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COVER STORY: Murder at the Miss Memphis Pageant

On the night of March 26, 1965, the auditorium of White Station High School was jammed with more than 1,200 people attending the semifinal competitions of the Miss Memphis Pageant. Since 1947, this had been one of the city’s biggest social events. The winner went on to the state finals and from there to the Miss America Pageant, and that Friday evening the panel of celebrity judges included Memphian Linda Mead Shea, the 1960 Miss America.

One of those among the crowd was 29-year-old Barbara Jean Smith known to her friends as Jean who had brought her three young children along to see the show. She had a special reason for getting the kids involved. Her husband, Joe, had volunteered to serve as chairman of the annual pageant, sponsored by the Memphis Junior Chamber of Commerce, or Jaycees.

Despite all the excitement, the kids David, 10; LaBonne, 8; and Michelle, 5 grew restless, so Jean left the auditorium during the 9:30 p.m. intermission. Her home at 847 Angelina was just five minutes away. She drove there, tucked the children into bed, and told the babysitter, 15-year-old cousin Elaine Boyuka, that she was returning to the school for the second half of the pageant. She would be back around midnight, she said.

No one except her killer ever saw her alive again.

The Next Morning

Joe M. Smith told police later that he wasn’t too concerned when his wife didn’t show up at the school after intermission. He knew she was tired and figured she had decided to stay home with the children. When the pageant ended shortly after 11 p.m., he had coffee with friends, then drove home in a Buick convertible loaned to him by the pageant.

Jean wasn’t there, and Joe assumed she had gone out with friends after the show, and they had somehow missed each other.

“I told the babysitter, ‘I’m going to lie down she’ll be here in a half hour or so,'” he told reporters at the time. “The next thing I knew, I was awakened by a fire engine. I looked at the clock, and it was 4 a.m. I was in a panic.”

His wife was still gone. Dressing quickly, Joe rushed to White Station and found the family’s yellow Ford sitting in the narrow lot between the school complex on South Perkins and Eudora Baptist Church next door on Poplar. Apparently Jean had returned to the school. But where was she? Using a pay phone at a nearby Pure Oil station, Joe called his wife’s friends but discovered that none had seen Jean since the previous night. He then drove back home, hoping his wife would be there. She wasn’t.

Not knowing what else to do, Joe returned to the school grounds with several fellow Jaycees, including Bob Jamison, Dan Forrester, and Vernon Ellis. Jamison remembers that the position of Jean’s car seemed odd. “That car wasn’t parked,” he says today. “It was just sitting in the parking lot, like maybe she was talking to somebody and got out of the car. When we pulled up there, and you saw the door was open, I just thought, Gee whiz.”

While waiting for the police to arrive, the men peered anxiously into the darkened windows of the school and searched under bushes. Years before, Jean had surgery for an aneurysm, and the men worried that she had perhaps blacked out in the school somewhere, so they awakened the custodian who lived on the grounds, and he unlocked the doors. All the rooms were empty. Then they went back outside and began to walk around the church building. Joe told a reporter from the old Memphis Press-Scimitar what happened next.

“We turned a corner, and Bob was still talking and suddenly stopped,” he said. “I knew it was something. I saw her about 50 yards away. She was lying face down. I started running toward her, but Bob caught me. I never did see how badly she was beaten.”

Ellis ran to the woman and discovered it was Jean.

“They took me away from the scene,” said Joe. “Nobody would tell me if she was alive. Finally, Dan came and told me she was gone.”

The rising sun cast light on a grim scene that morning. The body of Barbara Jean Smith lay sprawled on the edge of the parking lot, close to the southeast corner of the church building. Investigators would quickly determine that she had been clubbed in the head and then shot in the back three times with a .38-caliber weapon. Two of the bullets struck her heart; all three came out through her chest. She had then been shot a fourth time in the face, the bullet entering one of her nostrils. The gun had been held so close that her nose was burned with gunpowder.

The custodian lived in a small house tucked between the school and the church, not 50 yards from where the body lay. His wife, Jewell Freeman, told police, “I heard a bang, then another about 30 seconds later” at around 11 o’clock the previous night. The first sound was louder than the second, she remembered. “It could have been more than one noise going off close together. I thought it was firecrackers. I started to look, but didn’t.”

Investigators found Jean’s purse and shoes outside the double doors leading into the church complex from the parking lot. The purse was unopened and still contained her money and keys. Police also discovered the broken pieces of a revolver handle by the dead woman’s car and what appeared to be smears of blood on another door to the church.

The body was found fully clothed, and Jean had not been molested. “It just doesn’t make any sense,” her sister, Carol Kline, told The Commercial Appeal. “If it had been a sex maniac, it would make sense. But they didn’t even touch her.”

Who had killed Barbara Jean Smith, and why? And how did her body end up on the south side of the church building, when her car was parked on the north?

The Investigation Begins

Clues discovered by the police eventually answered some of these questions. They also revealed a frightening scene of a helpless woman fighting for her life.

The pistol fragments and a small pool of blood in the parking lot revealed that Jean had been slugged with the gun as she was standing near her car, and high-heel prints in the mud around the church building showed where the injured woman had run from her attacker. Also found were tracks from a “large-sized man’s shoe.” At one point, Jean apparently pressed her hand to her head, getting blood on it, and smears against the church doors showed where she had struggled to get inside.

But the doors were locked, and her killer caught up with her as she fled across the parking lot, shedding her purse and shoes as she ran. Just as she was about to turn the corner of the building, which would have put her in view of busy Poplar Avenue, her murderer shot her in the back, then fired the final bullet into her face as she lay on the asphalt.

Detectives from the Memphis Police Department’s Homicide Division immediately began a door-to-door search for suspects or witnesses. They took aerial photographs of the Poplar-Perkins area so they could verify tips or statements. Those pictures also gave them a view of nearby rooftops, on the assumption that the killer may have discarded the weapon by tossing it atop a building. Scuba divers even searched the lake at nearby Audubon Park for the gun.

The autopsy added another mystery to what was already a baffling crime. The medical examiner estimated the time of death between 10 and 11 p.m. meaning the killing occurred while the pageant was taking place just a few hundred yards away. According to the autopsy report, Jean’s stomach contained “relatively undigested fragments of what appear to be sliced green beans and a fragment of sliced pickle,” which should have been digested within an hour or so (suggesting that she had not gone directly back to the pageant from her home).

Investigators questioned the employees of Memphis restaurants. The Press-Scimitar ran Jean’s picture on the front page under a headline asking, “Did You See Her, or Serve Her?” Among other things, detectives wanted to know if she had dined alone or had met somebody that evening. They never found an answer.

At least one person noticed Jean’s car at the school that night. Mrs. David Parker, whose husband was production manager of the pageant, afterwards went with friends to the Carousel Restaurant (now the Half Shell) on Mendenhall for coffee. She and her husband then returned to the school auditorium about two hours later to help clean up. “Her car was the only one in the parking lot at 1 a.m. We couldn’t miss it,” she told a reporter. “We had to drive right by it. My husband remarked, ‘I wonder what Jean’s car is doing here so late?'”

But days passed, and nothing turned up. Police Commissioner Claude Armour announced, “All days off have been canceled by all our homicide officers, and I have detailed additional men to the investigation.” At one point, police suggested, “The way she was attacked and shot and the way that she ran indicated that she knew her killer.” That notion put a scare into everyone who had attended the Miss Memphis Pageant that evening. Would any of them be next, they feared?

The mother of Jean’s babysitter, Elaine Boyuka, told reporters the girl was terrified: “She believes the murderer thinks she may have seen him and will try to get her next.” Adults were nervous too. “We didn’t even go out of the house for the longest time,” recalls Bob Jamison. “We were afraid to. I just didn’t know what was happening.”

Police didn’t elaborate on any theories about the crime, but people were already wondering why Jean, after being confronted by her killer in the parking lot, didn’t run toward the relative safety of the crowded auditorium but instead fled in the opposite direction, around the deserted church building.

They also wondered if there was any connection between Jean’s death and the murder of Mary Elizabeth Barker, shot with a .38-caliber weapon inside her apartment at 2842 Kimball on Christmas Eve just a few months before. Then, two days after Jean’s death, another woman, Lessie Gates, was found shot to death inside the Coach House Restaurant she operated at 1085 Poplar. Armour tried to reassure nervous citizens. “I want to make it perfectly clear that there is no maniac at loose in Memphis responsible for these deaths,” he told the newspapers. (The Gates murder was later pinned on a disgruntled restaurant worker. The Barker killing, however, remains unsolved.)

After a week passed with no progress in the Smith case, homicide inspector Edward C. Swann didn’t try to conceal his frustration, telling the newspapers, “Some people are playing cat-and-mouse games with the police who have information that will aid in the investigation but, for one reason or another, are not giving them to police.” He admitted, “We need all the help we can get.”

That help never came. Barbara Jean Smith wife, mother, civic worker, den mother, Berclair School PTA president was laid to rest in Mt. Vernon Cemetery. “No one had anything except good words about her,” said a Press-Scimitar story headlined “She Was So Nice: Why Kill Jean?”

Memphian Ann Kane graduated with Jean in 1954 from Tech High. She remembers, “She was a real sweet girl. She took art and liked to draw. She was real outgoing and friendly. A lot of girls had ‘reputations’ in high school, but she wasn’t like that.

“I would never have thought something like this would have happened to her,” she continues. “When you’re looking through your old annuals, you think, Gee, I never thought that girl would have been murdered.”

A few days after the murder, Joe Smith told reporters, “She was always at my side. She helped me work through college. She raised these kids in the grandest fashion. We had a real, real deep love. This [the pageant] was going to be our last big civic project. We were going to really concentrate on our children and go on vacation.

“I’m really going to miss her.”

Looking for Suspects

When the police failed to turn up a suspect, it didn’t take long for friends and associates to wonder about Joe.

“It was very obvious the police thought Joe did it,” Jack Morris, a former Jaycees president, says today: “And listening to what they said we kind of suspected the husband did it. Either he had done it, or a complete and total stranger did it.” Even Jamison agrees it looked bad at the time for his pal Joe: “The way he talked, the way he acted, after everything was said and done, it was all but pointing at him. But nobody really said anything, because nobody really knew anything.”

Police never formally identified Joe as a suspect and made it clear that he was working with the authorities: “Mr. Smith has been down here several times voluntarily, and we have talked to him on the phone,” Swann told reporters. “He has cooperated with us in various ways.” Detectives questioned him off and on for more than a week, until attorney J.B. Cobb, hired by the family, put a stop to it. “I certainly think that eight days is long enough to question someone over and over,” Cobb complained to reporters.

Besides, what was the motive? Most people said the couple seemed very happy together. “She had a real nice figure and what I would call a flirtatious way about her,” remembers Morris. “But I never knew of anything, any infidelity she was involved in.”

As Jean’s sister said, it just didn’t make sense.

One immediate problem was what to do about the Miss Memphis Pageant, which was to conclude on Saturday evening the same day Jean’s body was found. The Jaycees finally decided the show must go on, and Judy Cobb was named the 1965 Miss Memphis.

On March 31st, the police commissioner held a press conference to announce well, not much. The Commercial Appeal reported that Armour said no arrests had been made, but “many suspects are being questioned.” In answer to a rumor that someone had actually confessed to the crime, he said, “I don’t know where these things get started. But I will say that we have not eliminated anyone as a suspect in this case.”

Have the other bullets been found?, a reporter asked, referring to the three slugs that passed through Jean’s body. Answer: “I don’t believe we care to comment on that.”

Has the murder weapon been found? Answer: “I don’t believe we want to say anything about the evidence at this time.”

Were any fragments of the gun handle found? Answer: “No comment.” And so on.

A week later, police revealed they were working on a bizarre theory that Jean had turned into the parking lot and interrupted a “peeping tom” who was peering into the school windows and watching the Miss Memphis contestants change their clothes. According to a Press-Scimitar story, “Mrs. Smith could have called out to ask what he was doing and the man could have turned, and they saw they knew each other, and he killed her.”

The paper didn’t reveal the source of this theory which disregarded the fact that the contestants actually dressed inside the school auditorium, not even close to where Jean parked her car.

Other people had other theories. “Suppose some man saw Jean driving alone back to the school and followed her,” said Morris. “He could have followed her into the drive, and it could have been a sex maniac.”

But police discounted that the murder was a random act, telling reporters, “The slayer probably knew her because of the brutal beating and the four shots, the last into her face to make certain she was dead.”

Those same reporters noted that Swann was “alternately optimistic and glum.” At one time, he told The Commercial Appeal, “doors are opening,” while later saying, “I can’t foresee any arrests at this time. We have questioned at least 80 or 90 people so far in this case. This one is a real mystery.”

In fact, Swann had personally carried evidence, including Jean’s clothing, to FBI headquarters in Washington, D.C. The results, he told reporters, were “enlightening,” but he wouldn’t explain why. Police also never revealed if the slug from Jean’s body matched any of the bullets taken from the body of Barker.

Even the time of death couldn’t be determined, adding to the confusion. Many people at the pageant that evening insisted they would have heard the gunshots if Jean had indeed been killed between 10 and 11 p.m. So the medical examiner, Dr. Jerry Francisco, revised his earlier statement and said Jean could have died as late as 2 a.m. “Only Sherlock Holmes and TV sleuths can pinpoint the exact time of a murder,” he admitted to reporters.

He also revealed one other detail. Jean had died instantly. “The bullet that killed her entered her back and pierced her heart,” he said. “The bullet in her face was not lethal.”

Even amid all the uncertainty, one thing struck a Press-Scimitar reporter as a bit unusual: “Security around this investigation is the tightest in recent years.”

A Year Passes

Joe soon resumed his job as credit manager at General Electric Credit Corporation. In May 1966 a little more than a year after the murder newspapers reported he was marrying Sarah Frances Cox, who worked in the same building as he did. GE gave Joe a promotion, and he moved with Sarah and his three children to Texas.

“The children love Sarah, and she loves them,” Joe told reporters. “We hope to make a new start in Houston.”

That same month, Jean’s murder was included in a Press-Scimitar cover story on five unsolved murders in Memphis. Attorney General Phil Canale revealed his office had new information about the Smith case: “Because of a bus driver, we now have evidence to think she was killed between 10 p.m. and 10:40 p.m., a time when a good many people were still at the pageant area.”

Who was this bus driver, and what did he see, exactly? Canale “would not elaborate.”

Even more mystifying, however, was a statement from police commissioner Armour in that same story. The police, he said, “have enough evidence on the Smith and Barker cases to convict. We know who the killers are. It’s just a matter of time, of waiting. You don’t make an arrest unless you know you have all the holes plugged up.”

Certainly a poor choice of words regarding shooting victims, but no arrests were made in either case.

Two Years Later

Two years after Jean’s murder, however, a special crime committee formed by Mayor William B. Ingram dropped a bombshell. Without revealing the source of their information, on April 22, 1967, the group told reporters that they believed a Memphis police officer was involved in her death.

Newspapers reported, “The officer had met Mrs. Smith a year before the slaying, had driven her home on one occasion, and telephoned her several times for a date. Mrs. Smith, it was stated, had complained to her husband that the officer was bothering her, and Smith had complained to the police department.” The officer was not named, but newspapers said he “reportedly holds a rank above that of patrolman.” Ingram would only say, “He is a suspect.”

That didn’t sit well with the police department. “They ought to name him,” complained police chief James C. MacDonald. “It’s unfair to all the other officers. By not naming him, they’re indicting me or any other law enforcement officer. Let’s call a spade a spade.”

The Press-Scimitar agreed. In an editorial, the paper declared, “The mayor has committed a serious blunder in making such a statement. By doing so he has cast a shadow of suspicion over hundreds of innocent law officers. If there is evidence definitely implicating someone in the crime, let a warrant be sworn out naming the individual suspect.”

That never happened. Forty years have passed, and no arrest was ever made in the murder of Barbara Jean Smith.

Still Unsolved

“Has it been that long? Forty years? I vaguely remember the name, but it’s just cold,” says John Carlisle, a former investigator with the attorney general’s office. “I imagine a world of investigators on that case are dead.”

He’s right. Four decades later, this cold case has grown even colder. Many officials with the police department and attorney general’s office have passed away, as have many of the Smiths’ family, friends, and associates. According to Jennifer Donnals, communications director with the district attorney’s office, most records before 1970 have been destroyed.

Quite a few people contacted by the Flyer couldn’t recall details about the crime. Bill Morris, county sheriff at the time and a former Jaycee, today says he remembers the case “just vaguely” since it was a city case, not a county one. “I couldn’t add anything of significance to your story,” he says.

Others simply do not want to discuss what happened on the evening of March 26, 1965. “I decided I would never talk about it again,” says one Jaycee today.

The Smith Family Today

Joe, now 72 years old, is still living in Houston. He and his second wife, Sarah, were divorced many years ago, and she passed away in February in Arkansas. Joe has since been married four more times. When contacted by the Flyer, he made it clear he did not want to talk about the events of 1965: “It’s really terrible for me, just to think about this.” His oldest daughter was 8 at the time of her mother’s murder. Now 48, married, and living in Texas, LaBonne Casey says, “We were brutally aware that my father was a suspect, and we were with my mother the night she died. It affects our lives to this day.”

She has haunting memories of the morning they found her mother’s body.

“That very night, I dreamed that my father had died,” she recalls. “When I woke up, the house was full of people, and I knew something was wrong, but I thought my dad had died, not my mother,” she says. “All day I asked for my dad, and finally they took us to my aunt and uncle’s house. I remember I asked for some comic books, and one of my uncle’s friends brought over a grocery sack full of comics, and that confirmed my worst fears that something awful was happening.”

LaBonne says she and her older brother and younger sister were taken back home later that day, and “our preacher and my dad told us that she had been killed.”

The murder was a devastating blow to the family. “Not only did I lose my mother that night, but in a manner of speaking, we lost my father too,” she says. “It was very traumatizing. I can honestly say that I was almost a lost soul, but I recovered, and I am now a productive, contributing citizen.”

When the police investigation appeared to reach a dead end, some of Jean’s personal belongings were given back to the family.

“They returned her purse to us,” LaBonne says. “My sister believes there’s a large bloodstain inside the purse. Of course, whether DNA would be intact after all this time, I have no clue. But we kids have looked at and touched that thing for 40 years.”

LaBonne has heard all the theories behind her mother’s death, including the notion that the killer could have been a woman. And there’s always the possibility that the murderer was a complete stranger whom Jean encountered in the dark parking lot that night in 1965. “That was my grandparents’ contention,” she says. “The official ‘party line’ to the children was that it was just a random act of violence.”

After all these years, she and her relatives are still waiting for answers.

“I can tell you that we are very interested to have some closure in this case,” she says. “It has been an ominous cloud over our family for 40 years. It’s always been my hope that someday somebody will come forward even if it’s a deathbed confession.”

That’s what it may finally take to solve this enduring mystery.

“Right now, I’m not going to open up the Barbara Jean Smith investigation, because there is just not enough new information,” says Captain James Fitzpatrick, head of the Memphis Police Department’s recently formed Homicide Cold Case Squad. “But I’m glad [the Flyer] is going to address this matter. It will get it back out there before the public, even though it has been 40 years. You never know what someone may recall or what they have been keeping within them all these years.”

Fitzpatrick has reviewed the complete homicide investigation report, which totaled several hundred pages. “It’s one of those investigations where you don’t see a motive,” he says. “I guess a prudent individual would say this had to be somebody she knew.”

According to the reports, both Jean’s and Joe’s cars were examined thoroughly before being returned to the family. Jean’s purse, found at the crime scene, was dusted for fingerprints and also returned. (“Unfortunately, we didn’t have DNA at the time,” Fitzpatrick says.) Police also conducted a paraffin test on Joe’s hands, looking for gunpowder that might determine if he had fired a gun recently. That test proved inconclusive.

“But we put him under the microscope,” says Fitzpatrick. Looking at his actions between Friday evening and Saturday morning, detectives “put together a timeline for him that for the most part eliminated him as a suspect. And I say for the most part. But not totally.”

Fitzpatrick believes that the old newspaper stories announcing the police were about to make an arrest were obviously premature: “Apparently they didn’t have enough [evidence] to take to the grand jury for an indictment.”

All the evidence collected during the original investigation is still stored in the MPD’s Property and Evidence Room. “If anything should come up,” says Fitzpatrick, “I am certain I could put my hands on it.” And, as he points out, there is no statute of limitations for murder.

Today, Barbara Jean Smith lies in lot 151-D of Memphis Memory Gardens (formerly Mt. Vernon Cemetery), west of Whitten Road. Her grave is identified by a double bronze marker. Between her name and Joe’s is a weathered scroll reading, “Together Forever.”<

Anyone with information about the slayings of Barbara Jean Smith or Mary Elizabeth Barker should call Captain James Fitzpatrick with the Homicide Cold Case Squad, 901-545-4600.

Categories
News The Fly-By

Sign Language

Last Friday, along with flyers advertising local theaters and St.
Patrick’s Day festivities, a poster in the window
of the Empire Coffee Company took a stand.

The large white sign said that the coffee house at Main and Madison had been
asked not to put any anti-Bush information in
their window during the president’s stay in Memphis. In tiny print at the bottom, it
added, “We would instead like to remind the
agent that we still have first amendment rights.”

“Somebody called us Wednesday evening asking that people not put up any
anti-Bush signs,” says owner John Gasquet, “so I
put up a sign saying I’d been asked not to.”

Gasquet is not sure which federal agency, if any, the request came from. The caller
may have identified himself, but Gasquet says he wasn’t paying close attention at the time.

“When they first explained it, it
sounded reasonable. They said they were trying to keep protests down to a minimum,” he
says. “It wasn’t like, ‘You can’t do this.’ It was
just kind of suggested.”

The sign was up in the morning during the president’s chat at the Cannon
Center but was gone by the afternoon because Bush was. Then Gasquet gave the sign away.

Before the telephoned request, the coffee house did not have any anti-Bush
statements in the window.

“We’ve had things up for the
Mid-South Peace and Justice Center before. We
always have stuff up. We have a good number of posters in the window right now,”
says Gasquet.

He thinks he ticked a few people off with his sign and says it might have been a
bad reaction, but he sticks with it.

“The explanation was reasonable
enough. But the more I thought about it, the more
I questioned the legitimacy of it,” says Gasquet. “To have someone doing that,
it just rubbed me the wrong way.”

Categories
Opinion Viewpoint

Caveat Emptor

Last Friday, at the Cannon Center in Memphis, President Bush dismissed observations from Democrats and others that his Social Security proposals are part of an effort to dismantle the New Deal: “That’s what you call political propaganda,” he insisted.

But it’s impossible to ignore that the Bush plan — as much as we can know of it — does nothing to bring solvency to the system, eliminates a portion of guaranteed benefits, and shifts a good deal of risk to the American people — as well as a disproportionate measure of wealth to Wall Street.

While in Memphis, the president expressed concern for “our grandchildren,” the demographic for whom he is certain Social Security will fail. “This is a generational issue,” he said. “It is an issue that is very important for members of Congress to understand — that a lot of grand-folk/parents care deeply about not only their own security. But once they’re assured, they care deeply about the security of their grandchildren.”

Security? The likelihood is that our grandchildren will not only assume more personal risk but pay the price, in trillions of dollars, for swelling an already gigantic national deficit.

In 2000, when America was happily contemplating a budget surplus, Vice President Al Gore said we should take a chunk of that extra money and put it in a “lockbox” to ensure solvency. He was laughed out of the political arena. “Lockbox” became a punchline for late-night comics. But as the mighty surplus has vaporized into a record deficit in the wake of massive tax cuts, record spending for Medicare, and the war in Iraq, all the laughter has died away.

Bush told Memphians to be wary of propaganda. That’s certainly something he knows about.

As TheNew York Times and others have recently reported, the Bush administration has engaged in the creation and distribution of prepackaged news supporting its domestic and foreign agendas. The president’s barnstorming tour of America, wherein he discusses the warm fuzzies of ownership and investment with handpicked panels of supporters, is a fine example of propaganda.

It has been said that the Democrats need to put forward their own plan for saving Social Security. Why should they, when President Bush has yet to put forward his plan? At this point all anyone has seen is a slick marketing package designed to test the waters and see how Joe & Jane Six-pack will respond to the notion of trading their guaranteed benefits for the assumption of risk.

The president’s proposal is not, as some have suggested, an actual plan to phase out Social Security. It’s more like a feasibility study to see if a Social Security phase-out plan can be packaged like a late-night infomercial.

“I’m going to continue traveling our country until it becomes abundantly clear to the American people we have a problem,” the president said. “And [until] it’s abundantly clear to those who will receive Social Security checks that nothing is going to change. So I want to start by saying to the seniors here in Tennessee and folks listening on your television set that for you — for those of you receiving a check today and for those of you, like me, near retirement — nothing is going to change.”

Well, except for the fact that you’ll have fewer benefits, higher risk, a staggering national deficit, and perhaps no insurance against disability. But you will own something. And ownership is the American Dream. Buy if you will, but caveat emptor: “Let the buyer beware.”

Chris Davis is a Flyer staff writer and proprietor of “The Flypaper Theory,” a Weblog.

Categories
Editorial Opinion

Darius the Great

Some of us were there. Many more of us saw it on television. And almost all of us have heard about it by now: the two missed free throws that ended a game, an era, and the hopes of an entire city; Darius Washington, the valiant freshman who had been fouled in the act of shooting a three-pointer and had a chance to win the game against arch-rival Louisville — and thereby crown the University of Memphis Tigers’ season with a bid to the NCAA tournament.

It had been a disappointing season, redeemed mainly by the emergence of Washington — D-Wash, as he came to be called — as a super point-guard and playmaker who kept the Tigers’ season hopes alive, at times almost single-handedly.

Upon seeing his last shot rim the basket and fall away on Saturday, Washington hit the deck, clearly devastated. He had literally to be lifted off the FedExForum floor by consoling teammates. They didn’t blame him, nor did we, nor should he blame himself. As one of his teammates said, the team wouldn’t even have been on the brink of such unexpected success without Washington’s heroics — including a heart-stopping steal of a Lousville pass in the crucial last few minutes.

Not only was young Washington named to the all-tournament team for his exploits, he had previously been designated Conference-USA Freshman of the Year. Clearly, he will make many more shots than he misses in the years to come — especially when it counts.

Ralph Branca, the old Brooklyn Dodger pitcher who in 1951 yielded the pennant-wining home-run ball — the “Shot Heard ‘Round the World” — to the Giants’ Bobby Thomson, suffered the same kind of despair that Washington did, initially. Why me? he asked a friendly clergyman. Because you can take it, said Branca’s priest, meaning that as a tribute to the forlorn pitcher’s strength of character.

We might say the same of Darius Washington. He too can take it, though it will surely hurt for a while. As far as we’re concerned, his heart and talent are as great as his stature is small. And, with any luck, we’ve got three more years to watch this prodigy.

Categories
News News Feature

Sweeping Changes

When Allison DeVante joined the U.S. Army, she thought she was building a bright future. While serving at Fort Drum in Watertown, New York, she took classes in broadcast journalism and toured bases performing original hip-hop under the pseudonym A.G. Blue. Everything seemed to be falling into place.

Two years later, DeVante’s optimism changed. On September 18, 2002, DeVante says she was raped by a senior officer at his house on base. She says she was told to meet him there to discuss a matter. But shortly after she arrived, she says, the officer forced himself on her. Now, with the help of Memphis lawyer Javier Bailey, she’s suing the Army for $9 million.

“The first person I spoke with [after the alleged incident] was Master Sergeant Sharon Opeka in Public Affairs. She told me in order to save my career and to save my family any heartache, I shouldn’t say anything about it,” says DeVante. “They didn’t help me in any manner. They didn’t send me to counseling. They put me into another unit, and then they began to harass me.”

DeVante says that not only did the Army refuse to offer assistance, some senior officers ridiculed her. She says one officer accused her of fabricating the story to get out of going to Korea. When DeVante filed a formal complaint with the Army’s Criminal Investigations Division, she was accused of filing a false report. She says they tried to suggest the sex was consensual.

In August 2003, DeVante was discharged. She claims she was never told why, but she believes it was because she spoke out about the rape.

“They didn’t even let me do out-processing correctly. That’s where you make sure your financial situation is okay and you have your veteran’s benefits,” she says. “Now I have minimal benefits, and they just took away my post-traumatic-stress benefit. They don’t care about me or other women who have gone through this.”

Stories like DeVante’s have prompted the Pentagon to reexamine the way rape and sexual misconduct in the military are handled. In January, undersecretary of defense for personnel David Chu announced that “sweeping changes” had been recommended by a Pentagon task force. They include mandatory sexual-assault classes, designation of a victim’s advocate for every military command, and confidentiality for rape victims. These changes are set to be put in place this week.

“At the time that this happened to me, they didn’t have anything in place in the military for rape,” says DeVante. “They gave classes on sexual harassment and drunk driving and child abuse and everything you could think of, except for rape.”

According to a study initiated by defense secretary Donald Rumsfeld, the military investigated 1,012 cases of sexual assault in 2003, up from 901 in 2002. The report acknowledges that many cases go unreported by women who fear further harassment.

But DeVante wasn’t about to bow out quietly. Once she returned home to Memphis early last year, she began picketing local military recruiting stations in uniform. Her actions caught Bailey’s attention.

“After looking into [other cases like DeVante’s], I saw the same patterns,” says Bailey. “There’s this pattern of victimizing the victim by threatening them with disciplinary action or suggesting that it was consensual. What’s more disturbing is that the perpetrator usually gets promoted.”

Such was the case in DeVante’s situation. The accused officer was promoted to a prominent position in a Special Intelligence Unit and is currently serving in Iraq.

“In a normal rape case, we’d sue the person who did it, but we’re afraid if we file suit against the perpetrator in this case, we’ll never get him served,” says Bailey. “You only have 120 days to get a person served, and because of national security interests, they’re not going to tell us where he is.”

DeVante says she’ll continue to use her music to get her message across. An album being released in April has several songs that deal with her resentment toward the Army.

“I’m not going to stop,” DeVante says. “The public will not be ignorant about this, because voices like mine are crying out.”

Categories
Music Record Reviews

Lost Marbles and Exploded Evidence – Enon (Tough and Go)

As a member of 1990s indie band Brainiac, Enon’s John Schmersal was aggressively blasting out Devo-inspired post-punk a decade before there was a factory manufacturing nine such bands per hour. So, rounded out by fellow grads of the ’90s indie netherworld — Rick Lee of Skeleton Key and Toko Yasuda of Blonde Redhead — it’s no surprise that Enon sounds so schizophrenic without making too big a deal of their diverse tastes. In fact, this Brooklyn band delves so intensely and effectively into all things experimental pop as to be effortlessly chameleonic.

Given the overactive songwriting imaginations within this band, Lost Marbles, an odds-and-ends collection, is tighter than any of the band’s proper albums. The collection spans six years but is heavy on the past three, where the band’s direction tended toward Euro-savvy, electronically inclined pop — alternately sultry, chilly, dance-y, and infectious numbers that occasionally look backward to execute the elusive trick of moving forward.

Grade: A-

Enon performs at the Hi-Tone Café Monday, March 21st, with Swearing at Motorists, the Color Cast, and the Circuit Benders.

Categories
News News Feature

Real Fake News

Continued violence in Iraq, a struggling economy, an unpopular plan to privatize Social Security, homeland security left underfunded while the wealthy get giant tax cuts … What’s a White House to do when the news about its policies isn’t favorable? Fake it.

An explosive, front-page New York Times story last Sunday exposed the Bush administration’s attempts to manipulate public opinion. Over the past four years, at least 20 different federal agencies have been involved in producing hundreds of fake TV news segments, many of which were “subsequently broadcast on local stations across the country without any acknowledgement of the government’s role in their production.” (The story cited one such segment that was broadcast on WHBQ Fox-13 in Memphis.)

In fact, since President Bush took office, the White House has spent at least $254 million on these fake segments and other public-relations ploys to spread positive propaganda about administration policies. Bush has paid lip service to the concept of a free press, saying in January 2005, “there needs to be a nice, independent relationship between the White House and the press, the administration and the press.” He also claimed “our agenda ought to be able to stand on its own two feet.” But apparently it can’t.

One of the concerns about these fake news segments is that they don’t reveal the fact that they are paid for using taxpayer money and contain a one-sided, positive take on administration policy. In a now-infamous segment by the Department of Health and Human Services, a PR official named Karen Ryan posed as a reporter interviewing then-Secretary Tommy Thompson. The Government Accountability Office found the agency “designed and executed” her segments “to be indistinguishable from news stories produced by private sector television news organizations.”

The Office of Broadcasting Services (yes, there is an actual Office of B.S.) is a branch of the State Department which traditionally acts as a clearinghouse for video from news conferences. That all changed three years ago. In 2002, “with close editorial direction from the White House,” the unit started producing “news” segments to support President Bush’s rationale for going to war in Afghanistan and Iraq. As one senior official told Congress, the phony segments were “powerful strategic tools” used to influence public opinion. In all, the office produced nearly 60 segments, which were then distributed around the world for local stations to use. Though the White House has claimed ignorance of of fake news, a White House memo in January 2003 said segments the State Department disseminated about the liberation of Afghan women were “a prime example” of how “White-House led efforts could facilitate strategic, proactive communications in the war on terror.”

The Government Accountability Office is a nonpartisan branch of Congress that investigates government fraud. The GAO criticized the administration’s role in creating phony news three times in the past year, saying it constitutes “covert propaganda.” The GAO also forbade federal agencies from creating prepackaged news reports “that conceal or do not clearly identify for the television viewing audience that the agency was the source of those materials.” The administration’s response? The New York Times reports that last Friday, “the Justice Department and the Office of Management and Budget circulated a memorandum instructing all executive branch agencies to ignore the GAO findings.”

The spots are produced with taxpayer money by outside public-relations firms. Federal law warns federal agencies from doing exactly that. The U.S. Code states “appropriated funds may not be used to pay a publicity expert unless specifically appropriated for that purpose.” However, the GAO, which monitors the law, has no enforcement power. That responsibility lies with Congress and the White House. U.S. federal law also contains the Smith Mundt Act of 1948, which prohibits the spread of government propaganda in the United States (although it allows groups like Voice of America to broadcast it to foreign audiences). According to the Times, State Department officials claim that provision doesn’t apply to them either.

This article first appeared on AlterNet.com.

Categories
Letters To The Editor Opinion

Postscript

Budget Cuts

To the Editor:

Thanks for your coverage of the effects of the city budget cuts on park-system employees (“Tightening the Belt,” March 10th issue). It is sad that for such a small amount of money saved, the Mallory-Neely and Magevney houses are now closed to the public. The staff worked hard to build up educational programs, including walking tours of Victorian Village, downtown Memphis, and Elmwood Cemetery, as well as hosting mother-daughter teas, Victorian birthday parties, receptions, and weddings.

Kate Dixon, the historic properties manager at Victorian Village, was there the day after Christmas, a Sunday morning when Memphis was covered with ice, to bake scones and brownies and make sandwiches for a group of seniors arriving from Nashville for lunch and a tour.

It troubles me that after many years of dedicated service, city employees are being treated in such a callous manner. It is dismaying that our city cannot manage its finances in a more responsible way.

Deede Wyatt

Memphis

Air America

To the Editor:

Thank you for your story on the emergence of a progressive alternative to the sewage that is right-wing radio (“It’s On!” March 10th issue). I think that Air America is a mixed blessing so far. When it works (e.g., the Al Franken show), it’s great. But sometimes it threatens to become a mirror image of conservative talk radio — the last thing that liberalism needs! Hopefully, the success of the Franken show will make it the model for future development of intelligent talk radio (conservative, liberal, or whatever). Franken succeeds because he is intelligent, informed, respectful of other views, and very, very funny. His on-air behavior (not just his politics) is the polar opposite of Savage, Hannity, Limbaugh, and Fleming.

The interview with Mike Fleming helps prove my point. As always, the most effective way to demonstrate Fleming’s shortcomings is to simply ask him to open his mouth. He comes across as shrill, hateful, defensive, incoherent, ignorant of issues, and completely lacking in respect for anyone who disagrees with him. The only “humor” on the Fleming radio program results from his ability to mangle the English language.

B. Keith English

Memphis

To the Editor:

I can’t help being shocked at the news that Mike Fleming has a large listenership. The surprise is not at the acceptance of his neosegregationist views but the fact that his listeners ignore his hilariously illiterate syntax and mispronunciation of common words. His popularity unfortunately spotlights Memphis as a hillbilly town.

Carolyn Adler

Memphis

Jim D. to the Rescue

To the Editor:

Opinions are like a certain part of our lower anatomy — everybody has one. But before making it public, one needs to show discretion. Whatever Black Oak Arkansas (Sound Advice, March 3rd issue) turned into, anybody who saw Knowbody Else [the band’s earlier name] witnessed a brilliant entertainment phenomenon. I have produced rock and roll bands for 40 years, and my work with Knowbody Else remains among the most creative experiences of my life. Sadly, our collaboration never saw the light of day, and by the time the band recorded for Stax, genius drummer Keith McCallum was gone and equally incomparable lead guitarist J.R. Brewer was on his way out.

The whole Black Oak Arkansas story wasn’t pretty. They inevitably “Spinal Tapped” and self-immolated, like their old stage show. But they did what they wanted. They became rock stars and they liberated a generation of kids. I still listen to: “White, Mix, and Smith,” “It’s Good That I Came,” “Till I’m Like Uncle Hugh.” Timeless masterpieces.

Jim Dandy could dance like James Brown on steroids and hit the double splits off the drum-riser with his arms shooting flames from asbestos bandages soaked in lighter fluid and kerosene and sing like a soul trapped in hell.

What can you do?

An artist’s self-expression is a soul-searching attempt at communication, a striving for immortality, an opportunity to entertain, inform, and stimulate an audience. Uninformed criticism is negligent blasphemy.

The history of Memphis music is peopled with misfits who failed to conform — artists who would not have had the opportunity to express themselves in other artistic communities. What once made us great is drying up and blowing away. If you’re not on the edge, you are taking up too much room.

Jim Dickinson

Coldwater, Mississippi

Categories
Music Music Features

Made in Japan

Within a single week, Tokyo rock heroes Guitar Wolf, DMBQ, and Electric Eel Shock will converge on Midtown Memphis. It sounds like Godzilla vs. Mothra vs. Megalon or an excerpt from Philip K. Dick’s The Man in the High Castle, which portrayed post-WWII America under a Japanese regime. Sci-fi theories aside, this Asian garage-rock invasion is purely coincidental, a fringe-benefit fallout from bookings surrounding the Austin music festival South By Southwest.

Formed in 1987, Guitar Wolf (guitarist Seiji, bassist Billy, and drummer Toru) have released nine albums over the last 12 years. Domestically, several are available from the New York-based Matador Records, while the band’s latest full-length, Love Rock, was just released on the independent Narnack label. In Japan, Guitar Wolf are a bona-fide pop phenomenon with a Sony Records deal and their own brand of designer jeans, while stateside, the group’s devotion to basic rock-and-roll chording, love for grueling, grinding feedback, and penchant for rockabilly-styled breakdowns has made them a favorite act on the garage-rock scene.

In 1993, the leather-clad trio made their vinyl debut, Wolf Rock, on the Memphis-based Goner label, and, over the last decade, they’ve delivered memorable shows at the Antenna club, Barristers, and, one traffic-stopping afternoon, in the Shangri-la Records parking lot. Local auteur John Michael McCarthy recruited the band to play themselves in his Sore Losers film and eventually shot videos for three of their songs, including “Invader Ace,” which was captured live at the Map Room.

“Guitar Wolf adopted Memphis, and Memphis sort of adopted them,” says Eric Friedl, owner of Goner Records. “They’re interested in the scene here, because they know this is where all the music came from — everything from Elvis Presley to Booker T. & the MGs. It’s a typical thing, but they managed to tap into it on a deeper level somehow.”

Despite — or perhaps in spite of — their Japanese citizenship, McCarthy believes that Seiji, Billy, and Toru live up to the American pop-culture credo that Presley personified. “They’ve got that cartoon stance, distorted delivery, and iconic presence,” he notes. “Some people are waiting for Jesus Christ. I’m waiting for Guitar Wolf.” Luckily, the filmmaker’s vigil won’t last long. Guitar Wolf are scheduled to hit the stage at the Young Avenue Deli Monday, March 21st.

DMBQ — aka the Dynamite Masters Blues Quartet — have also been stomping around Toyko’s music scene since the late 1980s. A heavy-riffing, psychedelic-rock outfit, DMBQ portray an MC5-like yin to Guitar Wolf’s Ramones-inspired yang: The songs on their brand-new U.S. debut, The Essential Sounds From the Far East (Estrus Records), reverberate with carefully cultivated fuzz, improvised screaming, and the funkiest garage noise this side of Detroit, circa 1969.

In Japan, frontman Shinji Masuko, guitarist Toru Matsui, bassist Ryuichi Watanabe, and drummer China enjoy major-label popularity. Here, like Guitar Wolf, they’re relegated to cult-fave status. But as purveyors of Motor City-meets-Mudhoney-styled hard rock, they’ve carved their own niche out of the contemporary indie scene. Currently on a two-month-long U.S. tour, DMBQ will perform at the Young Avenue Deli next Wednesday, March 23rd, along with the Oscars and the Immortal Lee County Killers.

Fans will face a difficult choice that night: DMBQ at the Deli or Electric Eel Shock at the Hi-Tone Café. That’s right — yet another Japanese group, metal-music sensation Electric Eel Shock, is making its way to Memphis. Will the last band left in Tokyo please turn out the lights?

Not that the members of Electric Eel Shock are strangers on these shores. Since forming the band in 1997, vocalist/guitarist Aki Morimoto, bassist Kazuto Maekawa, and drummer Tomoharu “Gian” Ito have toured more than 21 countries, including the U.S., multiple times. Their latest album, Go USA!, was produced by Attie Bauw (of Scorpions and Judas Priest fame) and released on San Francisco’s Gearhead label earlier this month.

With lyrics like “Maybe we can beat Nirvana/Maybe the Presidents of the U.S.A./I play faster than Eddie Van Halen” (on the song “Rock’n’Roll Can Rescue the World”) plus a naked drummer and a fish-loving lead singer, Electric Eel Shock is poised to be this week’s silliest import. But one listen to Go USA! confirms that this group also rocks the hardest. Think Metallica with a much-needed injection of nonsensical wit. Illogical song titles like “I Wanna Be a Black Sabbath Guy, But I Should Be a Black Bass,” “Japanese Meets Chinese in USA,” and “Waaaa” might not make sense, but Electric Eel Shock’s speeded-up riffs, comedic burps, and head-banging beats transcend the language barrier to make for a perfect musical translation.

Categories
Editorial Opinion

Public or Private

The issue of privatizing public functions surfaced twice locally within the last week — once when President Bush arrived here last Friday to push his plan for partial privatization of Social Security and again when a dispute arose on the Shelby County Commission concerning a move to out-source the management of the county’s correction facilities.

To recap what we’ve said before, we remain dubious about the president’s Social Security proposal. Any way we look at it, it would substitute risk for guaranteed benefits — and that would seem to run counter to the very purpose of Social Security.

The issue of privatizing the county’s correction facilities is more complex. On one hand, it would definitely seem to jeopardize the livelihoods of jailers and other personnel. On the other hand, it might indeed save the taxpayer some — as yet uncertain — sums of money. Other issues, notably public safety and quality of oversight, are involved. It is a matter requiring that Shelby County commissioners, all 13 of them, try to suspend their prejudices as they reach a decision.

And they might also set aside, as red herrings, the matters of last week’s indictments of prison personnel for drug smuggling and the question of how and by whom the county’s inquiry into privatization got going in the first place. The commissioners, sitting as a body, will have the last say. That’s what counts.