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monday, 31

Now, I hate to be the kind of columnist who uses his column to promote things of self interest, but right now I have to be that kind of columnist. Tonight at the Stax Museum of American Soul Music it s the kickoff of the new Last Mondays in Studio A! concert series. The legendary Studio A will be set up with tables and chairs and candles like a club/cabaret setting from 7-9 p.m. and tonight there will be live music by Di Anne Price & Her Boyfriends, along with complimentary wine, beer, and hors d oeuvres and the chance to tour the entire museum. It s 20 bucks per person or free to Stax Museum members. — Tim Sampson

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News News Feature

UPDATE: HALFTIME AT THE LOGAN YOUNG TRIAL

At halftime of the Logan Young trial, one of the notable things so far is the number of key players who have not made an appearance, the tough questions that have not been asked, and the witnesses who were allowed to skate through their testimony.

In the eyes of this courtroom observer, here are a few of the missing links, listed with the understanding that everything could change starting Monday when the defense puts on the bulk of its witnesses and, after that, when both sides make their closing arguments.

Milton Kirk, Lynn LangÕs assistant coach at Trezevant High School, was not called by the prosecution. That strongly suggests that most of what Kirk ÒknowsÓ he knows because Lang told him or he fabricated it in his own mind. Lang testified that Kirk has a tendency to combine fact and Òimagination.Ó ItÕs interesting that KirkÕs imagination was good enough for The Commercial Appeal, which would have everyone believe that its heroic reporting got the ball rolling.

A journalist named Richard Ernsberger may have something to say about that next week if he testifies for the defense. ErnsbergerÕs book ÒBragging RightsÓ vividly described the Logan Young-Roy Adams feud and laid the groundwork for the Lynn Lang-Albert Means story a month before Kirk blabbed to The CA. The story that Lang told Ernsberger was differed in substance and detail from the one he eventually told federal prosecutors.

Lang, a hulk who looks like he wears a sport jacket two or three sizes bigger than fellow witnesses Means and pro football player Kindal Moorehead, is the cornerstone of the prosecution. He said Young Òtook it like waterÓ when Lang suggested an opening bid of $50,000 for the services of Means. The ÒnegotiationÓ proceeded to $150,000, although how it got there and why it stopped there were not explained under questioning by either the government or the defense. In fact, the rest of the evidence and LangÕs previous testimony to the NCAA and a federal grand jury indicates that $150,000 is, at best, an estimate culled from talking points that included cars, houses, and $291,000 in Young bank withdrawals.

If Young indeed Òtook it like waterÓ at 50 grand, then it is hard to see how he survived so long without being nailed. If he was the softest touch known to man, an admitted grifter such as Lang or his like at other schools would surely have spread the word. Why would Young offer $150,000 for Means and, so far as we know, nothing for Cortez Kennedy, who is from YoungÕs home town, Osceola, Arkansas? Kennedy was an All-American at Miami and all-pro with the Seattle Seahawks. Means couldnÕt carry his jock strap. So how did Young and Alabama miss him?

Means is one of the luckiest young men in America. He cheated to get into college by allowing someone else to take his entrance exam, lied about it under oath to a federal grand jury, and through one season at ÔBama and three more at University of Memphis, he was never penalized by anyone not wearing a striped shirt. Yes, he was poor, but so are millions of other high school graduates who take their own entrance exams and do not have the promise of a career in professional football. And despite being a surrogate father to Means, Lang could not accurately state the number of siblings Means has when asked about it last week on the witness stand.

Mal Moore, athletic director at the University of Alabama, testified very briefly for the prosecution. LetÕs assume that Moore knows far more than, say, the average well-informed Internet chat room participant about what actually goes on in Southeastern Conference football recruiting and AlabamaÕs biggest football fan, Logan Young. How much light did he shed on that subject? Almost none at all. He testified only that Young gave the athletic department an insurance policy and some legitimate contributions. Curiously, he said the university defines ÒboosterÓ as anyone who ever buys a ticket and attends an Alabama football game. Talk about Booster Nation! YoungÕs lawyers did not lay a glove on him, probably fearing the lines of questioning they might open up about their man.

Former Alabama assistant football coach Ivy Williams testified for the defense Friday and was simply dreadful, as even diehard Alabama spectators at the trial admitted. First he tried to parse, in the manner of Bill Clinton, the difference between a conversation initiated by the caller and the person taking the call. He squirmed pitifully on prosecutor Fred GodwinÕs cruel hook, admitting that one way or another he and Young talked more than 200 times but, supposedly, not about Means.

Jim Donnan, another defense witness who testified Friday, was not much better. He came across as aggressive and sore, but it soon became apparent that one of the things he is sore about is the fact that he is no longer head football coach at Georgia and, by todayÕs standards, was perhaps underpaid when he was a coach. Godwin asked him how much he was paid at Georgia, and the defense objected. But not before Donnan blurted out ÒNot enough.Ó Godwin was then allowed by the judge to get Donnan to divulge that in his final year at Georgia his total compensation was $700,000. This to a Memphis jury whose members may well earn in the neighborhood of $30,000 a year, give or take $20,000. This might be the only thing jurors recall about Mr. Ònot enough.Ó

Donnan opened up one potentially fruitful line of questioning when he said he visited Lang in Memphis and promptly determined that Lang Òhad his hand out.Ó That suggests Lang did indeed attempt to shake down at least seven big-time colleges and, therefore, could have gotten various bribes or slush money from people other than or in addition to Logan Young for his cars and strip-club visits before they dropped out of the auction.

The defense succeeded in making Lang out a liar in the past, but the government was ready to concede that anyway. The problem and, at the same time, the puzzle is that he alleges that he and Young met or spoke on the phone not a few times but scores of times. Young claims they never met during the period specified in the indictment. Chipping away at a stack of phone records, the defense made some headway but the jury was left with the evidence that Young and Lang were not strangers. On the other hand, if they met as often as Lang claims they did at YoungÕs home in an affluent Memphis neighborhood, it could strike the jury as strange that neighborhood gossips apparently made little of the black football coach hanging out with the known football fanatic in their neighborhood. Or at least not enough to agree to be called as a witness and testify to it in court.

One of LangÕs more telling evasions had nothing to do with Young. Under questioning by the defense, he admitted he had failed to reveal his felony plea and conviction to the Benton Harbor, Michigan school system where he is a teacher. He said he told the state on his certification but the not the county. In other words, after all the trouble heÕs been through, he still doesnÕt get it, even when it comes to something as important and verifiable as a job application.

In the battle of the lawyers, Godwin is more than holding his own against well-regarded veteran defense attorney Jim Neal. He got Lang on and off the stand without a game-ending injury, and his dissection of Williams and Donnan was brilliant. HeÕll bloody some more noses next week. His weakest witness was Lisa Mallory, an ex-girlfriend of Young who basically supported the defense line that Young likes to drink, brag, and throw money around and often bragged ÒheÕs mineÓ about players who did not wind up at Alabama.

In demeanor, Godwin, an ex-cop, is the smartest boy in class and every cop who ever gave you a speeding ticket for going 60 in a 55-mph zone, then told you to shut up ÒsirÓ when you asked why he stopped you. In a rare but telling slip, he laughed sarcastically after one of Judge Daniel BreenÕs ruling went against him, drawing a public spanking from Breen that was immensely satisfying to many courtroom observers. On his performance so far, Godwin deserves a B at least.

Neal gets an incomplete because he has yet to present most of his witnesses. Lang was still standing after cross-examination, and Williams seemed unprepared. Normally talkative, Neal has totally clammed up with the media during the trial and it isnÕt clear at half time exactly what his strategy will be in the second half. The defense motion to dismiss the charges because paying a coach to do anything except throw a game is not a crime had the look of a Hail Mary. Breen has already ruled against it once when it was briefed nearly a year ago. How significant this is itÕs impossible to say, but more than one attorney has noted to me that Neal said a week or so ago that Òwe have a client who says heÕs innocentÓ and going to trial. Emphasis on Òsays.Ó

Deep in the heart of Dixie, attorney Tommy Gallion of Montgomery, Alabama must be licking his chops in anticipation of hauling the NCAA and its investigators into court in June — in Tuscaloosa, no less. Means clearly got kid-glove treatment for cooperating with the government, Mal Moore knows much more than he revealed last week, Kirk is an even bigger liar than Lynn Lang according to Lang, and a substantial amount of testimony to the NCAA regarding Alabama was apparently false. Even if Logan goes down, the Tide may yet roll over a few opponents and settle some old scores.

PREVIOUS (1-28-04)

Third and Long at the Logan Young Trial

A Hail Mary pass to the judge is under review and defendant Logan Young is looking at third and long as the two sides take a weekend break in YoungÕs trial in federal court in Memphis.

Young is charged with bribery and conspiracy for allegedly paying $150,000 to football coach Lynn Lang to influence star lineman Albert Means to enroll at the University of Alabama. He has listened impassively all week at the defense table as the government presented its case and several old friends and foes testified.

On Friday, the defense put on its first two witnesses, former University of Georgia head football coach Jim Donnan and former Alabama assistant football coach and recruiter Ivy Williams. Much of FridayÕs session was taken up with discussion of a defense motion to dismiss the case because, in laymanÕs terms, what Young is accused of doing is not a crime.

Defense attorneys previously made the motion almost a year ago, and U.S. District Judge Daniel Breen ruled against it.

After the government completed its proof Thursday, defense attorney Robert Hutton made the motion again. That prompted U.S. Attorney Fred Godwin to get permission to put on one more government witness Friday. The witness was former Memphis City Schools Superintendent Johnnie B. Watson, who testified that Lang and his assistant coach Milton Kirk be fired after the Means story broke and Kirk pleaded guilty. Lang wound up resigning instead, while Kirk was suspended for a year and rehired.

The issue raised by Hutton is whether it is a federal crime to influence a teacher or coach to do something that does not impair his or her ability as a teacher or coach. Hutton used the example of paying a teacher to give a student an A as opposed to paying a teacher to tutor after hours

The defense will present the bulk of its case starting Monday. Donnan and Williams were allowed to testify Friday for logistical reasons. Current NFL player Kindal Moorehead also testified, but only out of the presence of the jury. It is not clear how his testimony will be used. Moorehead was recruited by Williams and went to Alabama.

Donnan was somewhat more effective than Williams. He testified that he met with Lang in Memphis and that Lang Òhad his hand outÓ for bribes and that Donnan walked out of the meeting and reported Lang to the NCAA. He also said Lang never told him the price for Means was $200,000, a figure widely tossed about by, among others, The Commercial Appeal, the daily newspaper in Memphis.

The ESPN analyst was in his fourth year as head coach at Georgia when his name came up in the Means case and he lost his job. He answered a firm ÒNoÓ when asked if he ever offered Lynn Lang any money to get Means to go to Georgia. He said the university gave Lang $500 for working at a football camp and Means $194 for expenses for a campus visit. Lang testified that Donnan himself paid him $700. After a discussion with the jury out of the courtroom, Godwin was allowed to ask Donnan in front of the jury how much money he made in his final year as a head coach. Donnan said his total compensation was $700,000. The implication was that Donnan had a lot of incentive to lie about the alleged $700.

Williams is now an assistant football coach at Savannah State College but formerly was in charge of recruiting for Alabama in the Memphis area. He recruited Albert Means in 1999. He testified that he met Lynn Lang in 1999 but did not tell him to get an impostor to take the ACT college entrance exam for Means as Lang has told others.

ÒI was told by Coach Lang that the young man was fully qualified,Ó he said.

Godwin questioned Williams about the frequency of his telephone contacts and personal contacts with Young. Williams told the NCAA in 2000 that he talked to Young 10-12 times but later told a grand jury he talked to Young more than 200 times. Williams tried to argue that there is a difference between talking to someone who calls you and calling someone yourself.

Godwin also brought out that Williams and Young talked by phone for ten minutes in January at about the time Means visited Alabama. Williams and Young also had dinner together before Means signed with Alabama.

ÒDid you discuss the recruiting of Albert Means?Ó Godwin asked.

ÒNo,Ó Williams replied.

Starting Monday, the defense will present witnesses to discredit Lang and other government witnesses. The mysterious Melvin Ernest, also known as ÒBotto,Ó could make his first appearance. ÒBottoÓ is a former football coach and high-school hanger-on who allegedly drove Lang to meet with Young and acted as middleman between Young and other coaches.

Other witnesses are likely to include current and former high school and college football coaches. The prosecution was able to introduce testimony about former Melrose football coach Tim Thompson and his ties to Young, so the defense may also want to deal with that.

The government did not call either ÒBottoÓ or Milton Kirk or anyone from the NCAA. Lang admitted on the stand telling different versions of his story to the NCAA and, initially, to federal prosecutors. Because of his deal to change his plea to guilty, he faces five years in prison instead of the theoretical 135 years in the original charges.

MORE PREVIOUS (1-26-05)

Super Bowl of Sleaze

The star witness, Lynn Lang, is a cheater, a liar, and a greedy exploiter of high school athletes. And that’s the assessment of the prosecutor. The defendant, Logan Young Jr., is a braggart with an adolescent fixation on college football who drinks too much, talks too much, and gambles away money like it’s paper. And that’s according to his own attorneys.

And the star player, Albert Means, was so academically unqualified that he had to get someone else to take his college entrance exam, so dishonest that he lied about it to a federal grand jury, and so valuable that he was allowed to play four years of college football anyway without a single sanction.

Welcome to the United States of America v. Logan Young Jr., the Super Bowl of Sleaze.

“There are no heroes in this case,” U.S. attorney Fred Godwin told jurors in his opening remarks.

No kidding. Whatever the outcome, the trial is likely to be remembered for two catch phrases. The first is Young’s chest-thumping “He’s mine!,” supposedly spoken in regard to getting Means to attend the University of Alabama for the price of $150,000, payable to Lang. The other is the alliterative “Lynn Lang’s lies,” the cornerstone of Young’s defense by lawyer Jim Neal.

Godwin, who has been on the case for four years, wasted no time laying out his line of attack in opening remarks. He practically leaped to his feet, took a few quick steps toward the jury of seven women and five men, and thundered, “This case is about the buying and selling of a young man by men who had no right to do so,” and then pointing at Young, who sat at the defense table.

The first three witnesses Alabama athletic director Mal Moore, Young’s ex-girlfriend Lisa Mallory, and Means established that Young worships the late Bear Bryant, gave liberally to the Alabama athletic department, drinks like a fish, and likes to holler “Roll Tide.” Mallory, who met Young while working as his interior designer, testified about his heroic drinking and “He’s mine!” boast, but under cross-examination agreed that he made the same claim about athletes who enrolled at schools other than Alabama. She said it was not uncommon for him to wave around wads of cash, especially when he was gambling or on a football weekend.

Means testified that Lang guided his football decisions throughout high school and often gave him spending money or gifts. He said Lang steered him to Alabama although Means liked Arkansas and Kentucky better. He said he never met or talked to Logan Young in his life. And he admitted that he never took the ACT college entrance exam but told a federal grand jury that he did.

“I was afraid,” he said. “I thought it probably would affect my education.”

Jurors will also hear from middleman Melvin Ernest, nicknamed “Botto,” who supposedly brought Lang to Young’s house in 1999, remaining downstairs while Lang and Young went upstairs to talk business. Godwin said Lang will testify that their meetings always included just the two of them “because then it’s your word against mine that this ever happened.”

According to Godwin, Young made 64 cash withdrawals, each for less than $10,000 to avoid IRS reporting, with $150,000 finding its way to Lang over a period of several months. Godwin promised to present “some interesting coincidences” about the timing of Young’s withdrawals and Lang’s bank deposits.

“Follow the money,” Godwin told the jury in summation.

In his opening remarks to the jury, Neal indicated that he will essentially be putting Lang on trial.

“There is no way you will believe the government’s chief witness and certainly no way you will believe Lynn Lang beyond a reasonable doubt,” he said. He noted inconsistencies in Lang’s story as told to journalists, Memphis attorney Bill Wade, Memphis City Schools officials, federal prosecutors, and the NCAA. He said jurors will hear contradictory testimony from former University of Memphis head football coach Rip Scherer and former Georgia coach Jim Donnan, among others.

Neal suggested that Lang pled guilty because he was facing up to 135 years in prison on the original charges. He said testimony will show that Lang skimmed money from events at Trezevant High School and summer football camps when he was a coach and had to be ordered by a court to make child-support payments when he was supposedly “awash in money.

On Tuesday, prosecutors lost an attempt to introduce testimony alleging that Young also paid former Melrose football coach Tim Thompson to get star player Kindal Moorehead to attend Alabama.

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sunday, 30

Tonight s Coffee House Concert Series at The Church of the Holy Communion features none other than Alvin Youngblood Hart. And back at the Hi-Tone, it s live music by David Brookings. — Tim Sampson

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News The Fly-By

PITY THE FOOL!

“I’ve got to look at what Coach T is going to get out of it. Coming to Fayette-Ware, how am I going to benefit?” Coach Tim Thompson, who was handed a three-year suspension from coaching in 2001 for accepting money from a University of Kentucky coach and paying players to attend a UK football camp, as quoted in The Commercial Appeal. Classy. — Chris Davis

Plante: How It Looks

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saturday, 29

The Grizzlies take on Atlanta tonight at FedExForum. Today s Chocolate Fantasy at Oak Court Mall is a great way to see what this kind of brown can do for you while raising much-needed money for the Memphis chapter of the National Kidney Foundation. Gerry Finney plays tonight at the new Glasshouse 383 on South Main. Col. Bruce Hampton & The Codetalkers and Cat Call Choir are at the Hi-Tone. And those wild Jumpin Chi-Chi s are at the Blue Monkey Midtown. — Tim Sampson

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Editorial Opinion

EDITORIAL

For many of us, the golden, authoritative, and exuberant tones of Grizzlies broadcaster Don Poier — which first graced our ears in 2001, with the coming of the city’s NBA team — meant that we were big-league at last. Whether it was Poier’s inflection, his knowledge of the game, or his sense of humor, he was as valuable as any player or any franchise to a city that had felt itself to be minor-league in terms of sports and so much else for far too long.

“Only in the movies and in Memphis!” That was the excited finis spoken by Poier during one of the Grizzlies’ first game-saving moments in Memphis. It became a signature line for the whole fairy-tale saga of the now-beloved Griz.

This year, TV fans had the opportunity to put a face with the voice, as Poier became the Grizzlies’ television broadcaster. Though he preferred radio, Poier was a team player and agreed to the new duties after it was arranged for him to switch back to the radio broadcast on untelevised games.

“They asked if I would be interested in doing television,” Poier said when the change was announced by the Grizzlies’ front office last year. “I said, ‘Not really. I don’t want to give up doing every game.’ I have been since the team started. I wanted to continue.”

Though he’s gone — dead of an apparent heart attack in Denver last week during the Grizzlies’ recent road trip — the veteran broadcaster, one of several team figures who came with the team from Vancouver, leaves behind a legacy not only of professionalism but of goodwill and bountiful inspiration. And there’s no doubt: That legacy will continue, just as Don Poier wanted.

He is our loss but, for time to come, also our gain.

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Politics Politics Beat Blog

Harper v. Herenton

Last week the good folks at WPTY-TV chose to air some comments of mine concerning the recent run-in between Mayor Herenton and ABC-24 anchor Cameron Harper.

I have to say, as I did in a portion of my remarks which didn’t make the cut, that Herenton is my favorite interview subject. In several longish conversations over the last 15 years or so, he has never lacked for candor.

Lookit, Harper is a classy guy, and I definitely have admiration for his gumption as a guest at the Rotary luncheon, in deciding to pick up the cudgels for his station, join up with a WPTY cameraman who was covering the affair solitaire, and turn into an on-the-spot interviewer. But — how to put it? — I don’t think asking Herenton if his resignation would benefit the goal of consolidation is the kind of thing that a Freedom of Information suit could be built on.

Cameron certainly had a right to ask the question. We’d all have been pleased to hear the answer. But just as certainly, the mayor had a right, after a short spell of back-and-forth, to brush it aside. There’s no law saying you have to answer something so clearly hypothetical. And to deny the implied challenge in the question would be disingenuous. Sometimes a question can be simultaneously pertinent and impertinent.

So it’s six-of-one, half-a-dozen-of-another on the first count. Continuing to press the question as other reporters attempted their own interviews, which is what a reporter for another station contends on his personal blog and which some of the raw videos of the occasion suggest may have happened, is something else again.

As for continuing to insist on an answer by putting his hand on the mayor’s arm (which Harper denies and which the various videos are unclear on) well, what we know is that the mayor is heard to tell Harper, “Don’t put your hands on me!” in an unmistakably imperative tone, followed by a softer, “Please don’t touch me. No. Don’t touch me. You’re way off base.” Which was followed, some time and distance later, by the macho line, “For him to put his hands on me, I’m going to drop him, okay?”

Meanwhile Harper is insisting to the mayoral press secretary and to a member of the mayor’s security detail, “I can ask him any question I want to ask him. I can ask him anything I want. I will ask him what I want to ask him.”

One is reminded of the scene in Henry IV: Part One in which the Welsh mystic Owen Glendower boasts, “I can call spirits from the very deep,” and the cynical Harry Hotspur responds, “Aye, so can I, and so can any man, but will they come?”

In a later statement on the incident, the mayor contended that “an observed media employee made physical contact” with him and “had to be restrained and prevented from making further unwanted and offensive contact.” He went on to assert that “under no circumstances” would “the office of the mayor accept the media’s behavior in the future that is of a harassing or abusive nature.”

In its own statement, the station disputed the mayor’s version: “We believe Mayor Herenton is doing this to disguise his efforts to avoid answering pertinent questions from the public and the media. We also feel the mayor falsified and invented the ‘contact’ in order to avoid Mr. Harper and further questioning.” Further: “Mr. Harper did not touch Mayor Herenton deliberately. If there was any contact at all, it was incidental and unintentional and was caused by the close proximity of the media to the mayor. We believe no rational person would interpret any facet of the incident as ‘threatening.'”

For what it’s worth, I am reminded of an occasion in 1997, when we at the Flyer were probing what we saw as a potential conflict of interest regarding Herenton’s awarding of a lucrative consultancy. As a good soldier, I had done my part on that project. Shortly thereafter, both Herenton and I attended a Chamber of Commerce event. Chamber publicist Allan Hester asked us to pose for a snapshot for the chamber’s newsletter. There we are in the archives, both beaming. But the mayor, a former Golden Gloves champion, is saying to me under his breath: “Back when I was a boxer, Jackson, I would shake hands with a fellow and then whip his butt.”

I thought about that in the wake of the current imbroglio: If Harper had really wanted to advance the sum of human knowledge, he might have gone ahead and touched the mayor after being warned. Horrified or fascinated, we’d all have watched that movie.

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Music Record Reviews

Short Cuts

Miles in their shoes: Indie-rockers approach classic blues.

Sunday Nights: The Songs of Junior Kimbrough

Various Artists

(Fat Possum)

More than the music’s stark beauty or (more believably) its trancelike guitar sound, punk and indie-rock fans have bought into Fat Possum’s take on the hill-country blues because so many of them are helplessly titillated by the subgenre’s perceived transgressive content (or, to be more charitable, its “authenticity”), a complicated dynamic that has everything to do with race, even if that alone doesn’t sufficiently explain it. How else can you account for the marketing roles played by those grotesque animated R.L. Burnside covers, awed alt-culture media reports of T-Model Ford’s sketchy bio, or the presence of the Jon Spencer Blues Explosion?

The late Junior Kimbrough’s more stately music and less colorful persona have always seemed less susceptible to this dynamic than most of his other Fat Possum labelmates. He was a great artist with an utterly distinctive sound, certainly more worthy of a middling tribute album than most who’ve gotten the treatment. In fact, it’s pretty easy to conjure a fantasy list of artists who might produce something compelling with Kimbrough’s music as a template. My list would include guitar bands as disparate as Sonic Youth, the Drive-By Truckers, and Orchestra Baobob along with such singular blues-inspired solo artists as Bob Dylan, PJ Harvey, and Corey Harris.

You can’t fault Fat Possum for not wrangling a group of performers that impressive, of course, but the problem with Sunday Nights is that the participants seem to be largely Fat Possum bands too directly connected to the style to play around with it or scenester givens who provide more subcultural cachet to the project than they do sonic chops.

The only track on Sunday Nights that captures the tremendous potential of the project is British art-rockers Spiritualized’s total de(con)struction of Kimbrough’s “Sad Days, Lonely Nights.” Musically, this seemingly odd pairing makes some sense. Spiritualized’s essentially blues-free sound is just a different brand of hypnotic guitar music and the band turns this six-minute noise-fest into a psychic (and psychedelic) connection between musicians who otherwise have absolutely nothing in common.

Nothing else on Sunday Nights quite pushes the envelope like that, but there are other winners. Memphian Jack Oblivian’s relaxed, confident take on “I’m in Love With You” is the record’s most rewarding straight blues. He feels at ease with the music’s country roots in a way that no one else on this compilation can touch. And the molasses-slow slide-guitar duet between Entrance and Cat Power on “Do the Romp” builds up a considerable head of steam.

More earthbound but still commendable are a couple of Fat Possum bands: The Black Keys’ “My Mind Is Ramblin'” is a surprisingly fine and seemingly heartfelt bit of mimicry, nailing the trembling beauty of the source material both musically and vocally. And though the vocals on the Heartless Bastards’ “Done Got Old” sound a lot more Haight-Ashbury than Holly Springs, their take on one of Kimbrough’s most indelible songs crunches and stomps like an ace bit of lost ’60s psychedelic blues-rock.

Other youngish bands don’t fare as well. Thee Shams’ “Release Me” is spirited but entirely generic garage-rock. Outrageous Cherry’s “Lord Have Mercy on Me” is a muddle. And, sadly, the Ponys’ “Burn in Hell” is a cover that does a disservice to the artists on each end of the exchange. The Ponys are vibrant and immensely likable, but this attempt at getting slow and low to sound Old Testament-ancient just doesn’t become them.

The real “get” for Fat Possum here is clearly Iggy & the Stooges. Fat Possum seems so excited to have them that they give them two slots, bookending the project with alternate takes on Kimbrough’s scary “You Better Run.” I count the band’s 1970 proto-punk WMD Fun House among my favorite records, so I’m a fan. But this is the worst thing on Sunday Nights by far. Musically, the rumble is Raw Power dragged down by more than a little middle-aged paunch, but worse is the way Iggy preens through the song’s rape-threat lyric with the kind of knowing, self-conscious leer that Mick Jagger might have pulled off in 1968 but that otherwise white hipsters should stay away from. Slipping into falsetto to sing the woman’s part, he sounds like a self-satisfied ass and gives the whole album a bad aftertaste.

Grade: B

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friday, 28

It s the last Friday of the month, which means it s time again for the South Main Art Trolley Tour, with free trolley rides to the district s numerous galleries and shops. In the neighborhood tonight there s a Grand Opening/Opening Reception at Then & Again, featuring the shop s vintage accessories as well as mixed-media work by Angi Cooper; and there s a sale of half-price work by Dave and Carolyn Hinske at Durden Gallery. Elsewhere about town, there are openings at DCI Gallery for work by Janet Weed Beaver and at Painted Planet Artspace for work by Greg Bowden. Humble Boy opens at Playhouse on the Square tonight. And down on Beale Street, Venus Mission is at Club 152. — Tim Sampson

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Cover Feature News

High Time?

Sitting on the sofa in her Midtown apartment, Kathye Garner breaks up a small amount of marijuana and stuffs it into the bowl of a wooden pipe. She wears a brace on one arm, the result of a recently broken wrist. She holds the pipe with the exposed fingertips of her injured hand and lights it. After a couple of puffs, the already jovial Garner cracks joke after joke, throwing her head back in laughter. Her joy is infectious, and soon the others in her living room are joining in.

In 1997, Garner was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis (MS), a neurological disease with symptoms that can range from cognitive dysfunction and balance problems to depression and fatigue. Garner’s biggest problem was balance. She often fell while walking or standing, which resulted in extensive bruises. Her memories of her early days with the disease are hazy (which she attributes to cognitive dysfunction), but Garner does recall waking up one day and realizing she was unable to move her left foot. She got out of bed and dragged it behind her into the next room.

Her neurologist suggested weekly injections of Avonex, a drug commonly prescribed to slow the onset of MS symptoms. Garner gave the shots a try but says the flu-like side effects weren’t worth it. It wasn’t until she tried smoking marijuana that she found relief.

Garner had smoked pot while growing up in Whitehaven in the 1970s but gave it up after a brief stint in rehab in 1983 for what she describes as “multiple addictions.” After learning that the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML) had lots of information on medical marijuana and its effect on MS, she decided to try pot again.

Marijuana is typically used to treat the spasms and pain associated with MS, but Garner says it also provides a relaxing way to get her mind off of her symptoms. Marijuana makes laughter come easier, which she says is “one of the greatest coping mechanisms” she has.

These days, Garner likes to think of herself as cured, and she attributes it to the healing powers of marijuana. She still sees a neurologist regularly but rarely experiences MS symptoms.

But what Garner considers medicine, the federal government classifies as a Schedule I narcotic, which basically means it has no known medical value. Yet many patients and physicians believe marijuana does have therapeutic benefits. Although few formal studies have been done, patients say marijuana helps with the nausea, lack of appetite, and pain associated with chemotherapy, AIDS, and some neurological disorders. Twelve states have legalized it for medical purposes since 1996.

If state senator Steve Cohen of Memphis has his way, medical marijuana will one day be legal in Tennessee. Cohen plans to introduce legislation that will enable doctors in Tennessee to prescribe or recommend marijuana to their patients, who in turn will be allowed to cultivate a restricted number of marijuana plants for their personal use.

Medical Pot Is the New Lottery

“I’ve seen several friends die of cancer over the years, and many of them smoked marijuana when they were experiencing chemo or extreme loss of appetite,” says Cohen. “The laws are crazy to restrict an individual from something that can make them feel better when they’re dying. There are so many other legal drugs out there that are much more habit-forming, addictive, and potent.”

After finally getting the Tennessee Lottery into law, Cohen says he was looking for something new he could throw into the “marketplace of ideas.” He says he’s been considering the medical marijuana issue for some time, especially now that he and his friends are getting older. He knows passage of medical pot legislation this year is a long shot, but he plans to run a thorough educational campaign, so that the public and his fellow senators will be more receptive when he reintroduces the bill. It’s a method that worked for the lottery, though it took 17 years.

In an unscientific poll of his district, Cohen found that close to 80 percent of his constituents support the idea of legalized medical marijuana. Cohen’s numbers may seem high, but when compared to polls across the country, they aren’t unreasonable.

In November, an AARP survey found that 72 percent of respondents favored the use of medical marijuana when recommended by a physician. In a CNN/ Time magazine poll from October 2002, 80 percent of respondents supported allowing the use of medical marijuana.

Surprisingly, the idea isn’t exactly new in Tennessee. From 1981 to 1992, state law allowed the use of medical pot. But Cohen says legal marijuana wasn’t available, so the law was pointless. When the Senate voted to repeal the law in 1992, Cohen says he was the only senator who voted to keep it. But now that medical pot has been legalized in 12 states, Cohen thinks the issue will have a little more support this time around.

But there’s still plenty of opposition in the Senate.

“I’m opposed to it because there’s not much research to show that medical marijuana is an effective way to treat diseases and their symptoms,” says Senator Diane Black (R-Gallatin). “If someone has cancer, I don’t know that you really want to put more carcinogens in their bodies.”

Senator Mark Norris (R-Collierville) says he’ll be approaching the issue with an open mind, but he’s “not inclined to be supportive” of the bill. He says he has received correspondence from some constituents asking him to seriously consider the bill. He has yet to hear from anyone who opposes the bill.

“It’s been my understanding that there are other medications out there,” says Norris. “Cohen’s quick to point out that some people suffering from nausea and other digestive problems associated with chemo may not be able to keep oral medications down, so I’d need to know what other alternatives exist.”

The Wonder Drug

The list of conditions marijuana is believed to treat runs the gamut. AIDS, cancer, Crohn’s disease, multiple sclerosis, Alzheimer’s, anorexia, neuropathic pain, migraines, glaucoma, arthritis, and epilepsy are just a few of the conditions listed in the November 2002 U.S. General Accounting Office’s “Descriptions of Allowable Conditions under State Medical Marijuana Laws.”

With 60 unique chemicals known as cannabanoids, marijuana is believed to have a significant number of therapeutic benefits. Synthetic THC — the psychoactive component of marijuana — is legally available in all states in an oral form called Marinol. But many advocates of medical cannabis believe other helpful chemicals that are only released in smoking marijuana make that method of treatment more effective. They also say it’s harder to regulate the dosage with Marinol. With smoked marijuana, patients inhale as little or as much as they need, and its effects are almost instantaneous, providing immediate relief.

“Marinol takes a good hour or more to work, and if you’re in pain or nauseated, that hour can be torture,” says Bruce Mirken, director of communications for the Marijuana Policy Project, one of the leading advocacy groups for medical marijuana and for decriminalization of the drug for recreational use.

Paul Kuhn, who’s involved with the advocacy group Tennessee Alliance for Medical Marijuana, became a believer in pot’s medical benefits after his wife, Jeanne, used marijuana to fight off the nausea from her chemotherapy 10 years ago.

When Jeanne was diagnosed, her cancer had already spread to her liver, and treatment required high-dose chemotherapy. She talked to her oncologist about using medical marijuana to ward off the intense nausea that would result from the chemo. At the time, medical pot was still illegal in all states. The oncologist tried to convince her that legal medications could be just as effective, but she was concerned about side effects. Since Marinol is known to affect the liver and her cancer had spread there, she didn’t feel comfortable taking it. She decided to use pot, and Paul Kuhn says she never experienced nausea.

“For the final round, Jeanne decided to see how well Zofran worked, which is one of the best legal medications,” says Kuhn. “She went in, got a shot of Zofran, and came home. She hadn’t been home long when she felt the nausea coming back, so she said, ‘Give me the damn pot.’ One puff and it was gone.”

Medical pot is also used to help alleviate some types of pain. Victor Charlie (name changed to protect identity) of Southaven was paralyzed in his right leg 28 years ago as the result of an accident. Although he can’t move his leg, he still has phantom neuropathic pain. He’s been prescribed opiates such as oxycodone, hydrocodone, and methodone, but he says those medications make it hard to function.

“Marijuana’s more useful because it’s less debilitating, not to mention that one of the biggest problems with opiate use is constipation,” says Charlie. “Cannabis works well for lower levels of pain, but sometimes there is a point where opiates or sedatives are the only way to go.”

The Good, the Bad, and the Unknown

Although a number of studies have been conducted on the effectiveness of marijuana as medicine, not many are accepted by the medical community. It’s also not easy for researchers to legally perform studies, since marijuana is labeled Schedule I under the Controlled Substances Act. Most of the research has been done in other countries, including Great Britain and Thailand.

However, one of the most commonly cited American studies supporting medical marijuana is the 1999 National Academy of Sciences’ Institute of Medicine (IOM) report. It states: “Until a non-smoked rapid-onset cannababinoid drug delivery system becomes available, there is no clear alternative for people suffering from chronic conditions that might be relieved by smoking marijuana, such as pain or AIDS wasting.”

Ironically, the study was ordered by former U.S. drug czar Barry McCaffrey, who, after California passed the first medical marijuana law in 1996, declared marijuana a “Cheech and Chong medicine,” claiming that “not one shred of evidence” proved its usefulness. These days, the IOM report has become one of the most accepted studies favoring the drug’s medicinal use.

Clay Jackson, a hospice physician for Methodist Healthcare, says it’s not easy to conduct a blind study with smoked marijuana. The difficulty lies in creating a realistic placebo. Anyone who has smoked marijuana would probably recognize faux pot.

Jackson doesn’t dispute that marijuana may have some therapeutic benefits, but he says he believes most people who turn to marijuana have been underserved or denied access to proper care for their symptoms.

In his hospice practice, he focuses on alleviating symptoms rather than finding cures. Jackson says most of his terminally ill patients seem satisfied with the care they’re receiving. He rarely gets asked about medical marijuana, but he does prescribe Marinol to treat nausea and anorexia.

“You have to be realistic,” says Jackson. “There’s not a large number of people out there with unmet medical needs because we don’t have legalized marijuana. There’s a large number of people out there with unmet medical needs because we lack the will or the responsibility to make it happen.”

Many people don’t receive proper medical treatment because they lack health insurance. Cohen points out that medical marijuana would be an alternative for those who can’t afford expensive prescription drugs. In most states where medical pot is legal, patients grow their own or buy it on the black market, which is fairly cheap in comparison.

“THC pills are terribly expensive, and it’s just a great way to benefit the big drug producers,” says Cohen. “Marijuana can deal with it just as well, and it’s not expensive or addictive.”

The most common delivery system for medical cannabis — smoking — is used as an argument against it. Although marijuana can be vaporized and inhaled, or eaten, the effects are more instantaneous when smoked. Critics say the benefits are not worth the harm smoking does to the lungs. Advocates say that smoking pot for a short time to alleviate chemo-induced nausea won’t cause much long-term damage.

“It’s also important to keep in mind that some of the patients who may be smoking marijuana might already have some advanced stage of cancer or other terminal illness, so their life expectancy may not be that long anyway,” says Jackson. “Whatever the negative effects of smoking might be, it could be that those patients will never see them.”

Police Matters

Howard Wooldridge, a former police officer from Michigan and a founding member of Law Enforcement Against Prohibition (LEAP), speaks with police officers around the country about medical marijuana, including some in Memphis and Nashville. He says the police’s biggest concern is how to determine legal users.

“That’s so simple. If I’m in a state that has a concealed weapons permit and I carry a gun in my truck, when I’m stopped by law enforcement, I have to show them a permit,” says Wooldridge. “If I don’t have that permit, they can arrest me. It would work the same with marijuana. The state would issue an ID card that says John Smith can legally possess [a limited amount of] marijuana.”

Wooldridge says that although many police officers express enforcement concerns, most he has talked with support legalizing medical marijuana.

“Cops hear stories at family gatherings about somebody using medical marijuana,” he says. “Even though the government is telling us it’s not medicine, people believe their aunt or uncle who used it during chemotherapy.”

Sergeant Vincent Higgins, public affairs officer for the Memphis Police Department, wouldn’t say whether local police support a medical marijuana bill. He said local officers will enforce whatever the Senate decides.

Another common concern is “usage creep.” Opponents say legalizing pot for some will increase usage by people attempting to self-medicate. They also argue that allowing people to cultivate plants could result in patients selling some of their crop illegally.

“If you look at the groups that are pushing this, these are the groups that have been pushing legalization of all marijuana for years,” says Senator Black.

Clifton Harviel, a Memphis attorney on the NORML legal committee, disagrees.

“I don’t see medical use leading to recreational use,” he says. “Any substance is susceptible to abuse, but I don’t think that’s any reason to keep it away from our physicians. I think that’s a bit of a smoke screen.”

The States Versus the Feds

One big catch to states legalizing medical marijuana does exist: It remains illegal on the federal level. A person legally cultivating marijuana for medical use in California is still subject to arrest and punishment under federal law. In other words, the local cops can’t bust them, but the federal Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) can.

This catch-22 is now the subject of a Supreme Court case. In November, the court heard the arguments of Angel Raich and Diane Monson, two medical marijuana patients from California who were busted by federal agents. They had already been excused from federal prosecution by the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals in December 2003. That court ruled that prosecuting patients who are in accordance with state medical marijuana laws is an unconstitutional exercise of Congress’ Commerce Clause authority.

But the U.S. Justice Department asked the Supreme Court to overturn the Ninth Circuit Court’s decision. The high court heard the arguments on November 24th and is expected to rule by this summer.

“Right now, there’s almost a gentleman’s agreement in the areas where they have [legalized medical marijuana],” says Harviel. “They’re not doing much until they see how the Raich case comes out.”

Medical marijuana is legal in California, Colorado, Alaska, Arizona, Montana, Maryland, Maine, Hawaii, Nevada, Oregon, Vermont, and Washington. In those states, a ruling in favor of Raich would mean patients would no longer face federal prosecution. An overturned decision would mean medical pot would remain legal for those states, but federal harassment could continue.

“The Supreme Court could squish [medical marijuana use] like a bug, and then there’d be no point in spending resources trying to pass something that you know is not going to meet with current law,” says Harviel. “[The decision] is going to shake things up a lot, but which way it shakes them, we can’t know yet.”

Since his November announcement that he plans to introduce a medical marijuana bill, Cohen says he’s received supportive e-mails and letters from people all over the country. Few have written him in opposition.

He says he’ll hold off proposing the bill until after an educational campaign for his fellow legislators and the public. He’ll probably also wait until the Supreme Court rules on the Raich case. He isn’t too hopeful that the bill will pass the first time around.

“This is a year of education, and then maybe next year, we’ll have a better chance,” says Cohen. “Until then, I’d advise people to keep taking their Vitamin C and E and don’t plan on getting sick and having marijuana around to help. It’ll probably be a couple of years before they’ll have any pain relief in Tennessee.”