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POLITICS: Two for the Road

TWO FOR THE ROAD

John Vergos is still telling people he’s uncertain about running for reelection to his District 5 (Midtown) city council seat, and at least one solid contender — Memphis lawyer Jim Strickland — is lining up for the race, just in case.

A former chairman of the Shelby County Democratic Party, Strickland is a law partner of former Shelby Republican chairman David Kustoff and maintains the right kind of crossover connections for a non-partisan city council race.

In Democratic circles, Strickland is not a member of any particular faction but maintains reasonably good relations all around. He was the main man for Bartlett banker Harold Byrd last year in the latter’s campaign for county mayor — one aborted when too much mainstream force got attached to the cause of ultimate winner A C Wharton.

Strickland became Democratic chairman in 1995, in the wake of the party’s disasters — local, statewide, and national — of the 1994 campaign season. In the run-up to the 1996 campaign, he was privately asked to step down — or, more accurately, told he was stepping down — by then 9th District U.S. Representative Harold Ford Sr., who was preparing to hand the congressional baton to his son and namesake, Harold Ford Jr. and had prevailed on longtime party eminence and legendary fund-raiser Bill Farris to take over the helm.

Dutifully, Strickland played the role of good soldier and relinquished the post without a fuss.

Another candidate who, like Strickland, was an early starter, politically, but endured a setback or two to his ambitions is Scott McCormick, already campaigning for the District 9, Position 1 super-district seat (central and east Memphis) now held by long-term incumbent Pat VanderSchaaf, who has already indicated she will run again.

McCormick, owner of a printing company, first entered the candidates’ ranks in 1995 when District 2 council member Mary Rose McCormick (no relation) made a surprise withdrawal from her reelection campaign and endorsed her partial namesake.

After the incumbent’s withdrawal, the four-man race came down to three real contenders — McCormick, Beale St. impresario John Elkington, and funeral home administrator Brent Taylor. The well-known Elkington was the early tout, but discovered what many a political newcomer has found out — that grunt-level experience in politics is virtually indispensable to a candidate. Without a bank of loyal cadres to draw on, Elkington faded, and the resultant dead heat between McCormick and Taylor required a runoff, which Taylor won by just 400 votes.

Still, McCormick came off well and made a run for Pete Sisson’s suburban District 1 Shelby County Commisson seat when the incumbent decided not to run again. Other challengers in the Republican primary field were lobbyist Paul Stanley (now a state representative) and activist Marilyn Loeffel. No runoff would be necessary in that one, as Loeffel’s long-standing army of social conservatives helped her sweep Cordova and capture the nomination

McCormick’s name comes up virtually every time there’s a local election with an open seat in his neck of the woods. He is no perennial, however, and will proceed into the campaign with the backing of such established political types as Probate Court Clerk Chris Thomas, his campaign chairman.

VanderSchaaf, of course, is no slouch. She has already served 28 years on the council — a record — and, while that fact might be a provocation to voters of the turn-the-rascals-out variety (as it was for the voters who turned out her ex-husband, Clair VanderSchaaf, in his bid for reelection to the county commission last year), her longevity in office also attests to an undeniable long-term popularity.

VanderSchaaf’s vulnerabilities include an arrest for shoplifting some years back that will undoubtedly serve to encourage other candidates, and that would be good news for the incumbent, since super-district races — unlike those for regular districts — have no runoff provisions and go to whoevever has a plurality.

  • The Shelby County Commission, which has developed the habit of deferring certain key votes, may actually end up resolving two such when it meets again Monday. And it may give new life to a third, which actually got voted on last week and went down by a single vote.

    This is the proposition sanctioning the efforts of a private company, the Lakes Corporation, to investigate the conversion of The Pyramid into a casino that would be operated by Native Americans. The brainchild of Commissioner John Willingham, it went down by a single vote last week, but may be up for reconsideration as part of a trade-off in which the languishing issue of rural school bonds will come up for a vote.

    The bond-issue proposal would fund a new school in Arlington and improvements elsewhere in the county system by raising the county property-tax rate while circumventing the current funding ratio requiring that three dollars be lavished on Memphis city school construction for every one spent in the county. The commissioners to watch for possible switches are Willingham, who has not favored the bond proposal, and Tom Moss, who has been equally dubious about a downtown casino.

    The other deferred issue to be voted on Monday is a resolution calling for additional vacation pay for former commissioner administrator Calvin Williams, whose involvement in potential conflict-of-interest situations forced him out of his job in January. Though former Commission chairmen Buck Wellford and Tommy Hart spke on Williams’ behalf last week, his chances of prevailing are rated as highly problematic.

    Still rated as the favorite to succeed Williams is his former deputy, Grace Hutchinson, now serving as acting administrator. She and three other candidates — former Memphis police director Winslow “Buddy” Chapman; Chamber of Commerce administrator Jesse Johnson; and Memphis city council administrator Lisa Geeter — are the finalists pared down from a field of eight on Monday. (Those eliminated were veteran political and governmental hand Joe Cooper; investor Joe Rodriguez; veteran human resources administrator Elizabeth Walters; and Juvenile Court administrator Frank Conti.) Besides the finalists, one other applicant (from an original field of 176!) considered to have a chance for the job of deputy administrator is Clay Perry, now a local field director for Rep. Ford.

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    News The Fly-By

    CONFEDERACY OF CONFEDERATES?

    According to local AP writer Woody Baird, there has been quite a bit of infighting within the ranks of the Sons of Confederate Veterans, a “patriotic organizaTIon” dedicated to preeserving Confederate heritage. According to Baird, former SCV member Gilbert Jones, who blieves white supremacists should be banned from the SCV, fell victim to “The Memphis Resolution,” a rule which forbids members from publicly criticizing other members. Jones, a self-described conservative Republican, was quoted as saying, “This is the only group in the world [where] I would be labeled a liberal,” after he was pelted with paperwads and bags of peanuts while attempting to speak at an SCV meeting in Memphis. It should be noted that pelting liberals with peanuts and paperwads, standard weaponms of the perennially underquipped Confederate troops, might be considered a simple “reenactment.”

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    tuesday, 1

    Fred, Bobby, and Rusty at the Blue Monkey.

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    News News Feature

    FROM MY SEAT

    BUY ME SOME PEANUTS AND CRACKER JACK!

    Peanuts and Cracker Jack! Remember how you felt on the last day of school? Think back to, oh, fourth grade. Remember the final bell and the race for the door? Outside the classroom, the sun seemed brighter, supper tasted better, bedtime was even more peaceful. Time itself seemed to expand as you imagined the adventures ahead and the many, many days before the next roll call. Now, add to that emotional bliss the joy of finding precisely the toy you most desired under the Christmas tree . . . and you’ll understand how I feel on baseball’s Opening Day.

    Six months ahead, filled with box scores, batting averages, and the leftfield bluff at AutoZone Park. Take your NBA scores, your March Madness, your Winston Cup standings and move ‘em all to the back page. Baseball’s here and we’ve got some questions to answer.

  • Can we love the Redbirds without Stubby Clapp? Our favorite back-flipping second baseman is now toiling in the Braves system. His 425 games played as a Redbird is a record that may as well be written in granite. Sure, he’ll be missed, as will catcher Keith McDonald who, after five years in Memphis is now with the (yikes!) Cubs. The cold truth is that these two local favorites are prototypes for the “plateau player.” There’s a reason Clapp and McDonald spent so much time in Memphis, and such a tenure doesn’t do much for their major league hopes. Pitching prospect Jimmy Journell will be fun to watch as he works his way toward a crowded stable of St. Louis Cardinals starters. New names will mean new heroes. Remember, a year ago, none of us knew the name Ivan Cruz. He went on to lead the minor leagues in home runs last season. Heck yeah, we can love a Stubby-less Redbird team.

  • What will new manager Tom Spencer do for the Redbirds? Known by friends and fans as Sporty (a nickname he was given by none other than Pete Rose), Spencer succeeds another Bluff City icon, Gaylen Pitts (who managed the Redbirds all five years they’ve been in Memphis). At first blush, Spencer seems just as likeable as his predecessor, with maybe a little more thirst for the big time. He was open about his desire to manage in the big leagues when he met local media in December. And there was genuine excitement in his voice about the challenge ahead. “I miss that lump in my throat in the seventh inning, when my starter’s running out of gas,” said Sporty. Now manning a dugout at AutoZone Park, Spencer knows he’s landed in a minor-league gold mine. He won’t waste the opportunity.

  • Do All-Star games mean anything? Come July 16th, they sure mean something in Memphis. When AutoZone Park hosts the Triple-A All-Star game, you’ll see the best the Pacific Coast Leauge has to offer take on the finest of the International League. Tomorrow’s big-league stars on the same field for one night in front of a national TV audience. This will be a moment for our hallowed ballpark to shine from Tacoma to Pawtucket. In years past, the game has featured Mike Piazza, Jim Thome, Bernie Williams, Derek Jeter, Pedro Martinez, and Chipper Jones. And I’ll promise you one thing: the game will NOT end in a tie.

  • Is this the year for the Cardinals? The Redbirds’ parent club has a batting order that will have National League pitchers stocking up on Tylenol. With All-Stars Edgar Renteria, Jim Edmonds, Albert Pujols, and Scott Rolen making up the heart of the order, St. Louis will score runs in bunches. As with most teams between Arizona and Yankee Stadium, the question is whether or not their pitching can prevent runs. A healthy Woody Williams behind Matt Morris would make for a solid one-two punch. After those two? The much-traveled Brett Tomko will assume the third spot in the rotation, followed y some combination of Garrett Stephenson, Cal Eldred, and former Redbird Jason Simontacchi. Not the kind of group that calls to mind the ‘86 Mets, but probably solid enough not to lose games 10-8.

    Say what you will about the ailing J.D. Drew (recovering from knee surgery) or the mystery that is Rick Ankiel, the key to this year’s club may well be closer Jason Isringhausen. If the hard-throwing fireman is healthy after offseason shoulder surgery, he’ll make up for some of the shortcomings in the Cardinals’ middle-relief corps. (The Cards have parted ways with Dave Veres, Rick White, and Luther Hackman.) If Izzy misses long stretches of the season Ñ and he’s on the disabled list as the campaign opens Ñ all the runs in the world may ot be enough to keep St. Louis on top for those precious final three outs.

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    News News Feature

    WEBRANT: Freedom Leave

    FREEDOM LEAVE

    Samuel Johnson opined that patriotism is the last refuge of a scoundrel. If he were here to witness the overblown oratory about France and Germany emanating from some of our leaders, he might have to rework his phrase to make it the first.

    I’m speaking, of course, of the “Freedom Fries” flap and the Dixie Chicks debacle.

    Both of these contretemps would be laughable if they did not so clearly demonstrate why other nations have reason to criticize our propensity to distill very complicated issues of foreign policy into a Manichean essence. Would that foreign policy were a simple matter of distinguishing the good guys by their white chapeaux.

    While it cannot be disputed that at least some of our former allies’ criticism finds its origins in economic self-interest, this revelation should not consign those who question our moral authority to being guys in black hats. It is perfectly legitimate to be skeptical of the foreign policy of a nation that finds itself propping up the Shah of Iran in one generation, arming Iraq against Iran a decade later, and then making nice with Iran again by the next generation. Could geopolitics be a bit more complicated than requiring our allies to have their lips surgically attached to our derrieres? Is this really no more complex than demanding that another country be either with us or agin’ us?

    And if French food items should be renamed so as to be more patriotic, what’s next? Install software in newspaper editing rooms so that the The Memphis Flyer can purify itself of phrases appropriated from the French? Cleanse its op-ed pages of the term laissez-faire and any food articles of soup du jour (and this essay of debacle, contretemps, chapeaux and derrieres)? Allowing that our own language is an amalgam of many linguistic traditions, maybe we should just expunge from our dictionaries the words of any nation that does not support us in toto. Does our national future hold new career opportunities for underemployed liberal arts majors who could render service to our country as “patriot lexicographers?”

    Where is Germany in all this? One of Memphis’ exclusive eastern suburbs changed its name to Neshoba during war time–can frankfurters, weinerschnitzel and apple strudel be far behind? And a bonus is that if we do this lexicon-purification thing right, school principals might not even need to cheat because our students will have far fewer words to recognize on standardized tests, thereby increasing their scores.

    Why stop at renaming foods when we could move on to wiping America’s maps clean of the likes of Paris, Tennessee and Stuttgart, Arkansas? Just because there are towns with the grave misfortune of having had founding fathers from France or Germany is no reason to excuse them from their patriotic duty. Speaking of Germany, what about our Mercedes-Benz driving friends? Shouldn’t their support of our President include abandoning their luxury sedans at the nearest Chevrolet dealership?

    If I were an ad agency representing an American automaker, I’d be busy whipping up some clever storyboards showing a BMW being crushed by an angry mob of flag-waving, anthem-singing, Stetson-wearing, gun-toting “true” Americans. Nazi Germany’s propaganda ministers couldn’t have done it better themselves.

    Scoundrel: from the Latin condere, meaning “to hide;” also from the Old French and Anglo-French: I’m getting my resume ready.

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    LIFESTYLES OF THE RICH AND FAMOUS

    Ozzy Osbourne after a night out on Beale, 1984