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thursday January 26

One Day Is Not Enough:

Memphis Desegregation Through the Lens of Ernest Withers

Pink Palace, 6-8 p.m.

Reception for an exhibit of work by prominent local photographer Ernest Withers. This is the first of a series, which focuses on the African-American experience in Memphis.

Gallery Talk

Debbie Shmerler

Memphis College of Art, 6 p.m.

Debbie Shmerler is president of the Knoxville chapter of AIGA, a professional association for design, and curator of the MCA’s current exhibit, “AIGA Ten,” which features work by the state’s top graphic designers.

friday January 27

The Graduate

Playhouse on the Square, 8 p.m.,

$20-$25

Just out of college with no clue as to what he wants from life The Graduate‘s Benjamin Braddock has been the thinking-man’s rebel for almost 40 years. Playhouse on the Square’s production mimics Mike Nichols’ classic film scene-for-scene with only a handful of significant changes.

Opening Reception for “The Factory 4: The Studio Revealed”

Delta Axis @ Marshall Arts, 6-9 p.m.

Exhibit about workspace inspired by Henry Darger, a recluse whose 15,000-page illustrated manuscript was discovered shortly before he died.

friday January 27

Mozart Anniversary Spectacular

Cannon Center for the Performing Arts, 6 p.m., $15-$25

The Memphis Symphony Orchestra celebrates Mozart’s 250th birthday with this all-Mozart concert featuring sopranos Frances Lucey and Meredith Hall, tenor Nicolas Phan, the Rhodes Mastersingers, and the University of Memphis Singers.

Mike Marshall and Chris Thile

Bartlett Performing Arts and Conference Center, 8 p.m., $20

Mandolinists Mike Marshall and Chris Thile will play everything from bluegrass and folk to jazz and classical music.

saturday January 28

2006 Memphis Boat Show

Cook Convention Center,

9 a.m.-8 p.m., $3-$6

Boats everywhere at the annual event, plus this year’s featured attraction, the Sea Lion Splash. Through Sunday.

Philadanco!

The Orpheum, 8 p.m., $15-$38

Second of two-night run featuring this dance ensemble from the Philadelphia Dance Company known for its innovative choreography.

saturday January 28

Johnny Cash:

A GPAC Tribute

Germantown Performing Arts Centre,

8 p.m., $32-$45

Performance in honor of Johnny Cash by the Memphis Ballet with music provided by the Dempseys. Evening will include the debut of a dance choreographed by Garrett Ammon to the tune of “Walk the Line.”

sunday January 29

Harpist Jane Yoon

Baron Hirsch Congregation, 7:45 p.m.

Eighteen-year-old Jane Yoon began studying the harp at age 6 and won the Soka International Harp Competition in Japan at age 13. Her concert is part of the Artists Ascending Series.

Songwriters in the Round

With Jimmy Davis, Matt Tutor, Steve Reid, and Kirk Smithhart

St. Benedict at Auburndale High School Performing Arts Theatre, 8250 Varnavas Drive at Germantown Parkway in Cordova, 8 p.m., $10

Local singer-songwriters gather to play guitar and tell stories as part of St. Benedict’s Crossroads Artists Concert Series. Student songwriters will also perform.

monday January 30

Booksigning by Curtis Sittenfeld

Davis-Kidd Booksellers, 6 p.m.

Curtis Sittenfeld, a graduate of the Iowa Writer’s Workshop, signs her bestselling novel, Prep, about a girl who enters an exclusive New England prep school as an outsider, establishes herself as an insider, and completes the cycle by becoming a spectacle.

Last Mondays in Studio A!

Stax Museum of American Soul Music, 7-9 p.m., $20

Relaunch of the Last Mondays in Studio A! concert series after a holiday break. This month’s concert is by Di Anne Price & Her Boyfriends. Includes complimentary hors d’oeuvres and cash bar.

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Music Music Features

Getting Around

If you’re going to hear William Lee Ellis perform at the Church of the Holy Communion Coffee House Concert Series Sunday, January 29th, you might want to take your passport. Ellis’ latest sessions, for an upcoming album called God’s Tattoos, expand his traditional folk-meets-blues style into an around-the-world experience.

“The album sounds like traveling to Buenos Aires via Marrakech,” Ellis says, “but I don’t think it’s a ‘world music’ record.” Nevertheless, Ellis has been to 45 countries — Bali and Morocco are his favorites, he says, although he resided in Japan for years and spent his honeymoon on Easter Island — and, he concedes, “I get around. The exotic is always on my agenda.”

Since leaving his post as the music critic at The Commercial Appeal, Ellis has “gotten around” considerably. Last April, he performed at North Carolina’s roots-oriented Merlefest alongside his father, bluegrass banjo master Tony Ellis. While in June, the duo joined banjoists Earl Scruggs and the wild-and-crazy Steve Martin for appearances at the New Yorker Festival and on Late Night with David Letterman.

Of his nearly decade-long run at the CA, Ellis says, “the paper was very good to me. I got some amazing experiences under my belt, and I met so many amazing people. I became friends with people like Sam Phillips, Paul Burlison, and Jim Dickinson. Guys who were heroes in my mind long before I moved to Memphis. I discovered that they were not only heroes but wonderful human beings as well. I also learned how to write. But it was time to move on. Now I get to be an unemployed musician, like a lot of other people.”

Clearly Ellis relishes the challenge. He already has a State Department-sponsored tour to Belarus penciled in on his calendar for July, along with a teaching gig at Jorma Kaukonen‘s guitar camp, the Fur Peace Ranch. He’s currently enrolled in a musical doctorate program at the University of Memphis. And sometime this summer, God’s Tattoos will be released on Yellow Dog Records.

“It just came together really fast,” Ellis says of the album. “I was hoping that [label owner] Mike Powers would want to make another record. I didn’t realize he’d say, ‘We’ve got a budget this time. Let’s pick a producer.'”

There was only one person Ellis wanted to produce: Dickinson. “I wanted to make a weird, gospel, pop, bluesy, I-don’t-know-what kind of record, and he was the only person who would get it,” Ellis says.

After Ellis and Dickinson reduced a number of choices to 12 songs, they cut the album at Zebra Ranch, Dickinson’s Coldwater, Mississippi, studio, in two weeks.

“Most of the stuff was recorded in two or three takes,” Ellis recalls. “It was a lot of fun, even though I was sick the whole time. I couldn’t sing, couldn’t talk. I was running a fever, and I was real grumpy. In the end, it worked out fine.”

Despite the fact that most locals know Ellis as a solo performer, he says that recording with bassist Amy LaVere and drummer Paul Taylor was an easy switch. “When I lived in Japan, I had a rock band,” he says, “and as a duo, Paul and Amy created the perfect energy to bounce my material off of.”

Nevertheless, God’s Tattoos isn’t a traditional “rock” album: Ellis stuck to his trademark instrument, the acoustic guitar, throughout the sessions, although he confesses to using a vibrato and distortion pedals for effect.

“I know the record scared the hell out of Mike Powers initially,” Ellis notes with a laugh, “because he won’t be able to market it to a blues audience. But I don’t question how I write. I don’t know if anyone gets it or not. Is this commercial? Is there an audience for this? I’ve been writing music for 30 years, and I don’t ponder that.”

On Sunday, January 29th, William Lee Ellis will open the Church of the Holy Communion’s Coffee House Concerts Series’ third season. His performance will start at 7 p.m. Advance tickets (available at High Point Coffee, Cat’s Music’s Union Avenue location, and Holy Communion) are $15; walk-up tickets are $20. For more information, go to CoffeeHouseConcerts.org or WilliamLeeEllis.com.

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We Recommend We Recommend

Nature’s Song

When Huun-Huur-Tu appear at the Buckman Performing and Fine Arts Center this week, there will be four men on stage. Despite that fact, there will be between eight and 10 voices singing at once.

Huun-Huur-Tu are practitioners of throat singing, a vocalization that allows a single performer to produce multiple, distinct notes simultaneously. Throat singing — a constant low pitch with a series of articulated harmonics above it — sounds like a difficult skill, but as Huun-Huur-Tu founding member Sayan Bapa explains, it is a part of everyday life for the native Tuvan: “When you are a nomad, you hear your father and your grandfather sing like this, so you do it too.”

The nomadic lifestyle of Tuvan sheep and reindeer herders influenced both the sonic and representational qualities of throat singing. Traditionally, the Tuvan singer performed alone, each soloist specializing in a particular style of throat singing. “It was something you would do to keep yourself company when working or riding a horse,” says Bapa. In addition, the Tuvans’ surroundings dictated the sound.

Ted Levin, an American who explored the Soviet Autonomous Republic of Tuva located north of Mongolia and made the first modern field recordings of throat singing, explains it this way: “By imitating the sounds of nature, the human music-makers seek to link themselves to the beings and forces that concern them.”

The throat singing of the Tuvans is thus a kind of onomatopoeia. The warbling of birds, rushing of winds, and grumbling of animals are all transformed and transfigured as song. According to Levin, the Tuvans not only imitate nature, they also use the songs as a form of oral topography, a way to pass on information to people governed by large-scale movement and perilous geography.

The group playing at the Buckman is unique in that it performs as a quartet. It was formed in 1992 by Kaigal-ool Khovalyg, Alexander Bapa, his brother Sayan Bapa, and Albert Kuvezin. Since then Kuvezin and Alexander Bapa have left the group and have been replaced by Anatoli Kuular and Alexei Saryglar, respectively. The group joined forces as a means of concentrating on the presentation of traditional songs from their homeland. Originally, they were dubbed Kungurtuk but have since changed their name to Huun-Huur-Tu, which in English translates to the enigmatic phenomenon “sun propeller.”

The idea of a “sun propeller” is helpful in understanding the depth of the Tuvan connection to nature. It describes a particular moment, when the sky is clear enough and the sun, either ascending or dropping away for the evening, is briefly perched on the horizon. The rays of the sun divide and fan out like the blades of a propeller.

Since their arrival in America in the early 1990s, Huun-Huur-Tu has attracted a legion of fans and collaborated with many notable musicians, including Frank Zappa, Ry Cooder, and the Kronos Quartet.

Tickets to the group’s Sunday-night performance in Memphis sold out quickly, so a Monday-night performance was added. “The tickets are going like crazy,” says Cindi Younker of the Buckman. “We’ve just had an incredible response to this group.”

In addition to the concerts, Huun-Huur-Tu will visit Rhodes College on Monday afternoon to give a demonstration and lead a master class. Donna Kwan is a professor of ethnomusicology at Rhodes where she teaches a course titled “Global Pop: Asia and Beyond.” “I’m a big fan of Huun-Huur-Tu,” Kwan says. “They are not only amazing singers, they also have an incredible connection to nature.”

Memphians who want to learn how difficult it is to sing more than one note at a time can go to Rhodes’ McCoy Theater Monday, January 30th, at 4 p.m. There will be a 45-minute demonstration by Huun-Huur-Tu, followed by a 45-minute master class, both of which are free and open to the public.

Huun-Huur-Tu

7 p.m. Sunday-Monday, January 29th-30th

Buckman Performing and Fine Arts Center

$18-$20

Categories
Music Music Features

Itchy & Scratchy

Travis Wammack was only 8 years old when he went into his first Memphis recording studio and plucked out a song called “Rock and Roll Blues” for Eddie Bond’s Fernwood label. Bond, the country and rockabilly artist famous for his cycle of songs about McNary County’s tall-walking sheriff Buford Pusser and infamous for telling Elvis Presley not to quit his day job, saw Wammack performing on a street corner and heard something special in the kid’s youthful picking. Wammack started opening shows for the likes of Warren Smith and Carl Perkins, and seven years later, the 15-year-old prodigy teamed with Sonic Studio’s Roland Janes, Jerry Lee Lewis’ guitar player and a legendary producer of Memphis garage bands, to crank out “Scratchy,” one of the greatest instrumental singles of all time.

From its sloppy intro to its raging hooks to its brief backward vocal, “Scratchy” was a song clearly ahead of its time. The song was originally recorded as the “B” side to the equally quirky instrumental “Firefly.” It was offered to Nashville guitar god Chet Atkins, who decided not to release the single, saying, “It scares me. I’ll pass.” In 1964, at the height of the British invasion, Janes released the record independently with “Firefly” as the “A” side. But while Wammack was on tour supporting Peter & Gordon, whose hit “World Without Love” was racing up the charts, something strange happened.

“We were playing Chicago when I got a call from Art Roberts at WLS [radio], and he asked if I would play ‘Scratchy’ tonight. He said, ‘We’ve got two new hits at WLS today: Peter & Gordon’s ‘World Without Love’ is number two. ‘Scratchy’ is number one.'”

Wammack credits Janes — and the freedom he was given to “play around” in the studio — for the critical success of his early singles.

“I had my own key, and I’d get to the studio way before Roland would. I’d open all the mail and tell him what he needed to read when he got there,” Wammack says. In addition to reading other people’s mail, Wammack was constantly experimenting. He replaced the G string on his guitar with a tenor banjo string and built a distortion unit out of an old tape recorder that gave his cherry-red Gibson a distinctive “fuzztone” sound.

But being ahead of your time has its drawbacks. Although Wammack’s songs would find distribution through Atlantic, he remained a minor solo artist even as he became a highly sought-after studio musician backing artists ranging from Charlie Feathers to Aretha Franklin. As Memphis’ soul scene waned, Wammack found plenty of work at Rick Hall’s Fame studio in Muscle Shoals, Alabama, which rivaled Stax for the title of most soulful spot in the South.

“The R&B sound was shifting from Memphis to Muscle Shoals, and I was already going down there to do a lot of work, so I figured it was time to move,” Wammack says.

Wammack became a fixture at Fame and often worked as a go-between.

“Rick was good,” Wammack says, “but he didn’t always know how to communicate with the musicians.”

When the recently deceased Lou Rawls came to record a tribute to Sam Cooke at Fame, he brought with him a reputation for being difficult to work with. Wammack was sent to scope out the situation and bring back a report.

“[Rawls] started pulling out all this sheet music, and I said, ‘Hold on.’ I asked, ‘So did you come here for the Muscle Shoals sound? We don’t use sheet music; we like to feel things out.'” Rawls said he’d come for the sound, put his sheet music away, and never complained once. “Later I heard that Lou had been telling people about ‘this funky white boy’ playing guitar in Alabama,” Wammack says.

When Little Richard called and asked Wammack to be his bandleader, the funky white boy discovered that “Scratchy” had a much bigger reputation than he realized.

“We were playing one show in Birmingham, England, and Jimmy Page and Robert Plant were in the audience,” he says. “After the show they came backstage. My son Monkey [Travis Jr.] went over to talk to them and asked if they wanted to meet Little Richard. They told him, ‘No, we came back to meet your daddy.'” Page and Plant told Travis Jr. that they had been surprised when Little Richard introduced his band and announced that Travis Wammack was playing guitar. According to Wammack, they turned to each other grinning and said, in unison, “Scratchy.”

“Jimmy Page told me that after he heard ‘Scratchy’ he knew right then he wanted to be a hot guitar player,” Wammack says.

Wammack, who plugs in at Neil’s on Saturday, January 28th, and who will play the Ponderosa Stomp at the Gibson Guitar Lounge later this year, still rips through his Sonic-era instrumentals but rounds out his set with popular, if overplayed, standards such as Van Morrison’s “Brown Eyed Girl.” He’s been known to break into a self-indulgent cover of “Play That Funky Music White Boy,” but, even playing well-worn, and in some cases worn-out, material, Wammack’s virtuosity is unmistakable.

“I want everything to be perfect,” Wammack says. “I try to be the consummate performer.”

Categories
Politics Politics Feature

Plante: How It Looks

Cartoon

Categories
News

STANTON TAKES 9TH DISTRICT STRAW VOTE

The results are in on Thursday night’s “straw vote poll” for 9th District congressional candidates, taken from a teeming Rendezvous Restaurant crowd at a fundraising event organized by the Shelby County Democratic Party.

TA DA! The envelope, please.

The overwhelming winner, with 56 votes, was lawyer Ed Stanton, Jr.

Finishing second with 19 votes was a relative newcomer to the local political scene, one Tyson Pratcher, now serving as a state director for New York Senator Hillary Clinton. (Pratcher’s accomplishment was all the more impressive since, unlike the others who got votes, he was unable to attend and to address the crowd, having reportedly suffered a plane delay in transit from Up East.)

Third place was taken by free-lance consultant Ron Redwing with five votes. This, too, was something of a feat – since Redwing had publicly protested the $50 straw-vote fee as a “poll tax” and said he had advised his supporters not to show up and pay it.

Candidates Joe Kyles and Lee Harris each got two votes.

Bill Whitman, a new entry, was there and addressed the crowd, but got no votes.

Nobody else, absent or present, garnered any votes.

Granted, this was an unscientific poll. Take it with a grain or, if you please, a whole shaker-full of salt, but it was the first head-to-head matchup in which local Democrats got to express a choice for the record.

Categories
Opinion

CITY BEAT: Fallen Hero

Atlanta’s version of the 1993 Harold Ford trial and the
ongoing Operation Tennessee Waltz investigation got under way this week as
former Mayor Bill Campbell went on trial on federal corruption charges.

This
one bears watching in Memphis for several reasons.


Campbell, 52, was a black mayor in a Southern city that once called itself “too
busy to hate” and which has had a black mayor since 1973. A janitor’s son who
graduated from Vanderbilt University, he was mayor of Atlanta from 1994 to 2002
and spokesman for the city during the 1996 Olympics. He was indicted in 2004 on
11 counts of bribery, racketeering, and fraud after a seven-year investigation
that has convicted 12 city officials and city contractors.


National news coverage of the trial has noted that, with some notable
exceptions, it has divided the city along racial lines. The

Los Angeles Times

quoted Democratic state representative Bob Holmes, who said, “White people think
he was an awful, corrupt mayor. African Americans see him as a champion of the
poor.”


There are similarities to the trial of former U.S. representative Harold Ford
Sr., who was investigated for several years and tried twice before being
acquitted in 1993. Ford was a legendary Memphis congressman who fought to keep
his trial in Memphis instead of Knoxville, where federal prosecutors wanted to
try him. Ford won with a mostly white jury but not until both sides had played
the race card.

Now
it is former state senator John Ford who is under indictment in Operation
Tennessee Waltz, along with two other current and former state legislators and
Shelby County commissioner Michael Hooks. All of the Memphis defendants are
black, and all have pleaded not guilty and, so far, have indicated they will go
to trial.


Memphis mayor Willie Herenton and John Ford will be following the Campbell trial
closely, and Herenton may be called to testify as a witness along with former
Herenton aide Reginald French.


Herenton was a political friend and occasional host and companion of Campbell
when the former Atlanta mayor visited Memphis and Tunica. In 2003, Herenton
testified for the federal government in Atlanta against Herbert McCall, one of
the Atlanta city officials who has been convicted. McCall and former Atlanta
chief operating officer Larry Wallace pitched a contractor, Johnson Controls, to
Herenton in 2000. Herenton smelled a rat and rejected them. On several
occasions, including a press conference this month, he has called proposals by
bogus contractors and their consultants “crazy stuff.”

The
middleman for the meeting in 2000 was French, a sometimes consultant and current
candidate for Shelby County sheriff, who has been with Herenton in various
capacities since the mayor was elected in 1991. French, who was not charged,
gave $10,000 to the Atlanta hand-out crew and testified for the government at
the trial in 2003.


Consultants, of course, are central players in Tennessee Waltz. Memphian Tim
Willis worked undercover for the FBI to net John Ford and paid the former
senator $10,000 in cash. Ford was a consultant for Johnson Controls to help them
get a state contract with a medical facility in Chattanooga. Ford was also a
consultant to TennCare contractors.

Another Memphis connection to Campbell
is Dewey Clark, a Memphis native who worked in Campbell’s campaign in 1993 and
lived in Campbell’s basement apartment for six years while working as a mayoral
“special assistant,” according to
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
.
Clark fell out with Campbell and has accused him of taking bribes.

The seven-year duration of the Campbell
investigation suggests Tennessee Waltz is far from over. After some Atlanta
defendants were sentenced in 2003, the
Journal-Constitution
,
citing defense attorneys, published a story saying the City Hall investigation
was about to wrap up and Campbell was “seemingly in the clear.” He wasn’t. The
feds take their time in high-profile, racially charged cases. It ain’t over
until it’s over.

Categories
News

DONALD PROMISES DECISION NEXT WEEK IN FORD CASE

Ophelia Ford will be a state Senator from District
29 at least through the weekend, while U.S. District Judge Bernice Donald
ponders the exhibits, evidence, and testimony elicited up to and through
Wednesday’s day-long special hearing on the status of Ford, whose narrow 13-vote
victory in a special election last fall is on the very brink of nullification by
a majority of her colleagues.

Though there had been a general expectation that the issue
might be resolved on Wednesday, Donald’s decision to postpone a ruling until lnext week was accepted for the most part in an outward show of good grace by the
defendants in the case, including the 13 Republican state senators and one
Democrat who showed up en masse for the hearing.

“That’s fair enough. She’s got a lot of material to work
through,” said Senate majority leader Ron Ramsey of Blountville. His
sentiment was echoed by Memphis lawyer John Ryder, attorney for the GOP
senators who, along with Democrat Don McLeary of Humboldt, were in the
majority last week on a preliminary 17-14 vote to void Ford’s election.

Finding it difficult to be as philosophical was Terry
Roland
, the defeated Republican adversary who, in and out of court, has
challenged Ford’s election on the basis of several alleged frauds and
irregularities. Roland wondered aloud afterward if the extra several days
provided by Donald wouldn’t give Lt. Governor John Wilder, the venerable
Senate speaker who favors Ford’s seating, an opportunity to “twist arms and
change the vote.”

Promising to reach a decision sometime
between Monday at the earliest and Wednesday at the latest, Donald will
determine a plethora of questions – on the question of her own jurisdiction, on her need to hear further elements of the case, and on the possible permanent
continuation of her temporary injunction against a final – and definitive
–Senate vote.

Donald imposed the injunction on due-process grounds last
week after the Senate, acting as a “Committee of 33” for purposes of the ongoing
special session, voted to void the results of the September 15th special
election in District 29. The move came in response to a motion by Republican
majority leader Ron Ramsey of Blountville and reached the magic number of
17, a majority of the body, when Democrat McLeary broke ranks to join with 16
Republicans.

Before that vote on Tuesday
night of last week could be repeated in a scheduled vote by the Senate in
regular session on Thursday – when another majority would have made the outcome
irreversible — Donald had been petitioned by lawyers for Ford, reportedly via
telephone, and had granted the Temporary Restraining Order.

Legal teams representing the various parties to the action
were in Donald’s court on Wednesday. On hand to represent the Senate as a whole
were state Attorney General Paul Summers and two deputies. Ryder — like the AG, making a motion to dismiss Ford’s suit — was
there on behalf of the 17 Yea voters from last week, and Lang Wiseman,
aided by Richard Fields, represented Roland, whom Judge Roland later dismissed as a defemdamt. Memphis lawyer David
Cocke
headed a three-member team representing Ford, who has invoked Civil Rights statutes in an effort to block further Senate action.

Witnesses heard from Wednesday included state Election Supervisor
Brook Thompson, several Ford co-plaintiffs who claimed to have ended up
improperly on Roland’s list of suspect voters, and state Senator Steve Cohen,
a Memphis Democrat who was called by Cocke to affirm his thesis that the Senate
had acted last week without appropriate information from the six-member Senate
special committee charged with offering recommendations on the seating question.

From the pont of view of content, the only truly startling
fact adduced in the testimony was Thompson’s admission, in reply to a question
from Ryder, that the final matching of District 29 voters against the Social
Sercurity Administration’s “master death list” had yielded 38 hits — not just
the two that were already known. The disclosure evaporated almost as soon as it
bubbled up, however, as Thompson went on to explain that 32 of these matches
were “keying errors” involving voters whose names and ages “weren’t even close”
to those on on the corresponding death file. Another four matches involved
surviving people continuing to  use the social security number of a
deceased family member — as was once permitted by the SSA. Upon receiving this
explanation, Ryder did not press Thompson further, and the matter never
re-surfaced.

Wednesday’s proceedings were often dull and technical to the point of challenging the wakefulness of attendees. Cohen managed to liven things with a series of quips that were
both on and off the point of the moment. (Example: “If I can, I can get
around this,” Cohen said when his paraphrasing of a statement by Wilder was
objected to as hearsay evidence. Rephrasing the testimony from his own
perspective, the Memphis senator quipped about Wilder, who frequently speaks of the
“cosmos”: “What he said was cosmotic, anyway.”)

Cohen, who had tangled last week with Senate Democratic Leader Jim Kyle and others over the organizaton of the Senate into a “Committee of 33” for the special session also got the opportunity to complain that “they” had thereby “emasculated” the State and Local Government Committee, which he chairs. And, in response to a question in cross-examination from Assistant Attorney General Janet Kleinfelter about the duration of last week’s Senate discussion on seating Ford, Cohen had the satisfaction of referring to Kyle, a frequent antagonist, as having been “verbose.”

Ironically, Cohen’s appearance,
coupled with the presence of Ophelia Ford herself, brought to 16 the number of
senators on hand in Donald’s courtroom – almost enough to constitute a majority,
if still well short of the two-thirds majority needed to constitute a quorum.

The most anxious of the senators present Wednesday was Democrat McLeary, who
observed during a break in proceedings, “I feel intimidated about my vote, just
being made to come here.” He, along with Memphis Republicans Mark Norris
and Curtis Person, had received subpoenas for possible testimony –
presumably because their domiciles were within a hundred-mile radius of the
court and they could offer some background, if called upon, concerning last
week’s vote.

In the event, the three senators, who were meanwhile
bolstered by the show of support from their colleagues, were never called. Most
of the testimony that was heard concerned the technicalities of the voting
process and the alleged election irregularities, which included nine votes that
were ultimately found by the six-member special Senate committee to be invalid.
Two of those votes had been cast in the name of dead people, and several more
were cast by felons whose right to vote had never been legally restored.

Remaining at issue were multiple instances of improper
addresses and invalid election-day voter signatures alleged by Roland’s team. It
was largely on the basis of these that Ford’s team sought the injunction,
charging that any effort to void the election based on them would cause Ford
“irreparable harm” and result in mass disenfranchisement of District 29 voters,
as well as violation of constitutional due process.

Those are some of the issues Judge Donald will have to
consider, as well as the defendants’ claims that the federal court lacked
standing to adjudge the Senate’s historical right to determine its own
membership (“Let the Senate be the Senate,” as AG Summers put it Wednesday, employing a vintage Wilderism), that the results of the enjoined vote could not be predicted, in any
case, and, most simply and crucially, that the injunction should therefore be
dismissed – clearing the way for a final Senate vote.

As the courtroom was clearing, just after 6 p.m., and the
weary senators were making plans to return to Nashville for the week’s final
legislative day on Thursday, one of the Republicans who had voted against Ford
and argued strongly to void her election, Jim Bryson of Franklin, made a
point of smiling cordially at her. “See you tomorrow,” he said,
colleague-to-colleague.

 

 

           

 

Categories
Politics Politics Beat Blog

POLITICS: First Showing





New Page 1

On Tuesday night, the first 9th District cattle
call (don’t blame us, folks: That’s the term of art among pols — the Beltway
sort, especially) went on as scheduled, featuring seven would-be Democratic
successors to current Congressman Harold Ford Jr., now a U.S. Senate
candidate.

           

The event (a “forum,” as it was actually called) was held
at the IBEW headquarters building on Madison, under the sponsorship of Democracy
for Memphis, one of the new activist groups that surfaced last year and became a
force in the  party’s biennial reorganization.

           

Here’s a brief take on the candidates, including a capsule
intro prepared for this week’s Flyer print edition, coupled with follow-up notes
on how each was perceived to have done Tuesday night:

 

Print edition:
The prospects of one candidate, NIKKI TINKER, were dealt with at some
length in this space two weeks ago. Suffice it to say here that Tinker has
impressed many with her high-level support and early-bird activity. Growing some
bona fide grass roots remains a challenge for this Alabama/D.C. import.

 

Tuesday night:
Tinker was a no-show at the forum. A friend read a statement on her behalf and
said later she was “working;” her mother said she had a “prior commitment.”
Whatever the case, it was hard to imagine what other circumstance could have
been so all-important as to keep Tinker away. “She doesn’t know the issues,”
theorized one acquaintance. “She wants to set herself off from the pack,”
guessed another.  To judge from the reaction of many attendees Tuesday night,
the still little-known Tinker would have been well advised to have been there.
She remains an Unknown Quantity, and her best way of “setting herself off” would
have been to show well in the give-and-take

 

Print edition: Also discussed in detail was the
likelihood of a go-for-broke candidacy on the part of state Senator STEVE
COHEN
, a major figure on the local and statewide scenes.

 

Tuesday night: Cohen
stayed away from Tuesday night’s proceedings, too, but nobody begrudged him
that. He’s well-established enough to get away with being absent. Besides, he
hasn’t formally declared yet.

 

Print edition: Lawyer ED STANTON, JR.,  son of a
well-known local governmental figure, has been making something of an impression
himself, running a low-key, under-the-radar campaign that is reportedly fueled
by a hefty – and growing – war chest. Stanton is likely to be in for the long
haul.

 

Tuesday night: In
almost everybody’s estimation, Stanton did well, sounding crisp and even
somewhat original in his call for such staples as education and economic
development. “Live well, then learn well,” is how he accounted for the primacy
of the latter issue.

 

RON REDWING, now a
free-lance consultant and formerly an aide to Mayor Willie Herenton, has been
running hard and for even longer than Tinker. He has built an organization, it
would seem, and, to judge by the turnout at some of his fundraisers, something
of a following. He, too, will go to the End Game.

 

Tuesday night:
Though Redwing got some early response from the crowd by addressing it directly
with a hearty greeting, he seemed to lose ground by repeatedly declining to
offer either any specifics or any particularly inspiring rhetoric.

 

RALPH WHITE, a
minister, musician, and former star athlete, is a bona fide renaissance man –
superbly talented in most of what he does but so far unlucky in politics, a
field whose pros and junkies and facilitators have largely made a point of
looking the other way from nice guy Ralph over the years. Too bad. White is
deserving, though he has contributed to his own loneliness in Democratic ranks
by backing some wrong horses in the past (Republican Rod DeBerry vs. then
congressman Harold Ford Sr. in 1994!) Money may be a long-term problem,
but White intends to stick around.

 

Tuesday night: In
the judgment of almost everybody who offered an opinion, White didn’t measure
up, offering preacherly platitudes and avoiding anything concrete in his
answers. He seemed surprised at being asked about Iraq and had no prepared
answer. More astonishingly, considering that the venue was a union hall, he
began an answer about his attitude toward organized labor by grousing at length
about corrupt unions. (Helpful hint: Ralph, Ralph!, any voter who would
respond to that kind of answer is going to be voting Republican on primary day.)

 

 

JOSEPH KYLES, who
in recent years has been a mainstay of the Rainbow/Push coalition locally,
belongs to a famous local family and has connections to spare at the grassroots
level. A former football player at UT/Martin, Kyles has the requisite
young-man-on-the-way-up look and an appropriately serious demeanor to go with
it.

 

Tuesday night:
Though not everybody agreed,  Kyles impressed many by speaking in his slow,
stately way of specific abuses in the existing social power structure, firing
salvoes at “corporate welfare,” for example,  and taking particular exception to
what he perceived as chicanery on the part of MLGW. On a personal level, his
story of suffering temporary paralysis after a violent football hit on
Fourth-and-One resonated with the audience.

 

 

LEE HARRIS, an
assistant professor of law at the University of Memphis,  is a fairly new
face in local politics, but he’s rapidly acquiring exposure, most recently
alongside some of the major players in statewide ethics reform as emcee at a
Cooper/Young forum on that issue.

 

Tuesday night:
Harris is another who was well received, making frequent common-sense
connections, such as his response to a question about how to deal with illegal
immigration:  “We don’t need to police the Mexicans; we need to police the
businesses.”

 

All things considered, though, the most impressive
responses Tuesday night came from a candidate whom I had postponed dealing with
in this week’s print column, planning to write about him next week, along with
such other candidates who in the meantime might come out of the woodwork  (As I
put in in print: “This list is only partial. Stay tuned; more candidates – both
Democrats and Repubicans — will be featured in weeks to come, especially as the
number of potential filees seems to be proliferating.”)

 

Anyhow, the best showing Tuesday
night might have been that of  TYSON PRATCHER, a Memphis native who has
been serving as a state director in New York for Senator Hillary Clinton
and who, much in the manner of Nikki Tinker, is faced with the task of
establishing grass-root connections from the top down.

At the forum, Pratcher gave a good
demonstration of how to do that, making full use of his presumed expertise and
connections (“Senator Clinton and I did some work on this issue….”) but
persuasively rather than presumptuously so, going on in most cases to spell out
exactly what he meant. As in the case of specific labor legislation when faced
with the same question about union rights that appeared to buffalo Rev. White.
Pratcher, too, would seem to be in for the long haul.

 

One other unadvertised special: a
newly announced candidate named BILL WHITMAN, a young white Memphis
native graduate of Notre Dame and veteran of several public-issue causes. In his
on-line statement, Whitman had given special attention to  health care, a
subject that didn’t get much attention from anybody Tuesday night. Whitman came
off as engaging and well-intentioned but not enough so to overcome the
probability that, as a white unknown, his chances in the race are extremely
limited.

 

 

To continue from the print edition: [A]lready  something is
obvious from this early-sample hard core. There are good chances for a split
favoring Cohen in the Democratic primary. Partly this is based on demographics,
with most of the other candidates being African-American and likely to carve up
that part of the electorate, a majority in the 9th. But the Midtown
state senator, who has represented a sprawling slice of the district for more
than a quarter-century in the legislature, has a huge name-recognition factor
working in his favor, as well.

 

Suppose Cohen should win and then defeat his Republican
opponent in the general election. The likelihood is that, in a re-election race
two years later, he’d face only one or two challengers in a primary. His victory
would be anything but certain. But he’d have another option.

 

Assuming that a Congressman Cohen would attract more than
the usual amount of attention for a first-termer – a fairly safe bet for this
articulate and highly un-bashful and issue-conscious politician – he might be
sorely tempted to leverage his enhanced profile into a statewide race for the
U.S. Senate seat now held by Republican Lamar Alexander and up for grabs
again in 2008. 

 

But that’s getting ahead of ourselves. There’s going to be
a crowded race for 9th District congressman meanwhile, and it’s
impossible to handicap the outcome at this point. Watch this space.

 

For those Democrats who want to participate, by the way,
there’s a “straw vote” polling opportunity at the downtown Rendezvous restaurant
from 5 to 7 p.m. this Thursday.

 

There has been much speculation in political
circles about the possible effect of Ford-family troubles (the state-senate
District 29 wrangle; the upcoming Tennessee Waltz trials, etc.) on the U.S.
Senate candidacy of Rep. Ford.

 

Two cautions for those who see all that becoming an
obstacle for Ford: (1) While everyone seems to believe there’s a sizeable
population of people who might vote against the congressman either on family
grounds or because of his race, no one has yet unearthed a real live member of
that species; (2) To offset any such backlash, there’s the so-far overlooked
factor of the national media.

 

Fact: There has never been a statewide race in Tennessee
commanding the amount of national attention the 2006 Senate race will get, and
Ford is the largest single reason for that. Here’s the national-media storyline,
which you can expect to see invoked three of four times every week during the
heat of the campaign on this or that network or cable show or in this or that
major print medium: “Can a bright, charismatic young African-American politician
overcome racial bias and his family history to win election to the Senate in the
border state of Tennessee?”

 

Count on it: That storyline – which, from the media’s
standpoint, has a directed-verdict ending – will outweigh any of the other
potential issues involving Ford, including his hewing to a blandly centrist line
that unsettles many traditional Democrats.

 

Not to be overlooked, by the way, is Ford’s still active
Democratic primary opponent, state Senator Rosalind Kurita of
Clarksville, who spent a couple of days in Memphis last week and is making a
point of addressing some of the domestic and foreign-policy reforms some of the
hard-core Democrats want to see addressed.

 

Many of those selfsame Democrats were on hand Tuesday of last week for a brief
stop at the Hunt-Phelan Home by National Democratic chairman Howard Dean,
following through on his pledge to make frequent outreach visits in the
so-called “red” states that favored President Bush in the 2004 election.

 

Dean exhorted the party faithful to help him restore
Democratic prestige in Tennessee. The former presidential candeidate also proved
a ready man with a quip. When one of the local cadres told him about
such-and-such a woman who had “worked the streets for you,” Dean responded, “Well,
I appreciate that, but I hope she didn’t go that far….”

 

When the
cadre tried to backtrack and amend his phraseology, Dean, no doubt remembering
“The Scream” from the 2004 primary season,  laughed and said, “Trust me, I know
from experience. Once you’ve done something stupid, you just can’t take it
back.”

 

 

 

 

DATES TO REMEMBER

 

Deadline for filing, countywide primary races: February
16
.

Deadline for filing, state and federal primary races and
for independents in countywide races: April 6.
Countywide primaries: May 2.

State and federal primaries and countywide general
election: August 3.

Deadline for filing as independent in state and federal
races: August 17.

General election, state and federal races: November 7.

 

Categories
Politics Politics Feature

GADFLY: Who You Gonna Call?






New Page 1

Imagine this: a
snake crawls into your house in the middle of the night and bites your child,
injuring her seriously. What do you do about it (the snake, that is)? You call a



snake exterminator
, right? He
tells you he’s going to get the snake, “dead or alive,” and as he goes into your
basement in pursuit of the snake, you even hear him taunting the snake with the
words, “bring it on.” You pay him a lot of money, and you feel good about the
prospect that he’ll eliminate the problem. Then, a month later, the snake is
back, but this time he bites one of your friends’ children. Your confidence in
the exterminator is shaken (wouldn’t it be?), and you even think about calling a
different snake expert, but you call the same one (after all, he’s told you he’s
a man of faith), and he charges you more money to go after the snake again
(there’s no money-back guarantee with snakes, he tells you). A month later,
guess what—that’s right, the snake shows up in your kitchen, and scares the
holy you-know-what out of you.

Now the question
is, do you still feel the exterminator is worthy of your confidence, and second,
are you going to trust him to go after the snake the third time, having already
violated your belief in the old “fool me once, fool me twice” bromide. The
answer to both questions should be obvious. Not only are you going to feel like
the exterminator was incompetent, you might even feel like he bamboozled you. In
any event, you’re certainly not going to make the mistake of relying on him
again. You might even sue him for snake malpractice, or try to get his
exterminators’ license revoked.

And yet, when the
snake is named
Osama
bin Laden, and the exterminator is named George Bush, for some stupefying reason
I have yet to fathom, our elected snake buster still inspires public confidence
in his ability to accomplish the mission. Even though this particular snake has
only struck in our house once, he’s struck our friends, we know he’s capable of
striking us again, and based on



his latest media performance
,
we know he’s planning on it. And yet, after more than four years, and many
billions of dollars fighting a war on a tactic for which bin Laden is,
literally, the


poster child
, polls continue
to show that Americans trust Bush on issues of national security. Remember, this
is the same President who acknowledged, a year after 9/11 (i.e., in the 
“post-9/11 world”) that he was


not all that concerned about bin Laden

or his whereabouts.

The Republicans are
so confident in their strength on this issue, they’ve even trotted out

typhoid
Karl
,”
to speak to his
party’s faithful about hammering on this issue in the coming election campaign.
Astonishingly, the conventional wisdom is that if there were to be another
terrorist attack in this country, it would end up benefiting this administration
in opinion polls, and Republicans at the election polls, something “Bush’s
Brain” is relying on. This in spite of this administration’s demonstrated
incompetence, on any objective basis (wouldn’t bin

Laden’s
nose-thumbing audio tape be evidence of that?), when it comes to effectiveness
in its “war on terror.” It is beyond challenge at this point that our
President’s misbegotten policies in his war have actually resulted in the
proliferation of terrorists and of their activities. The war in Iraq has
increased the number of terrorists, and has



served as a training/recruiting ground for terrorists
,
worldwide. And most tellingly, available studies show that



the incidence of terrorism has dramatically increased
,
51% in just the last year, and a whopping 250% during the five years of our
current commandant in the “war on terror.”

Heckuva
job,
Georgie.          

And where are the
Democrats, the party of the only true, effective war presidents of this century
(e.g., Wilson, Roosevelt, Truman)? AWOL. Mostly running and hiding, afraid of
their shadows, or worse, trying to out-Republican the Republicans.

My contempt for the
intelligence of the American public (shared with

H.L.
Mencken) is well documented in some of my



earlier pieces
. But how
stupid do you have to be to believe that a man who’s demonstrably incapable of
prosecuting a successful campaign to bring down (“dead or alive”) our avowed
“Public Enemy Number One,” is the man for the job, or worse, that even if we’re
attacked again, he’s still deserves to be considered our protector. How many
more times do we really need to be fooled?

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