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CITY BEAT

SCHOOL CHOICE IN MEMPHIS

Twenty-five years ago, a new Memphis City Schools superintendent threw his considerable clout behind a controversial program that gave students and parents a choice in the school they attended.

Optional schools were one of those imperfect real-world “solutions” that probably angered as many parents as it pleased and possibly hurt as many or more schools as it helped. The rich and nimble got richer and the poor and immobile got poorer as the best and brightest students flocked to optional schools that were often outside of their assigned district. Some optional schools became majority-white schools within majority-black schools. For years, there were long lines, sign-up lists, camp-outs at the board of education, and an unwritten set of rules for getting one of the limited number of transfer slots into the school of choice.

But over the years, the system got fairer and the rules got publicized so that today nearly all of the 11,300 students in the optional program got the school of their choice, despite the overworked political slogan that public school students are imprisoned in failing schools.

“Every person who applied on the first day last January, whether it was at 6 a.m. or 6 p.m., mail-in or drop-in, got into the school of their choice if they met the entrance requirements,” said optional schools coordinator Linda Sklar.

The superintendent who made it possible was Willie Herenton. Two of his grandchildren in elementary school are in the optional program. That’s called eating your own cooking, always a good public policy but one not always practiced in Memphis, where private schools and county schools attract most affluent families.

On November 14th, Memphis City Schools will hold an optional-schools fair at the central office at 2597 Avery Ave. The 31 optional schools specialize in college preparation, creative and performing arts, technology, the Montessori method, individually guided education, and focused literacy.

Last year, more than 3,000 parents and students attended the fair. This year, given the extra attention given to schools in the presidential and school-board elections, there should be more participants than that. Optional schools give Memphians a chance to turn the rhetoric of school choice, accountability, and parental involvement into action.

Some of the success stories are well known. White Station High School annually leads the state’s public and private schools in the number of National Merit and National Achievement scholars. John P. Freeman, which has an entrance requirement of test scores in the 75th percentile, not surprisingly posts the highest test scores in the city. Wooddale High School graduates many of the future pilots and airplane mechanics that are so vital to the Memphis economy.

There are also some overlooked stories and pleasant surprises every year in a 120,000-student school system that is always undergoing subtle changes and shifts of population. One of them is Keystone Elementary School, located on Old Allen Road between Frayser and Raleigh.

Keystone has been an optional school since 1991. Its only principal during that time has been JoAnne Jensen, an educator since 1962. She could have chosen a comfortable pension and retirement 10 years ago.

This week, Jensen was invited to Washington, D.C., in recognition of Keystone being named a 2004 No Child Left Behind Blue Ribbon School by the U.S. Department of Education. It is one of five schools in Tennessee and the only one in West Tennessee so honored.

“You are a national model of excellence from which others can learn,” wrote Secretary of Education Rod Paige in a letter to Jensen.

Keystone third- through sixth-graders have tested in the 60th-70th percentile on standardized tests for three years in a row. Eighty percent of the students live in the working-class neighborhoods surrounding the school; 47 percent qualify for free and reduced-price meals, and that number has increased in the last five years, according to MCS.

“It shows what can be done if you have extremely high expectations for students, teachers, and parents,” said Sklar.

Herenton and Sklar are two of the last public-employee survivors of an era of idealism and experimentation that followed the drastic changes caused by court-ordered busing in the early 1970s. Along with MCS employees like JoAnne Jensen, they have been crucial to the survival and success of optional schools, which have foundered in other urban school districts.

School choice will always involve mobility and awareness. The word has to get out about the best and worst schools and the procedures for getting into them or out of them. In 25 years, MCS has done a reasonably good job of doing that. The rest is up to the customers. If you’re one of them, the dates to remember are November 14th, Optional Schools Fair day, and January 28, 2005, the first day that transfer applications will be accepted.

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News The Fly-By

GEST APPEARANCE

David Gest, the producer mostly famous for his rather embarrassing marriage to Liza Minnelli, has become a naturalized Memphian. To celebrate, he’ll host a little coming-out party at the Cannon Center on December 6th. Though tickets may be purchased for as little as $45, the good seats range in price from $1,000 to $25,000. Potential advertisers can buy the center spread in his commemorative program for a mere $35,000. Considering that party guests include Topol, the Doobie Brothers, Patricia Neal, a host of other bands you probably thought had broken up, and a slew of golden-age celebrities you thought were dead, it’s really quite a bargain.

In related news, Charles Nelson Reilly (below) has canceled his scheduled appearance with Opera Memphis due to illness. And no, I’m not making that up either.

Plante: How It Looks

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Politics Politics Beat Blog

WINNERS AND LOSERS IN LOCAL ELECTIONS

As Tuesday turned into Wednesday, the presidential race between President Bush and John Kerry was still hovering on the cusp of decision, but there were some definite election results at the local and statewide levels.

Legislative Races: Potentially dramatic change was in the offing for the next session of Tennessee’s General Assembly, as two Middle Tennessee Democratic state senators — Jo Ann Graves (Clarksville) of District 18 and Larry Trail (Murfreesboro) of District 16 fell to Republican challengers Diane Black and Jim Tracy, respectively. As Memphis lawyer John Ryder, the GOP’s immediate past national committeeman from Tennessee pointed out, “That gives Tennessee its first elected state Senate majority in history.”

A survivor, though, was the Senate’s presiding officer, Lt. Governor John Wilder of Somerville, who turned aside a challenge from Republican Ron Stallings. And the speaker of the state House of Representatives, Jimmy Naifeh of Covington, won an easier-than-expected victory over Dr. Jesse Canno, his GOP opponent.

Although Republicans had a net gain of one seat in the House, the Democrats — and presumably Naifeh — will maintain their power, with a seven-vote majority. What happens in the Senate, where nominal Democrat Wilder has in recent years functioned as a de facto nonpartisan leader, is still uncertain. The Senate speaker has had the declared support of three GOP senators, including Shelby County’s Curtis Person, but Ryder predicts that there will be a “grass roots” demand from Republicans that the GOP get to name one of its own as speaker.

All the incumbents in Shelby County and its environs held on to their seats. That included Democrat Mike Kernell in state House District 93, who won over Republican John Pellicciotti with somewhat greater ease than he had in 2002, when the two first tangled.

At a Republican rally in Shelby County on Monday night, Pelliocciotti had been fatalistic. “I’d like to flatter myself that what I do or what Mike does in our campaigns will make the marginal difference that elects one of us or the other,” said the young businessman. “But the fact is, I think these local races, where they’re close, will be driven by the Bush-Kerry race. Whoever does the best job of getting their voters out for president will determine the outcome in District 93, too, I think.”

And, though President Bush won Tennessee handily, Kerry would carry Shelby County by 52,000 votes, which was marginally better than his Democratic predecessor Al Gore had done against Bush, then the Republican governor of Texas, in 2000, and that fact may have confirmed Pelliocciotti’s stoic forecast. (Local Republican chairman Kemp Conrad would suggest, however, that Republicans gained proportionately more than Democrats in Shelby County voting from 2000 to 2004.)

Another Democratic House member, Beverly Marrero, turned back Republican Jim Jamieson’s third try for the District 89 seat, and Democrat Henri Brooks easily beat Republican D. Jack Smith, a former Democratic legislator, in District 92. Ditto with Barbara Cooper over George Edwards in District 86.

Two local Republicans, House GOP leader Tre Hargett and newcomer Brian Kelsey, won easy victories over Democrats Susan Slyfield and Julian Prewitt in Districts 97 and 83, respectively.

School Board Races: Two upsets and one narrow escape dominated results in the five contested elections for the Memphis board.

In the closest race, incumbent Wanda Halbert of Position One, At Large, profited from the halving of the “anti-” vote between her two major opponents, second-place finished Kenneth Whalum Jr. and Robert Spence. But her Board colleagues Willie Brooks in District 1 and Hubon “Dutch” Sandridge in District 7 were not so lucky, falling behind newcomers Stephanie Gatewood and Tomeka Hart, respectively.

Gatewood won outright. Sandridge will get to fight another day, however, since Hart failed to get an absolute majority; the balance of the vote went to third-place finisher Terry Becton.)

Patrice Robinson defeated Juanita Clark Stevenson and Anabel Hernandez-Rodriguez Turner in District 3. And Dr. Jeff Warren defeated Rev. Herman Powell in a battle of newcomers for the right to succeed the retiring Lora Jobe in District 5.

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News News Feature

EDITORIAL: WHAT MUST HAPPEN NEXT

With George W. Bush achieving the popular-vote majority that eluded him in 2000, the tumultuous election of 2004 is now in the record books. And while most of the television networks, as we go to press, have not declared the President’s electoral-college victory official, it’s all over but the shouting.

But there should not be too much shouting about a Bush electoral mandate. Not now, not in a country as bitterly divided as ours is at this critical juncture. Election 2004 confirmed all of our worse suspicions, namely that the polarization process that began during the Clinton era has continued. The divisions worsened, of course, after Bush/Gore 2000, hardened with the invasion of Iraq, and have now become etched in concrete. As NBC’s Chris Matthews observed in the wee small hours Wednesday morning, “This was not an election about issues, but one about the kind of country we want to be.”

Much to the pundits’ almost universal surprise, the exit polls demonstrated that the single issue voters most cared about in 2004 was not the war in Iraq, not the state of the economy, not even the specter of “terrorism,” but something they labeled as “moral values.” In a nutshell: President Bush swept to victory on the strength of the perception that he was somehow more ethical, and more true to himself, than Senator Kerry. To 51% of the voters, the better “man” won.

However correct or absurd that notion may be, it is a stark political reality. Indeed, the hard mathematics that have insured George W. Bush’s re-election may be the only reality this country can currently agree upon. Otherwise, we Americans dwell in two parallel universes.

Nor do those universes correspond neatly to the now-ubiquitous red-state/blue-state geography favored by the tv pundits. Here in Tennessee, for example, all four major newspapers in Nashville and Memphis (including this one) endorsed Senator Kerry, and while the President carried the state by 15 percentage points, Senator Kerry carried Tennessee’s two most populous counties by 14. The divisions in this country are not as simple as the colors on a map might suggest; we are divided by neighborhoods, not states. And unless we’re prepared to indulge in our own version of ethnic cleansing, over-simplifying these divisions, as the national media is wont to do, does no one any good.

In his second term, President Bush, then, must now do the right thing. With his campaigning days now officially behind him, he needs to send Karl Rove into graceful retirement, and turns his attention to the one problem that dwarfs even the Iraq quagmire in significance. This time around, George W. Bush must become the once-promised “uniter not a divider.” A continuation of the winner-take-all approach so evident in his first administration is simply not prudent public policy.

Senator Kerry, on the other hand, should not be consigned to the dustbin of history. He ran a superb campaign — he will go down in history, for example as the first candidate to win the presidential debates and yet lose the election — and can legitimately lay claim to the position as spokesperson for the 49% of Americans whose views will continue to need representation. Tom Daschle’s defeat in South Dakota creates a natural opportunity for that “leader of the opposition” role to become official; we strongly suggest that the Democrats place John Kerry in the position of Senate Minority Leader.

But the loser in this race can only do so much. The burden is upon the President to reach across the partisan divide, to work with Senator Kerry and other Democrats to begin the healing process so essential for our future. Should he choose to do otherwise, George W. Bush runs the risk of presiding over “evening in America,” and leaving as his legacy a truly dysfunctional nation.

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Politics Politics Beat Blog

BUSH BACK(S) IN

Election Day 2004 was a day of mixed messages and, intermittent rains notwithstanding, brisk turnouts at the polls. Almost 375,000 votes were cast in Shelby County, along with 2 million statewide. Both were records, added on to what had already been precedent-shattering totals for early voting.

Though the Big Issue on everybody’s mind — that of the presidency — remained unsettled until mid-morning Wednesday, when Democrat John Kerry made a surprise concession to President Bush — perhaps to avoid a period of national confusion like that accompanying the Florida recount in 2000, shake-ups in other races were signaled early on. These were both locally, where two School Board incumbents suffered reverses, and statewide, where the Republicans added significant legislative gains to Bush’s electoral-vote victory in Tennessee.

Local Democratic activist Cheri DelBrocco reported a wait of an hour and a half on Tuesday morning at Temple Israel on East Massey. And her own expectations were stood on their head. Seniors in line, supposedly responsive to traditional Democratic positions, were indicating their intention to vote for Bush, the Republican, while youngish mothers with children — the conservative-minded “soccer moms” of yore — were talking up Massachusetts senator Kerry.

As local Kerry campaign director David Cocke boasted to the faithful from a stage at Beale Street’s Plush Club Tuesday night, Shelby County would go for Kerry by some 52,000 votes — two thousand more than separated Al Gore from Bush in 2000. But that was countered by local Republican chairman Kemp Conrad, who presided over a crowded election-watch party at GOP headquarters on Ridgeway.

Conrad, who had set as a goal the cutting in half of Gore’s countywide majority, nevertheless professed himself “thrilled” by the election results. “We had an increase of 10 percent in the Shelby County overall, and of that new 10 percent, Republicans got 75 percent,” maintained the numbers-juggling GOP chairman, who noted further that his party had captured a majority in the state senate and that Shelby County had provided more votes than any other Tennessee locality for Bush, who won the state, Conrad calculated, with “a 13 percent majority.”

Though they were moot as far as influencing any local outcomes, both Conrad and Cocke, as well as state Representative Kathryn Bowers, the Shelby County Democratic chairperson, were nigh on to apoplectic about what each of them saw as the other party’s machinations and about apparent screw-ups in communications between the Election Commission downtown and various local precincts.

FOR COCKE, THE ISSUE WAS the issuance of provisional ballots to voters whose credentials could not be verified at local polling places. By his estimation, these were mainly Democratic and numbered “in the thousands.” Worse, though, was what we called the “confusion” resulting from the communications breakdown. “You have to blame the commission,” he said. “There was gross incompetence. It doesn’t matter what party was responsible.” (Democrats have a 3-2 majority on the panel.)

A corollary to Cocke’s concern was one advanced by Probate Court clerk Chris Thomas, a Republican, who claimed that at one precinct at least 75 voters who should have been classified as provisional were allowed to vote by machine. He, too, blamed a communications breakdown between the Commission and outlying precincts.

Even as the polls were opening Tuesday morning, Bowers and Conrad were in a verbal tangle over what the Democratic chairman charged were efforts by Republican poll-watchers to intimidate and disqualify obvious Democratic voters — African-Americans in the main. Conrad said the charge was “an attempt to play the race card…right out of the Kerry-Edwards playbook” and unjustified by any Republican conduct, “past or present.”

The local controversies reflected some accruing to the Big Issue nationally — that of who gets to be president for the next four years. All hinged on Ohio, whose vote count had been delayed, contingent on what at first was predicted to be a weeklong counting of provisional ballots in that state. Right up to the point of Kerry’s Wednesday-morning concession, Bush maintained a numerically slight lead in that all-important Midwestern state, which even before Tuesday’s voting had been generally classified as one of three decisive “battleground states — the others being Florida, which went for Bush, and Pennsylvania, which went for Kerry.

In the final mathematics, the winner of Ohio’s 20 electoral votes was destined to be elected president. That was the bottom line, and that was the line reluctantly crossed by Kerry — reportedly at the behest of his wife Teresa.

THOUGHT THERE WERE SEVERAL WELL-WATCHED RACES on the local ballot (see below), most eyes at the two party election-watch parties — the GOP’s at their Ridgeway headquarters, the Democrats at the Plush Club — were fixed on the several big TV screens that sporadically presented the presidential results in key states.

Burned in 2000 by what turned out to be premature calls of Florida for both Gore and Bush, the networks were reticent about stating their conclusions. Notable in this regard were CBS News and the Fox News Channel, criticized by Democratic and Republican partisans, respectively, for their alleged biases.

Though he had been billed as one of the star attractions at the Plush Club festivities Tuesday night, 9th District U.S. Representative Harold Ford Jr. had decamped earlier in the day for Boston, where, as a national co-chair of Senator Kerry’s effort, he intended to share a stage with the Democratic nominee in Copley Square.

Given the incompleteness of the outcome, the Democrats’ celebration never occurred, however, nor did the Republicans indulge in one at their national headquarters in suburban Virginia. Local Republicans did whoop it up on Ridgeway, however, claiming victory as soon as the Fox network got over its unaccustomed bashfulness and put Ohio in the Bush column just before midnight, Memphis time.

Though local office-holders were numerous on Ridgeway, Memphis lawyer David Kustoff, Bush’s state campaign chairman, joined other GOP bigwigs in Nashville to monitor statewide and national results.

Though Rep. Ford was not to be seen at the Plush Club other members of the Ford clan were. There was, for example, Uncle John Ford, the controversial District 29 state senator, who took the occasion to proclaim to another attendee, “You’re looking at the next mayor” — a boast which underlined the curious absence from political events, this week or at anytime in this campaign year, of Memphis Mayor Willie Herenton.

And Isaac Ford, a sometime candidate for various offices and the congressman’s brother, was going about at the Plush, impeccably suited and chanting, somewhat inscrutably, “Hip-hop politics! This is hip-hop politics!”

Whatever it meant, that was a counterpart of sorts to “flip-flop” — the pejorative adjective which, used by Bush and other Republicans against Kerry, figured large in this year’s presidential campaign. For a while, it seemed that term “flip-flop” might come to describe the outcome of the presidential race. But that was before Kerry resolved on his concession statement Wednesday — an act that no one could call ambivalent.

MEANWHILE, THESE WERE THE WINNERS AND LOSER in local and statewide voting:

Legislative Races: Potentially dramatic change was in the offing for the next session of Tennessee’s General Assembly, as two Middle Tennessee Democratic state senators — Jo Ann Graves (Clarksville) of District 18 and Larry Trail (Murfreesboro) of District 16 fell to Republican challengers Diane Black and Jim Tracy, respectively. As Memphis lawyer John Ryder, the GOP’s immediate past national committeeman from Tennessee pointed out, “That gives Tennessee its first elected state Senate majority in history.”

A survivor, though, was the Senate’s presiding officer, Lt. Governor John Wilder of Somerville, who turned aside a challenge from Republican Ron Stallings. And the speaker of the state House of Representatives, Jimmy Naifeh of Covington, won an easier-than-expected victory over Dr. Jesse Cannon, his GOP opponent.

Although Republicans had a net gain of one seat in the House, the Democrats — and presumably Naifeh — will maintain their power, with a seven-vote majority. What happens in the Senate, where nominal Democrat Wilder has in recent years functioned as a de facto nonpartisan leader, is still uncertain. The Senate speaker has had the declared support of three GOP senators, including Shelby County’s Curtis Person, but Ryder predicts that there will be a “grass roots” demand from Republicans that the GOP get to name one of its own as speaker.

All the incumbents in Shelby County and its environs held on to their seats. That included Democrat Mike Kernell in state House District 93, who won over Republican John Pellicciotti with somewhat greater ease than he had in 2002, when the two first tangled.

At a Republican rally in Shelby County on Monday night, Pellicciotti had been fatalistic. “I’d like to flatter myself that what I do or what Mike does in our campaigns will make the marginal difference that elects one of us or the other,” said the young businessman. “But the fact is, I think these local races, where they’re close, will be driven by the Bush-Kerry race. Whoever does the best job of getting their voters out for president will determine the outcome in District 93, too, I think.”

Though, as previously indicated, spokesperson for the two parties differed as to which party actually improved its lot in Shelby County, Pellicciotti’s stoic forecast might have been on target.

Another Democratic House member, Beverly Marrero, turned back Republican Jim Jamieson’s third try for the District 89 seat, and Democrat Henri Brooks easily beat Republican D. Jack Smith, a former Democratic legislator, in District 92. Ditto with Barbara Cooper over George Edwards in District 86.

Two local Republicans, House GOP leader Tre Hargett and newcomer Brian Kelsey won easy victories over Democrats Susan Slyfield and Julian Prewitt in Districts 97 and 83, respectively. Republican state Senator Mark Norris and Democratic Senator Steve Cohen easily disposed of their opponents. Cohen eclipsed both Republican Johnny Hatcher and Mary Taylor Shelby, a perennial running as an independent. Norris won two-to-one over Democrat Pete Parker.

School Board Races: Two upsets and one narrow escape dominated results in the five contested elections for the Memphis board.

In the closest race, incumbent Wanda Halbert of Position One, At Large, profited from the halving of the “anti-” vote between her two major opponents, second-place finished Kenneth Whalum Jr. and Robert Spence. But her Board colleagues Willie Brooks in District 1 and Hubon “Dutch” Sandridge in District 7 were not so lucky, polling well behind newcomers Stephanie Gatewood and Tomeka Hart, respectively.

Gatewood won outright. Sandridge will get to fight another day, however, since Hart failed to get an absolute majority; the balance of the vote went to third-place finisher Terry Becton.)

Patrice Robinson defeated Juanita Clark Stevenson and Annabel Hernandez-Rodriguez Turner in District 3. And Dr. Jeff Warren defeated Rev. Herman Powell in a battle of newcomers for the right to succeed the retiring Lora Jobe in District 5.

Congressional and Legislative Races: All members of the Tennessee congressional delegation won handily or without opposition — including those closest to home: 7th district Republican congressman Marsha Blackburn, who was unopposed; 8th district Democratic congressman John Tanner, who buried unregenerate racist James L. Hart, running with the GOP label but repudiated by every Republican in sight; and 9th District congressman Ford, who racked up a better-than-4-to-1 majority against Republican Ruben M. Fort.

OH, AND THERE WAS AN UNKNOWN — because so far uncounted — number of votes for gay activist Jim Maynard, the write-in candidate who was spurred to oppose Ford because of the congressman’s support of a Federal Marriage Amendment that would exclude gay matrimony.

In a post-election press release, Maynard said he was considering a formal run against Ford “in the next primary” — which, given that the congressman will almost certainly next be seeking the U.S. Senate seat which current incumbent Bill Frist has said he will vacate in 2006], would escalate Maynard’s goal as well.

Though Maynard’s effort this year — not even noted by most media outlets — never amounted to more than a blip on anybody’s radar screen, he made some effort in his press release to put his own circumstances in a larger context. Referring to Tuesday’s overall national outcome as a “sad election,” Maynard went on to sum up thusly:

“George Bush lost every debate to John Kerry. The exit polls that the majority of voters opposed Bush’s handling of the economy and the War in Iraq. So why did he

win such a large popular vote (51 %)? The polls show that the most important issue to voters were “moral” issues (i.e. abortion and gay marriage.)

“The Republican Party, under the direction of Karl Rove, strategically planned to use the issue of gay marriage to motivate the Christian Right and to divide the base of the Democratic Party. They succeeded. As I predicted, the issue of gay marriage and gay rights may have played a larger role in this election than the economy or the Iraq War. The political Right uses cultural issues like abortion and gay rights to win the support of people who do not benefit much if at all from Republican economic policies.

“…Like the rest of the world, I am baffled by the choice the

American people have made today….”

One wonders how “baffled” Maynard could actually be, having just pinpointed one of the clear reasons for the seismic, and potentially permanent, shift to Republican control in national and statewide — and, perhaps even in the long run, local — politics.

Not long before his death last month, Religious Right activist Ed McAteer, who had no trouble acknowledging he wouldn’t know a Laffer Curve (or any other economic precept) from a laugh track, said his own de facto support for Republican causes and candidates owed almost wholly to social and moral issues. Otherwise, he could be a Democrat. Even Moral Majority mogul Jerry Falwell, on a visit to Memphis some years back, had said much the same thing.

For better or for worse…No, this isn’t a matter of “better or worse.” It’s just reality — which one post-modern school of philosophy defines, simply enough, as “that which is the case.”

With Bush backing in again and the GOP stealthily gaining elsewhere, Republicanism is increasingly the case.

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Politics Politics Feature

SENATE HOPEFULS AT G.O.P. ELECTION-EVE RALLY


Among the notables at local GOP headquarters Monday night was former congressman Van Hilleary, the 2002 Republican candidate for governor.

Shelby County’s Republicans managed a good show of force Monday night for the Bush-Cheney ticket and other GOP hopefuls, as several of the party’s statewide notables rode in via bus for an election-eve rally before a sizeable crowd at local party headquarters on Ridgeway.

Perhaps not coincidentally, many of the luminaries who had just hit some political hot spots in West Tennessee on behalf of the GOP ticket were potential U.S. Senate candidates in 2006. Others were already on the premises.

One of the latter was former 7th District U.S. Rep. Ed Bryant, now of Jackson, who was mildly critical of two potential opponents. One was Chattanooga Mayor Bob Corker, who wasn’t on hand in Memphis but had been aboard the “Bush Victory Special” further east in Tennessee and who has already begun a campaign for the seat that current Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist will be vacating. Frist intends a presidential run in 2008.

“He shouldn’t be starting his fund-raising now, when we have the Bush effort going and various other races important to the party. I’ve heard a lot of complaints about that,” said Bryant concerning Corker’s early efforts.

And, about State Rep. Beth Harwell, one of those shortly to arrive on the bus, Bryant was actually complimentary, in a left-handed sort of way. “I think it’s great if Beth runs.” He said the possibility reminded him of the 1994 Republican primary for the 7th district congressional seat, which he eventually won. “You remember? It started out with me and [then Germantown mayor] Charles Salvaggio and [former local GOP chairman] Maida Pearson. If Maida hadn’t been in, there probably would have been a congressman Salvaggio, and I’d probably have been shoveling trash in Jackson for the next several years.”

Other than this intimation that a split in the 2006 congressional race would benefit him in the same way that the one in 1994 presumably had, Bryant did not elaborate.

Also on hand at the headquarters before the bus arrived was current 7th District Rep. Marsha Blackburn, who won the seat after Bryant vacated it to make an unsuccessful Senate primary race against fellow Republican Lamar Alexander two years ago.

“Wait and see” is how Blackburn described her attitude toward a possible candidacy for the Frist Senate seat in 2006.

Harwell, who headed up the contingent of Republicans who ultimately arrived to kindle Monday night’s rally, did not have an opportunity to comment on her 2006 plans, but former 4th District congressman Van Hilleary, who was the GOP’s unsuccessful 2002 gubernatorial standard-bearer, did.

“I’m ahead right now,” said Hilleary, referencing a statewide poll showing him in the lead over other potential GOP candidates, “but I’ve got to worry about Corker.” Going on with tongue presumably in cheek concerning the wealthy Chattanoogan, he asked rhetorically, “How much money do you think he’ll raise before the end of the year? $18 million? Anyhow, I’ve got to worry about the money he’ll have.”

In the midst of these musings, Hilleary was approached by a well-wisher who urged him to consider running in 2006 against Governor Phil Bredesen, the Democrat who defeated him two years ago.

“I don’t think he’ll be easy to beat,” Hilleary replied.

Meanwhile, there was this year’s election to complete. Speaking to the crowd about that, Blackburn quipped, “We’re the state that made Florida relevant.” Meaning: Bush’s statewide victory over Gore in 2000 gave the Sunshine State, with its month-long vote-counting controversy, the opportunity to decide the presidential election in Bush’s favor.

State Rep. Tre Hargett of Bartlett, who is Republican leader in the House, has been careful about making sweeping predictions concerning Tuesday’s legislative outcomes, but told the crowd, “We’ve had 140 years of Democratic control of the legislature. Tomorrow will be the first day of 141 years of Republican control.”

Speakers at the event besides the forementioned included Memphis lawyer David Kustoff, the Bush campaign chairman for Tennessee; local GOP chairman Kemp Conrad; state Representative Paul Stanley; state Senator Mark Norris; and former Tennessee Governor Winfield Dunn, formerly of Memphis, now of Nashville.


Former congressman Ed Bryant (2nd from right) and Probate Court clerk Chris Thomas get some popcorn from young helpers at Monday night’s GOP election-eve rally.

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News News Feature

COMMENTARY: HOLDING ON TO AN ASSET

An Irish wake saved the Shell in 1985. It will take much more than that today. Friends of longtime Overton Park Shell activist John Hanrahan, who died in 1985, spontaneously formed a grassroots group at his wake, and the day after began cleaning up and “saving” the mid-town Overton Park Shell from certain death by demolition. The loss of Hanrahan was the Shell’s gain.

Since 1985 the Shell has been run by a very cost-effective, dedicated non-profit group who has kept the Shell running with little financial support from the city of Memphis. In fact, the city has given no financial support to the Shell since 1987.

Last month, Bob Fouche, the Memphis Parks Department Director, on the basis of an engineering report submitted to the Parks Department in March, 2004, ordered the Shell shut down until further notice. Fouche cited stated liability concerns as the reason for closure. The report detailed code violations that estimated $511,600 for repairs or $60,000 to tear the Shell down.

David Leonard, a Shell board member and the organziation’s founding president, believes that as a member of the National Historic Register, the Shell receives a grandfathered exemption for many of the code violations. He also believes that the Shell organization can get many of the materials and much of the labor donated for repairs that are needed, greatly reducing the city’s estimates. .

What Leonard is most excited about is the long-term prospects for the Shell. “I am excited the city is interested in working with us. We see the zoo model as what we need: a management agreement with the city. People don’t want to donate to the city, but they will to a non-profit group. We’ve been operating that deal (the Shell) for 18 years without any written agreement. Maybe we finally can.”

Leonard sees Fouche as the first city employee to offer the Shell time to create a long-range plan that can be taken to the city to permanently fix the Shell and make all parties happy. Leonard is confident that there are family foundations and contractors as well as Shell fans and supporters who will come to the table when the non-profit presents a proper long-range plan. He cites online Elvis fan clubs as one group (of many) who have already begun raising money for the effort. (Fouche did not return phone inquiries about the Parks Departments commitment to the Shell). .

Why is the Shell so important to Memphis? The Shell is a gem of an amphitheater that sits on a beautiful piece of property in Overton Park surrounded by the first class Memphis College of Art; the incredible secret of the Memphis Brooks Museum; a beautiful public golf course; the top-shelf Overton Park Zoo, which has had an incredible renaissance in the last 15 years as a public cause celebre, a party palace for the smart set, and a vehicle for regional tourism; as well as the mating fields of the Overton Park forest.

None of these Memphis institutions would be here were it not for the 1960s fight against the federal government, a lawsuit which ended with the citizens of Memphis winning thereby preventing Interstate 40 from running through Overton Park. Score one for the people. .

The Overton Park Shell hosted Elvis’ first public concert once he recorded for Sun Records. The footage of Elvis shaking his hips in 1954 that has been ubiquitous of late was shot at that concert. Other music superstars have followed in Elvis’ footsteps at the Shell: Johnny Cash, Furry Lewis, Sleepy John Estes, Bukka White, Trapeze, ZZ Top, Edgar & Johnny Winter, the Allman Bros., Deep Purple, Alex Chilton, Marguerite PiazzaÉ..

The former hippies of mid-town (and the suburbs beyond) have an appropriate nostalgia for the late 1960s and early 1970s at the Shell as well. The Shell’s history is incredibly noteworthy, but what makes reviving the Shell so important is the present and future of Memphis music.

The Shell remains one of the few entry points for live performances for current Memphis musicians. In the last 15 years, there are few Memphis bands that have not played at the Shell at some formative point in their career. The Shell is a great place for young performers to cut their teeth in a forgiving, laid-back atmosphere that has the cache of hosting the King of Rock ‘N Roll at a similar early point in his career. If Memphis is to continue its legacy in the world of popular music, Memphis must create an atmosphere that already exists at the Shell. .

Those who wish to get involved with the latest imbroglio involving the Overton Park Shell may donate by calling (901)274-6046 or visiting www.overtonparkshell.com .


Another Overton Park landmark: Plaque in honor of the late Jeff Buckley, music great and, in 1997, when he succumbed to a Mississippi River tide while swimming, a zoo enthusiast.

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News News Feature

FROM MY SEAT

THE SAME OLD…NOT!

First of all, the important stuff. Take your vote seriously Tuesday. Rarely in our country’s history has so much been at stake in one election. So consider the candidates . . . and vote smart.

Considering the Memphis Grizzlies will open the 2004-05 NBA season Wednesday night with the same 10-man rotation that won 50 games last season — plus Brian Cardinal — it would be easy to forecast a season of “same old” for the Griz. But it would be unwise. While the characters may be more and more familiar — albeit draped in new duds and playing under a shiny new roof — Year Four of the Memphis Grizzlies will see plenty of change . . . and the ripple effect could be long-term.

A new neighborhood. In the NBA’s new six-division structure, it would be hard to argue that any division measures up to the Grizzlies’ Southwest. Made up of the infamous “Texas Triangle” (San Antonio, Houston, Dallas) and a pair of music-loving river cities (Memphis and New Orleans), the Southwest Division will offer each of its members 16 games of trench warfare. The division includes four certifiable superstars in the Spurs’ Tim Duncan, Houston’s Yao Ming and Tracy McGrady, and the Mavs’ Dirk Nowitzki. The Hornets have been weakened considerably by the surgery that ended Jamal Mashburn’s season but still boast point guard Baron Davis (22.9 ppg last season). In 2003-04, Memphis was part of the first division in 21 years — the Midwest — to finish a season with every team over .500. Look for a repeat in this year’s Southwest free-for-all.

Less in the West means more for the Griz. Do you have a sense there’s more elbow room in the Western Conference with Shaquille O’Neal jumping center for the Miami Heat? O’Neal’s divorce from Kobe Bryant and the Lakers means the Spurs, Timberwolves, and Kings have seized the inside tracks toward the NBA Finals. And it also means the likes of Houston, Dallas, and yes, Memphis are that much closer to being merely a playoff upset away from the grand stage. Injuries play such a huge role in the fate of NBA teams (just ask Chris Webber and his Kings). A turned ankle by Duncan or a twisted knee by Kevin Garnett could make the value of the Grizzlies’ depth that much more profound.

Hubie’s sunset? The reigning NBA Coach of the Year is 71 years old, and hats off to Hubie Brown for out-coaching men three decades his junior last season. Thanks largely to Brown and president Jerry West (a spry 66), what had been seen as a longterm rebuilding project has turned into the kind of operation where success will be defined by advancing in the playoffs . . . not merely reaching them. With that the case, pressure will intensify as January turns to February, March to April. And you can’t help but wonder where Brown will see himself after another 82-game regular-season grind. Considering how vital Brown’s leadership has been to keeping 10 egos happy in a rotation that might lead a team with less backbone to mutiny, the tiny chapters that make up the larger book for the season ahead will help determine who is calling the shots a year from now. Let it be known that of all the Grizzlies’ players and personnel, no one wants to win NOW more than the head coach.

A new carrot for Pau. The Grizzlies answered any questions about who exactly their franchise player is by signing Pau Gasol to a lucrative and long-term contract extension. One of the joys in watching Gasol over his first three seasons has been seeing the competitive fire he shows when up against more renowned — and until this year, more wealthy — competition. It will be interesting to see if this fire intensifies (or flutters) with the big contract. Gasol said a lot about “respect” upon signing his new deal. Respect, he should know well, is a two-way street. So the burden, more than ever, is on Gasol to lead his Grizzlies to uncharted territory: playoff success.