail corridor to haul local freight, but according to Carter Gray, metropolitan planning coordinator for the city’s Office of Planning and Development, it would probably be utilized only during the night when there is less traffic on city streets.

The superterminal would be built on 1,000 acres at the southwest Memphis site in an area that is currently an empty field. TDOT estimates that the project would cost $1.02 billion.The state hopes to fund the project in part through the U.S. Transportation Re-Authority Act which is due out next summer. There is also talk of building a new railroad bridge across the Mississippi River. The Frisco Bridge is more than 100 years old, and TDOT believes a new bridge is long overdue.

“This is still just a plan, and there’s a long way between a plan and track on the ground,” said Gray.

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We Recommend We Recommend

saturday, 30

Al and Tipper Gore are in town this afternoon at Davis-Kidd Booksellers signing copies of the new books Joined at the Heart and The Spirit of Family. If you want to check out a very excellent vibe, go down to the Butler Street Bazaar in the South Main Arts District this afternoon. The North Mississippi AllstarsJim Dickinson are playing at the New Daisy tonight. There s Memphis Rock-a-Billy Review at the P&H. And The Reigning Sound and Viva L American Deathray Music are at the Hi-Tone.

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We Recommend We Recommend

friday, 29

It s the last Friday of the month, which means there s a South Main Trolley Art Tour tonight, with free trolley rides up and down Main to the district s many shops and galleries. Opening receptions in the area are at: 10 S. Main St. for Salon and Saloon, works by Val Russell and Joel Hilgenberg; 387 S. Main St. for an artist retrospective by sculptor Luther Hampton; and Jay Etkin Gallery for the Holiday Season Changing Group Exhibition, featuring recent works by Jan Hankins, Christine Conley, Marc Rouillard, Pam Cobb, and Jane Flowers (also check out the Peruvian retablos and vintage African sculpture). The Memphis Brooks Museum of Art is hosting A Day Without Art today, in honor of World Aids Day, with special functions and free admission. Opening on the stage tonight are All Men Can t Be Dogs at The Orpheum, in which Denise Williams and Carvin Winans play a husband and wife making it through a marriage; and The Santaland Diaries at Circuit Playhouse, based on David Sedaris hilarious tale of working as an elf at Macy s, during which time instead of pointing to the window and telling the kids in line to look at Santa, he tells them to look for Cher. Speaking of Santaland, the holiday decorations go up today at Graceland, a must-see for all children and most adults. The Memphis Grizzlies are playing none other than the L.A. Lakers tonight, and I say, look out Shaq! We are on a role. There s a Thanksgiving Celebration with the Daddy Mack Blues Band, The Spirit of Memphis, and The Orange Mound Messengers tonight at the Center for Southern Folklore. The beautiful Di Anne Price & Her Boyfriends are at the Blue Monkey. And, as always, the Chris Scott Band is at Poplar Lounge.

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News The Fly-By

EAST HIGH: MOLDING YOUNG MINDS

Some students may still be boycotting class at East High, hoping to avoid contact with dangerous mold, but recent, perhaps premature, findings suggest they have nothing to worry about. As of Tuesday, November 26, officials had toured 51 out of 160 rooms, and discovered only four areas of potential mold growth. Experts at Fly on the Wall, however, have noted that we live in a new era of global molding, and while we certainly shouldnšt ignore areas were mold is concentrated, itšs actually the smaller, isolated mold cells (sometimes called spores) scattered throughout the world we should fear the most. This multi-cellular, microscopic vegetable plant forms cobweblike masses of pure evil and projects into the air the part of the plant from which these ruthless spores develop. It must be irradiated utterly by whatever means necessary with or without UN support.

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Politics Politics Beat Blog

POLITICS: What Comes Next

WHAT COMES NEXT

First things first: The parties must decide who they are — and who will lead them.

Earlier this month, the Republicans won what in some circles was an unexpected victory, but their pre-eminence at the national level — by the most modest of majorities in Congress — will be tested again in two years, when there will be a presidential election and new congressional and gubernatorial races.

At state and local levels, meanwhile, neither Republicans nor Democrats have a clear edge.

Statewide: The Democrats won the governor’s race, but their candidate, Gov.-elect Phil Bredesen, ran as a centrist and won that way. Consequently, he’ll have no particular mandate, and certainly not one with strong partisan overtones. Both branches of the legislature will almost certainly be under Democratic control again — with a newly renominated Jimmy Naifeh in the House and John Wilder in the Senate holding the reins.

But octogenarian Wilder of Somerville — dependent on a bipartisan coalition and notoriously reluctant to commit on controversial issues like that of a state income tax (which is probably a non-issue now) — straddles the party line. And Naifeh of Covington, whose pro-income tax forces fell short in the last session and who will have a slimmer majority in the new one, will presumably have to tread more cautiously.

Naifeh won his party’s nod for another Speakership term over the weekend in Nashville, but dissident Democrats who preferred Rep. Frank Buck of Dowelltown may team up with GOP members to trim Naifeh’s sails on procedural questions. Memphis state rep Kathryn Bowers, newly elected as the majority Democrats’ party whip, is feisty and determined on policy issues, but she, too (as a onetime supporter of GOP Senator Fred Thompson) is used to making common cause with Republicans.

State senator Lincoln Davis of Pall Mall, a Democrat, has been elected to the 4th District congressional seat currently held by Van Hilleary, the Republicans’ defeated gubernatorial candidate. That gives the Democrats a technical 5-4 majority of the state delegation, but Davis is about as conservative as a Democrat can be and will undoubtedly line up with moderate and conservative Democrats in a “Blue Dog” coalition that already includes the 8th District’s John Tanner and the 9th District’s Harold Ford Jr.

All things considered, neither party can be said to have an edge on the other in state political affairs.

At the local level: In Shelby County, same kind of tenuous balance prevails. Democrat A C Wharton won the mayor’s race, but with support from every point on the political spectrum. Never much of a political partisan and without discernible commitment to local Democratic Party affairs, Wharton is virtually a non-party mayor, a functional independent.

Republicans swept the other constitutional county offices, but the strongest partisans among them — Probate Court clerk Chris Thomas and county register Tom Leatherwood — hold positions that are virtually non-political. Many of the other county officers are Republicans only nominally — the party label having simply provided their best chance at getting nominated and elected.

The current Shelby County Commission is dominated by Republicans in the same 7-6 ratio as before, but political partisanship per se will be relatively unimportant on a body that has seen bipartisan coalitions flourish on the key issues of zoning and growth policy.

In any case, the county’s demographics will continue to shade in the direction of black, predominantly Democratic voters over the next few years, and the partisan edge will shift accordingly.

In city politics black, Democratic voters have a clear edge, but city government is formally non-partisan, and, in fact, partisan politics plays no role in the affairs and votes of the city council. Mayor-for-life Willie Herenton is nominally a Democrat, but the important of that party label for him was best indicated by his support of victorious Republican Lamar Alexander for the U.S. Senate.

Party Organization: Both local parties will elect new officers next year. The Republicans, who will hold reorganization caucuses in January and a party convention in February, go first.

So far, five candidates — Kemp Conrad, Nancye Hines, Bob Pitman, Arnold Weiner, and Ray Butler — have announced for GOP chairman, and a sixth, Rick Rout, son of former county mayor Jim Rout, has not announced his decision about staying in the race after falling into disfavor with the party steering committee.. Some weeks ago, a majority voted to seek Rout’s resignation from the committee on grounds of his publicly expressed disavowal of last summer’s nominee for county mayor, Dr. George Flinn.

Conrad would seem clearly to be the candidate to beat. First out of the box with his organizational efforts, the 29-year-old businessman played host to a crowded meeting of supporters Monday night. His declared backer include a virtual Who’s Who of party luminaries — including seven former party chairmen and a number of currently serving public officials.

Moreover, there is some spread to Conrad’s base — with supporters ranging from social conservatives like Wayne West to moderates like Annabel Woodall and Bill Gibbons. Conrad made a point of supporting Flinn when others were reticent, but his primary recent activity was on behalf of Alexander and legislative candidate John Pellicciotti, who came close to unseating longtime Democratic state rep Mike Kernell.

Conrad has also been prominent in an official party outreach effort to recruit African Americans and Hispanics to the Republican Party. “It’s the future of the party we’re talking about here. It’s about where we’re going,” Conrad said this week. “Our theme for the campaign will be reconnecting and reaching out, The party is very fractured rigtht now. It’s an urban county we live in. And, as everybody knows, our demographics are changing. “

As they mount their own campaigns, Conrad’s opponents — most of them identified with conservative constituencies — will have a chance to express their own points of view.

Local Democrats don’t elect new officers and a new executive committee until April, and no definite chairmanship candidates have emerged yet, though current chairman Gale Jones Carson, is presumed interested in running again.

She may or may not draw some determined opposition, depending on the degree to which opposing Democrats identify her with Mayor Herenton, whom she serves as administrative aide, or former chairman Sidney Chism, a Herenton intimate who vigorously supported her chairmanship efforts during two previous campaigns, including the one last year, when she was elected without much difficulty.

Though Carson proved adroit in walking through the minefield caused by Herenton’s overt support of the GOP’s Alexander, some Democrats blame her for the party’s record in the summer’s county election, when no Democrat won but Wharton — whose campaign was more or less separate from the party’s overall effort.

And Chism angered several Democratic legislators, who felt he supported their primary opponents (something which the former chairman has denied). “Let’s put it this way,” said Democratic executive member Steve Steffens, who publicly denounced Herenton as a “traitor” after the November 5th election., “If Sidney got to be the candidate himself, that would be something which I’d have to try to prevent. So would the legislators”

Steffens was noncommittal about Carson but predicted, “I doubt she’ll have a free ride.”

Categories
Politics Politics Beat Blog

CITY SPORTS: GRIZZLIES

GRIZZLIES ROLL TO SECOND STRAIGHT WIN

MEMPHIS, Tenn., Nov. 27 (Ticker) — Rookie Drew Gooden and the Memphis Grizzlies wasted no time building on their first win.

Gooden hit his first four shots en route to 23 points and the Grizzlies never trailed in a 117-99 victory over the Seattle SuperSonics.

Jason Williams scored a season-high 28 points for the Grizzlies, who have won two in a row following a season-opening 13-game losing streak. Memphis has been much more competitive in the seven games since Hubie Brown replaced Sidney Lowe as coach, and this was its best performance of the season.

Gooden scored eight points in an 11-0 burst that opened the game and propelled the Grizzlies to a 35-23 lead after one quarter. Memphis put together another 11-0 spurt in the third quarter, when it led by as many as 18 points.

Matched up against perennial All-Star and defensive demon Gary Payton, Williams scored 11 points in the fourth quarter, helping the Grizzlies maintain a double-digit lead.

Rashard Lewis scored 24 points and Desmond Mason added 22 for the SuperSonics, who had won the last seven meetings with the Grizzlies.

PREVIOUS

FIFTEEN SECONDS TO VICTORY

by CHRIS HERRINGTON

Heading into this season, second-year forward Pau Gasol was clearly recognized as the Memphis Grizzlies’ central building block, a reigning rookie of the year coming off a stellar performance at the World Championships. In the preseason and through the first several regular season games, Gasol gave every indication that he would become one of the NBA’s most dominant offensive big men sooner rather than later.

But a 13-game losing streak, a tumultuous coaching change, and an on-court slump took some of the shine off Gasol’s game. He has struggled to find a rhythm and role in new coach Hubie Brown’s share-the-ball motion offense, his offensive struggles exposing his porous defensive play. A wrist injury suffered at the Worlds was revealed as more of a problem than Gasol cared to admit — the injury and protective soft cast limiting his offensive versatility and his ability to rebound.

Suddenly, a fan base frustrated with losing began to doubt Gasol’s stature, with trade scenarios and talk of rookie Drew Gooden as the team’s real future star popping up on talk radio, on message boards, and around water coolers.

In truth, many of the issues curtailing Gasol’s offensive production were around during the Lowe tenure as well. During eight games under Lowe, Gasol took fewer shots in more minutes than Gooden and shot the ball less frequently relative to his time on the floor than the team’s other significant rookie, Gordon Giricek (not to mention frontcourt reserve Lorenzen Wright). But this was masked by Gasol’s efficiency, a gaudy 55 percent shooting clip that enabled him to score 21 points a game despite taking far fewer shots per game than any other 20-point scorer in the league.

Under Brown, these problems have been exacerbated, with Gasol’s shot attempts and his effectiveness plummeting. Through Brown’s six-game “evaluation period,” Gasol averaged 10.5 points per game on mere 40 percent shooting. And the only players taking fewer shots relative to their playing time have been point guards Brevin Knight and Earl Watson. Partly, this is a result of a breakdown in the continuity of Brown’s offensive sets, possibly from the quick-trigger approaches of Gooden and Giricek, but also from Gasol’s lack of aggressiveness and execution on the offensive end.

In some ways, the team’s game Saturday night against the Washington Wizards was a continuation of these problems. Gasol had a season-low five shot attempts and had only his second single-digit scoring game of the season. But there was a clear difference on the court. For one thing, the team seemed more active in trying to get Gasol the ball. Three times in the first half, Gooden spotted Gasol open around the basket but was a beat late on his pass, resulting in a turnover each time. Washington guards were regularly dropping down on Gasol in the post to deny the entry pass.

The other difference is that, after some early pouting, Gasol got his head in the game and refused to let his lack of offensive touches affect his play on the other end, resulting in his most effective game yet on the boards. He was more aggressive blocking out an athletic Wizards frontline and controlled the defensive boards. Gasol’s defensive rebounding helped the Grizzlies stay in the game, but it was his play down the stretch that was most heartening. Through the losing streak, the Grizzlies had been in several games down the stretch but were unable to execute effectively to win.

Saturday night looked to be more of the same. A nine-point Grizzlies lead was cut to nothing when Wizards point guard Tyron Lue knocked down a fadeaway jumper at the 2:57 mark to tie the game, 74-74. A series of turnovers, missed shots, and clutch play from Michael Jordan seemed to have created a familiar fourth-quarter meltdown. But, over the next two minutes, it was Gasol, not Jordan, who imposed his will on the game, sparking the Grizzlies to a 7-0 run to put the game away.

Stars are supposed to take over down the stretch, and fans have wondered if the Grizzlies had anyone who could do this. On Saturday, Gasol was a finisher, but he took over in a manner most probably weren’t expecting — without scoring a point. Gasol dominated the two-minute stretch with defensive rebounding, shot blocking, and passing.

On the possession after Lue’s jumper, Gasol received the ball on the left block and, when Lue dropped down to help cover him, recognized the double team and found an open Watson at the top of the key for a three-pointer. Then, a few seconds later, came one of the most inspired sequences of Gasol’s young career — the 15 seconds that won the game.

Jordan drove by Shane Battier to launch a shot (1:42), but Gasol and Wright closed the lane to force a miss. Wizards forward Kwame Brown snatched the offensive rebound and went up with it, only to be blocked by Gasol with his bad hand (1:40), then Wizards guard Jerry Stackhouse launched a long jumper (1:34) over tight Wesley Person defense. He missed and Gasol grabbed the defensive rebound.

At that point, Gasol paused, as if he were looking for a point guard to hand the ball to, as he typically would after a defensive rebound. Then, for some reason, he sprinted downcourt with the ball, leading the break. Just inside the free-throw line, with Wizards defender Lue backpedaling, Gasol gave Lue a skip step, head fake, and then shot a no-look pass to Person on his right for the lay-up (1:27).

The best part? That he also had the presence of mind to hop slightly left after delivering the pass to avoid Lue and avoid picking up an offensive foul. A possession later, a driving Gasol found Battier open under the basket and delivered a pinpoint pass. Battier was fouled, knocked down both shots, and the game was over.

Gasol had plenty of help Saturday night: Point guard Earl Watson had what might have been his best game as a pro. Battier played tough defense on a hot Jordan. And Person and Giricek delivered quietly stellar play, combining for 25 points on 10 of 19 shooting and, more importantly, holding Stackhouse to four of 19 and only two free-throw attempts. But Gasol delivered the victory. Great players make great plays at crunch time. This team hadn’t had that until Saturday. Hopefully, Gasol can build on that momentum now. And hopefully, his coach and teammates can start getting him the ball.

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We Recommend We Recommend

thursday, 28

Since this is the week of Thanksgiving, I m going to take the easy route here and just use this space to offer up some thanks for some things. First of all, let s all give a HUGE THANKS for the Memphis Grizzlies finally winning a game for the first time this season. I don t care what anyone says, this is a great team in many, many ways. When they aren t on the court they are doing wonderful things for the community and they deserve our unconditional support. BUT winning that game was absolutely sweet. And, Silky Sullivan, if the fact that you walked a goat around the Pyramid that day to improve its karma had anything to do with it, thanks to you. Now, thanks to the Canadian official who, under her breath at the NATO expansion summit in Prague, called George W. Bush a moron. Let s face it: Half the world has been thinking it for years, and finally, someone actually said it for the world to hear, although the press has done a terrible job of covering it. Where are the headlines? And this is not to say that Bush is a bad man. Even though he s on a role of stripping Americans of their basic civil rights and is about to engage us in a colossal war of bloodshed and violence, he is necessary for the movie we re in and makes it all the more interesting. It s just like when the Roman Catholic Christians wiped out the Pagan Christian civilization thousands of years ago. Yep, demolished one among many sanctuaries and plopped the Vatican down right on top of it. If you don t think history repeats itself, think again. I d like to offer a huge thanks to my eight-year-old nephew Grant for the wisdom he has shown in the new book he is writing that spells out the similarities between elementary school and prison, a work of genius prose in which he refers to recess as simply time in the exercise yard. Speaking of my family in the context of Thanksgiving, this reminds me of a particular one loooooong ago when I was in my early twenties. I had decided to be completely honest with my mom in an attempt to allow us to reach our full potential of loving and understanding one another. I know, the things we do during our youth. So while eating Thanksgiving brunch with her at a restaurant one year, I related a story to her that involved, well, let s just say a now-defrocked priest (I ve always prided myself on being ahead of fad among the masses; no pun intended), a house full of empty glass vases, and a dog bite. At this juncture, she simply took a long drag off of her cigarette, lowered her black sunglasses, and said, Enough with this honesty business. I am not paying your psychiatrist to have to endure this kind of thing. You do whatever makes you happy but just don t tell me about it. I do miss her so. And I guess that wasn t as bad as the messes I made when going through my sand candle-making phase as a junior-high aged hippie. I d also like to offer thanks for the deer that walked into the Blues City General Store on Beale Street Saturday; how cool was that and was that in any way related to the goat karma? Who knows? And a big thanks to the What Would Jesus Drive? people for bringing up that oh, so valid question. I can tell you right now it wouldn t be any of the cars I ve ever owned, although He probably could have fixed the last one, which had a perpetual dead battery due to the automatic door locks voluntarily locking and unlocking themselves constantly when the car was not running. Click, click. Click, click. If I bought a 2003 Bentley, I guarantee you something would happen to render it not driveable. Finally, I d like to say thanks to the hamburger that walked into a bar recently and asked the bartender for an order of fries, to which the bartender responded, I m sorry but we don t serve food here! And with that, I will call a cease to this meaningless chatter and offer a little thanks to some of the things going on around town this week. Today, of course, is Thanksgiving, so eat plenty and give plenty of thanks and try not to cringe at remarks you in-laws make. And to escape after the big dinner, The Eric Gales Band and The Zach Myers Band are playing at The Lounge. And there s a Tuscon Simpson CD-Release Party at the Full Moon Club.

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News News Feature

CITY BEAT

EASY MONEY

A honeymoon trip isn’t public business under any circumstances. A “trade mission” to Australia at Easter may technically be public business but is fishy enough to warrant an extensive investigation by the media. A Shelby County politician meeting with state education officials in Nashville to discuss report cards is clearly public business.

But between those extremes there’s a gray area of entertainment, travel, lunches, telephones, and other expenses that prompt this question: What sorts of things can people who work in government write off as public business or political activity with a clear conscience?

That’s the question local elected officials and top government administrators are grappling with in the wake of the ongoing investigation into misuse of Shelby County government credit cards. The question is particularly relevant to city officials, including Mayor Willie Herenton and members of the Memphis City Council, who are up for reelection in 2003. Shelby County elected officials, who took office in September just before the credit-card scandal broke, don’t have to run again until 2006.

For elected officials, campaign contributions rather than credit cards present the greatest opportunity to spend other people’s money. For one thing, credit cards are scarce and getting scarcer. Shelby County mayor A C Wharton has called in most of the county credit cards that were abused in the previous administration. The city doesn’t issue credit cards, even to the mayor, although he has both a six-figure campaign fund and a personal expense fund paid for by private donors.

Hundreds of thousands of dollars in campaign funds will change hands in the next six weeks as the mayor and council members hold Christmas parties and prayer breakfasts that double as fund-raisers and political rallies. Some members of the city council who expect challengers next year aim to raise more than $100,000 in campaign funds.

Because the money comes from donors rather than taxes, how politicians spend it is basically up to them. The Shelby County Election Commission requires regular reporting and disclosure, and the Tennessee Registry of Election Finance gives specific rules for raising funds ($1,000 maximum from individuals and $5,000 from political action committees) and general ones for spending them. But enforcement is, for the most part, up to political candidates themselves and the media.

The published guidelines of the registry say the purpose of an expenditure “depends upon all the facts and circumstances surrounding the expenditure.” An expense which is “directly related to and supports the selection, nomination, or election of that individual to public office is considered political activity. An expense which would be incurred by an individual regardless of that person’s candidacy for public office is considered an expenditure for a nonpolitical purpose.”

With that in mind, how would you classify these expenses?

* A new suit of clothes. “I’ve had candidates ask about this, and my first reaction was to laugh,” says Brian Green, administrator of the Registry of Election Finance. “But after I thought about it I would say yes. Some people campaigning in jeans this year didn’t get elected.”

* Taking a trip to Dallas with spouse to study downtown development. “I would say yes,” says Green.

* Dinner with a group of constituents at Folk’s Folly. “Yes, if the candidate is trying to get their views,” says Green. “It depends on what is discussed.”

* Buying tickets for a Grizzlies game at The Pyramid for campaign workers. “Yes, and the drinks and pizza as well,” says Green. “It’s a way to say thank you and get votes.”

* Donation to charity. “Yes, we see this all the time,” says Green.

* Membership in the Plaza Club. “That depends,” says Green. “The guidelines specifically mention membership fees as long as the organization has an up-to-date exemption from the Internal Revenue Service.”

* Donation to another candidate for political office. “This is one of the most common uses of funds,” says Green.

* A cable television subscription. “Is it for the purpose of getting knowledge or for entertainment?” Green asks. “The mayor of Lebanon, where I am from, has cable on all day to stay informed.”

* Cell-phone bills. “Yes,” says Green. “I see them on almost all forms.” But some politicians like City Councilman Tom Marshall say they shun the practice because they don’t want their calls open to the prying eyes of reporters.

* Newspaper subscriptions. “Yes,” says Green. “It’s a way to keep up.”

* A Christmas party. “As long as it helps the candidate get elected or stay elected it’s okay,” says Green.

Green says his office gets a few calls a week from candidates asking about proper and improper spending. Enforcement is up to the state attorney

general.

“Somebody has to make a complaint,” says Green.

“Then we pass it on to the attorney general.” Green says he hasn’t seen it happen in the two years he has been with the registry.

A spot-check of filings at the Shelby County Election Commission shows that most candidates file reports in a timely fashion, but losing candidates in particular can file late or not at all with impunity. The interpretation of “political purpose” is so broad that it makes no sense to hide something. Receipts are not required. As one Shelby County commissioner says, “I’ve heard of candidates basically living out of their campaign fund.”

The bottom line: Campaign contributions beat a city or county credit card any day.

Categories
Letters To The Editor Opinion

Postscript

Cross Guards?

To the Editor:

Your editorial, “Driving Home a Point” (November 21st issue), struck a note with me. I’ve watched with some amusement as private schools and myriad Memphis churches have hired security guards entrusted with traffic control on our public streets. PDS security personnel (many of whom look to be parents) on Poplar and Central often hold the citizenry at bay while SUVs make the run into the parking lot. CUMC at Poplar and Grove Park has security guards stopping traffic while church goers amble across seven lanes to and from church. Yet there are two sets of traffic signals within 50 yards of the crossing — one at Grove Park and one at the corner of Oak Court Mall and Poplar.

I’ve always wondered what laws allow this infringement on my personal Sunday morning driving liberty? And I marvel at the waste of church and school dollars on traffic control for public streets when we seem to have adequate controls already in place.

Bill Butler

Memphis

Offensive Landmarks

To the Editor:

For once I agree with Naomi Van Tol: Why should we expend energy on destroying some monuments in our city when we have plenty of opportunities to build up others?

Leave the Confederate-named parks alone and go save more churches from falling in. Or salvage some cemeteries. Zion Christian Cemetery on South Parkway is arguably the oldest and most historic black cemetery in the city, and it is for all practical purposes abandoned. It can use all the money and volunteer labor that can be rounded up. Martin Luther King Riverside Park has a beautiful river view, a terrific pavilion, great playground equipment, a boat ramp, a golf course … and more trash, chop-shop car parts, and quart beer bottles than you can count in a week. Community policing and trash pick up is the only hope.

If Commissioner Walter Bailey has so much spare time — and, heaven knows, circumventing the Sunshine laws and those accompanying pesky media questions would free up quite a bit — let him focus on some existing “monumental” opportunities.

Ken Hall

Memphis

The Future

To the Editor:

Harold Ford Jr. is the future of the Democratic Party (Politics, November 21st issue) … and he always will be.

Michael B. Conway

Memphis

Irresponsible?

To the Editor:

As a veteran journalist, I appreciate a free and vigorous press, but such unfettered press must act responsibly. Your November 14th cover story (“End of the Honeymoon”) about Tom Jones’ alleged misuse of government credit cards and related accounts was certainly vigorous, but it crossed into the realm of the irresponsible when it identified Jones’ daughter and son-in-law by name.

Unless I’ve missed something, Jones is the public figure in this matter, not his daughter and son-in-law or any other member of his family. Friends, associates, auditors, and other investigators might have known, or needed to know, the couple’s names but the public did not. No matter how much they or anyone else may have benefited unknowingly from Jones’ alleged actions, they are still private citizens who, unless implicated in some verifiable way, should not have been cast into the public light in such a manner. In the future, I hope you’ll refrain from making such identification when it is not necessary.

Curt Guenther

Memphis

Time to Heal

To the Editor:

Being a victim of crime is not easy. The pain of losing our loved one is often hard to bear. I thank God that I have him to call on when the unbearable times occur. The pain is beyond words when movies, books, and support groups are created for those convicted of the crime (“Untangling Devil’s Knot,” November 7th issue). To others, it may seem like news, but it only serves to remind me of the pain I have gone through.

When will I be allowed to rest from the public humiliation that books such as Devil’s Knot bring? My life is not on trial and I would like to live it in private. What gives anyone the right to write a book giving details of my life that serve no meaning as opposed to the fact that there has been a conviction in the murder of my son?

Pam Hobbs

Memphis

Note: Pam Hobbs is the mother of West Memphis murder victim Stevie Branch.

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
Music Music Features

Local Beat

Folks can complain all they want about the dearth of good live music in this town — Monday through Wednesday, that is. But come Thursday, they’d better shut up and head on over to Wild Bill’s, the city’s friendliest juke joint. Located just north of Rhodes College at the intersection of Vollintine Avenue and Avalon Street, Wild Bill’s packs ’em in four nights a week.

Most nights, the club is so crowded that patrons have to wait for William Story — Wild Bill himself — to clear a path for the door, which opens onto the dance floor. Until then, you stand outside, a $5 bill in hand, getting your last few breaths of fresh air before diving into the steamy, smoke-drenched sweatbox of a club. Just 70 feet deep, Wild Bill’s nevertheless sees at least 100 patrons on any given night.

The setup is simple: Three rows of tables that run the length of the room, with a bandstand just inside the front door and a bar and jukebox in the back. The walls are painted a cheerful orange, which complements the paintings and photographs of Bill and his patrons, which are thumbtacked throughout the room. A ceiling fan keeps time above the band, while Bill watches over the scene from his stool just inside the front door.

Students from Rhodes come over, as do older residents from the surrounding Klondike and Hyde Park areas. And, as Bill points out, “We have people in from overseas every week.” It’s hardly a surprise. Wild Bill’s has been listed in everything from The New York Times’ “Sophisticated Traveler” section to Shangri-La Records’ Kreature Comforts’ Lowlife Guide to Memphis. As one of the only “sure things” happening in Memphis, Bill’s has become an international destination.

Most nights, the house band, the Hollywood All-Stars, provide the music at Wild Bill’s. Led by bassist Melvin Lee, the loosely knit group has been a pivotal force on the local blues scene for the past two decades. Guitarists come and go, but Lee — along with drummer Don Valentine — holds down the rhythm section with pride. The group plays a variety of music, from hard-hitting, gutbucket blues to unadulterated Memphis soul.

Buddy and his friend Mike are the two waiters at Wild Bill’s, clean-cut first-name-only men who cater to the neighborhood crowd. It’s up to them to keep the party rolling, and they do their best in the cramped room, moving at least six cases of beer a night. And the kitchen is open until 2 a.m., selling cheeseburgers, hot wings, and fish sandwiches to a hungry late-night crowd.

One recent Saturday night, it occurred to me that I’ve clocked in nearly 1,000 hours here over the years, but I don’t know much about the man at the door at all. I approach him at his post, and after a shouted conversation, arrange a meeting for the next afternoon.

I am surprised to see nearly as many cars parked outside Wild Bill’s on Sunday afternoon as there were the night before. Inside, I notice a dozen people enjoying a soul-food luncheon: fried chicken, greens, field peas, and cornbread. Wild Bill is seated on a stool at the bar, drinking a cup of coffee. I realize that in all those nights of drinking and dancing, I’ve never seen him truly relaxed before. He waves me over, and we begin to talk.

“Not too many people know my story,” Bill says with a wink. He sips his coffee and sighs, then sets it back onto the bar, wiped spotless after a busy night. “I was born down in New Albany, Mississippi,” Bill says. “When I was growing up down there, they had a little racetrack. I was just 7 or 8 years old, and I ran the rest of those kids down. That’s why they call me Wild Bill,” he says with a sly smile.

Bill moved up the Delta to Memphis in 1937. “The high water ran me away,” he says, referring to the devastating Mississippi River flood of that year, “and I’ve been in Memphis ever since. I started driving a cab in ’48, and I haven’t retired from that yet. I’m a co-owner of Citywide Cabs, and that keeps me pretty tied up.”

Bill Story has been running nightclubs since 1964. “I’ve always loved music,” he claims. “I never wanted to play. I just like to sit back and enjoy it. My first club was at 2110 Chelsea, not too far from here,” he recalls. “It’s been so long that I can hardly remember what it was called The Pink Cat — that’s it. Then I had a club called the L&H on Avery Street. When I left there, I came here, and that was 10 years ago.”

For a man who’s spent a lifetime inside nightclubs, Bill has little to say about the scene. “We have as many white people coming in here as we do black. And they mix well. We don’t have any trouble,” he says. I ask him about a few legendary juke joints on the Memphis scene — Club Manhattan and the Plantation Inn — but Bill shrugs in reply. “I don’t have time to go anywhere else in Memphis,” he says. “I’ve never even been to the casinos. I went to the dog track a few times when it first opened, but never went back.”

You can e-mail Andria Lisle at localbeat@memphisflyer.com.