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werdnesday, 31

And tonight, of course, is New Year s Eve. There s a lot going on, and here are just a few things. There s a New Year s Eve Gala in the lobby of The Peabody with Blind Mississippi Morris, Nation, and Gabby Johnson. There s a big bash on Beale Street, with a show in the W.C. Handy Performing Arts Park with live music by my men Ingram Hill, along with Slick Ballinger, Kavious, Poizon, Free Sol, and Chosen View. Among the club shows on Beale Street are Burnside Exploration at Beale Street Tap Room; James Govan & The Boogie Blues Band at Rum Boogie CafÇ (can t go wrong with Govan); and The North Mississippi Allstars and Lucero are at the New Daisy. Elsewhere around town, there s a special New Year s Eve Dinner at Melange. There s a New Year s Eve Party with The Sallymacs back at the Blue Monkey Midtown. NRGLuv presents Funkin In Da New Year featuring DJs Ben Armstrong, Danny Rockwell, Mary Jane, Singularity, Muse, and Truss at the Full Moon Club. Jim Duckworth s Action Figures are at the Glass Onion. Back at the Hi-Tone, there s the 2nd Annual Greatest Rock n Roll New Year s Eve Party featuring The Reigning Sound and The Cool Jerks. There s a New Year s Eve Party with Carol Plunk at the P&H. At Newby s there s a Zarr Records New Year s Eve Bash featuring Stout, Thingamajig, and The Subteens. And the future of heavy metal rock-and roll, Hopes Like the Hindenberg, is at The Riot along with a lot of other bands. And, well, there you have it. As always, I really don t care what you do this week, because I don t even know you, and unless you can get Paris Hilton and Nicole Richie to come film a few episodes of The Simple Life in Frayser, I feel certain that I don t want to meet you. Besides, it s time for me to go find out why the Creature is really having and MRI on his knees. Probably has something to do with him servicing the bigwigs at Halliburton when he was running for office.

T.S.

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FROM MY SEAT

MOMENTS TO LAST A LIFETIME (PART TWO)

We pick up where we left off last week, with the top five moments in Memphis sports history. Your favorite moment missed the cut? Send me the tale.

  • 5) June 8, 2002 — The Rumble on the River? This may not have been anything like Ali-Foreman (or Ali-Spinks, for that matter), but when Lennox Lewis and Mike Tyson got it on for the heavyweight championship OF THE WORLD, The Pyramid — and Memphis — had an unprecedented spotlight in the world of sports. Better yet, when Good (Lewis) knocked out Evil (Tyson) in a clean, eight-round bout, the Bluff City made its mark in sports history without marking the police blotter. Oh, and this was the premiere of Tyson’s elegant face tattoo. Again, history.

  • 4) September 15, 2000 — The day AutoZone Park made its premiere as downtown’s newest crown jewel (April 1, 2000) was rather special. But it can’t top that season’s final game. Taking a cue from the likes of Bobby Thomson, Bill Mazeroski, and Joe Carter, a relatively unknown outfielder by the name of Albert Pujols drilled a 13th-inning home run just inside the rightfield foul pole to set off delirium and win a Pacific Coast League championship for our Redbirds in only their third Memphis season. When Pujols enters the Hall of Fame in, oh, 2022, I’ll be there with my ticket stub from 9/15/00.

  • 3) November 9, 1996 — Someday, the right local filmmaker will do this movie. The hard part will be convincing an audience it really happened. Entering the game with an 0-15 record against the mighty University of Tennessee (ranked sixth in the country at the time and led by superstar Peyton Manning), the University of Memphis ignored the odds for three hours and left the Liberty Bowl in a kind of euphoria the 31-year-old stadium had never seen before. Keyed by an acrobatic 95-yard kickoff return by Kevin Cobb — which later earned National Play of the Year honors from ESPN — the Tigers roared back from an early deficit and won the game, 21-17, after Chris Powers snagged a touchdown pass from Qadry Anderson. For one night, at least, Rip (Scherer) was Rocky.

  • 2) November 1, 2001 — The Bluff City became Big League on this night, when our Grizzlies hosted the Detroit Pistons in the first regular-season NBA game at The Pyramid. A capacity — and quite loud — audience of 19,405 saw the debut of Pau Gasol (he scored four points in but 17 minutes of play) after Isaac Hayes and Justin Timberlake starred in the pregame festivities. The 2001 college Player of the Year, Shane Battier, joined native son Lorenzen Wright among the Grizzlies’ inaugural Starting Five. The next morning, a city long devoted to basketball was able to find its name in the NBA standings. Never in the history of Memphis sports has a score (Pistons 90, Grizzlies 80) mattered less.

  • 1) March 26, 1973 — No, those Memphis State Tigers of Bartow, Finch, and Robinson didn’t beat Goliath (read: UCLA). But mark this one down: however many championships Memphis teams are destined to win, none will be OURS like this squad. Recalls point guard Bill Laurie (now owner of the NHL’s St. Louis Blues): “For the city of Memphis, besides Elvis, that [game] was the largest event that had ever taken place.” Larry Finch remains the preeminent star in this city’s sporting galaxy and his 29 points in that losing effort three decades ago cast the Orange Mound hero in his brightest glow. A seed was planted this night for a program that has since drawn Keith Lee, Elliot Perry, Penny Hardaway, Lorenzen Wright, and John Calipari to the basketball capital of the Mid-South. The 1972-73 Tigers remain kings without a crown.

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    tuesday, 30

    The Memphis Grizzlies are at it again tonight playing Seattle.

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    MAD AS HELL

    PEGGING THE NEW YEAR RIGHT

    Like many kids, my brother had one of those toy shape finders. It came with a little mallet and wooden pegs for hammering correctly shaped pegs into matching holes in a bench. When playing with his friends, inevitably, some would not be able to fit the peg into its corresponding shape.

    One kid would always figure out that if he took the mallet and banged and hammered really hard, and forced the peg, even if it splintered or broke, eventually the peg would fit into a hole that did not fit its shape.

    George W. Bush has been the kid who has forced the square pegs into the round holes. He has beaten and hammered the country and the world. He has used force to break us, and come hell or high water, he is going to bang those pegs into the shapes he wants, even if they are the wrong ones.

    In 2004, we have finally, finally reached another election year. As the year unfolds, it will become clear to voters that after four long years of being forced, divided, hammered, and broken, they will have a distinct choice in candidates and the chance to replace the destructive forces of George W. Bush.

    Recently, in The Washington Post, Al From, who heads the centrist Democratic Leadership Council, credited Howard Dean with running a successful campaign, but questioned whether Dean can effectively lead the party as its nominee. “We need to lay out a reason to replace Bush.” From said. Al From should take a break from his efforts to create the Republican-lite a.k.a. Loser Party and listen to Howard Dean, for he has been laying out reasons to replace Bush for months, now. The following are just a few reasons why most Democrats and many Independents think another four years of a Bush administration will be a global tragedy in the making:

    Reason Number One: The greatest disaster to ever happen in our country, September 11, 2001, could have been prevented by George W. Bush. He has taken more vacations, more long week-ends, and more taxpayer financed campaign fundraising trips than any President in history. Former Republican governor of New Jersey, Tom Kean, chairman of the independent 9/11 investigating commission said publicly that 9/11 could have and should have been prevented. Why was Bush taking a month off to vacation in Crawford, Texas just prior to 9/11 when he and his national security adviser had been warned repeatedly of its imminence? Why did he fail to alert the American people? Is it too much to ask of the President to stay on the job and not take a month’s vacation if he has been told we might be attacked? Governor Kean promises major revelations in the coming new year, but if his commission raises doubts about the President’s competency, Bush will just take that proverbial mallet and bang away until the will of the people is thwarted and the square peg has fit into the round hole.

    Reason Number Two: Bush lied about his reasons for invading Iraq. He squandered the country’s entire stock of global empathy and goodwill following 9/11 by invading Iraq under false pretenses, in violation of international law, and without the approval of most of the world. Bush said Iraq’s weapons of mass destruction(WMD) posed an imminent danger to America, but when no WMD were found, he said we invaded Iraq so we could install democracy there. Bush used 9/11 as a pretense for invading Iraq and repeatedly spoke of Sadaam Hussein and 9/11 in the same breath, as if it was Sadaam Hussein who had orchestrated the attacks on our country. Our efforts should have been concentrated on capturing Osama bin Laden and defeating al Qaeda, but Bush handed victories to the very terrorists he claims to scorn by placing our troops in Iraq. It took 150,000 soldiers, tens of thousands of deaths, and a billion dollars a week to capture Sadaam Hussein. Americans are told the country is safer, but are given warnings of “high alert” for more terrorist attacks. So which way is it? Are we safer? Are we more vulnerable and at a higher risk of another 9/11? Where are the weapons of mass destruction that were such an imminent danger?

    Reason Number Three: Under Bush, at the expense of necessary programs such as Social Security and Medicare, the giant corporations who contributed so lavishly to his campaign, are being rewarded. During this administration, three million people have lost their jobs. Daily, the corporate giants announce thousands of jobs being exported to India and China. The Wall Street Journal, recently reported that if this trend continues, by 2010, well over half of America’s high tech jobs will have vanished and America will have completed its transformation from an advanced to a Third World economy! And what about those Bush tax refunds? The $300 in tax relief most middle-income earners received was more than offset by increases in local property and state taxes, tuition hikes, and increased energy costs due to draconian cuts in federal funds for vital state and local services.

    Reason Number Four: Bush has transfigured a healthy budget surplus created by Democrats into an endless sea of red ink – in the form of massive federal deficits of over $500 billion. Taxpaying families, their children, and their children’s children will be swimming in debt to pay for what? Endless war, tax cuts for millionaires, and multinational corporate bankrolling.

    The national debt has exploded to over $6.9 trillion since 2000. Since then, our currency has declined in value over 30%. This President is asking future generations to pay more taxes, experience high inflation, and suffer a devalued currency to repay the unrealistic tax cuts of his reckless fiscal policies.

    So ring out the old, ring in the new! The year to come will surely be a bright and happy one when we get someone in the White House who doesn’t beat, hammer, and bang America by splitting it and forcing it into a shape it doesn’t belong.

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    HOW IT LOOKS

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    HOW IT LOOKS

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    monday, 29

    Go to the Stax Museum of American Soul Music.

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    HOW IT LOOKS

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    sunday, 28

    At the Hi-Tone tonight, it s Red Tiger Industries Family Picnic with Mr. Quintron & Miss Pussycat, Ecce Homo, and Dearest Darlins.

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    saturday, 27

    Los Cantadores are at the Blue Monkey Midtown tonight. And there s a Lucero Christmas Party at Young Avenue Deli.