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News

Rickey Peete Raises $75,000

City Councilman Rickey Peete raised upwards of $75,000 at a fund-raiser on Beale Street this week but says he isn’t planning on running for anything besides City Council.

Peete, head of the Beale Street Merchants Association, welcomed hundreds of supporters to a $250-per-person party at Alfred’s.

“You run like you’re scared,” said Peete, who represents one of the superdistricts which stretches from Frayser to the Mississipppi state line to Hickory Hill and includes 128 precincts. The election is in 2007 and at this early date Peete has no opponents.

The district includes such hot growth areas as Uptown and South End as well as FedExForum and Beale Street.

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News The Fly-By

The Cheat Sheet

1 The University of Memphis men’s basketball team picks a really, really bad time to play their worst game of the season. They fall 50-45 to UCLA, ending their (and our) dream of a trip to the Final Four. In just 40 minutes, March Madness turns to March sadness for Tiger fans everywhere. Still, with 33 wins, the team finished with the best record in school history, and we have to say that we enjoyed that wild ride while it lasted.

2 Graceland is named a National Historic Landmark. The former home of the King of Rock-and-Roll already had been listed on the National Register of Historic Places, but this new designation is a higher honor. Just one question: What took them so long? The Jungle Room alone is worthy of landmark status.

3 Members of the Horn Lake Tactical Apprehension Containment Team smash their way into a house and rough up the elderly owners. The cops are looking for a meth lab being run out of the home, but there’s one problem: The meth lab is in another house on the property, occupied by somebody else. Excuse the pun, but that’s some crack investigative work.

4 D’Army Bailey has relisted on eBay the boarding-house bathtub where James Earl Ray supposedly stood when he shot Dr. Martin Luther King in 1968. Bailey tried to sell the old bathtub in 2004, and bids reached $152,000 before eBay shut down the auction, concerned that the sale violated some policy about listing “offensive” items. We don’t know who would want the tub or who would want to spend $150,000 on it. For that kind of money, you can buy something really nice from the Watson’s girl.

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News The Fly-By

Rover Rescue

In the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, Snowball — a small, white, fluffy dog — was famously, and forcibly, separated from his young owner during the evacuation of the New Orleans Superdome. Of course, Snowball wasn’t the only one.

After Katrina, Memphis Animal Services and the local Humane Society took in hundreds of animals rescued from flooded and abandoned homes in the Gulf. Now that most of those animals have been reunited with their owners or placed in foster care, city officials and pet rescue groups are thinking about what would happen to local animals if a major disaster were to hit Memphis.

“Sadly, it takes something bad to force everybody to come together and keep an interest,” says Phil Snyder, director of Memphis Animal Services. “Even though Katrina did not happen in Memphis, people came here from the devastated areas and kind of forced the disaster on us. It was good training, and it certainly helps us to be more prepared for a disaster in our own area.”

Memphis Animal Services hosted “Animals in Disaster: Working Within the System” last week at the Agricenter with about 60 attendees from various county and regional animal rescue groups, shelters, and emergency management offices. Speakers addressed issues such as preparing animal disaster kits and the importance of training for disaster rescue.

According Nina Wingfield, director of Collierville Animal Services, anyone rescuing animals in a disaster must have credentials from the Tennessee Emergency Management Agency (TEMA). TEMA offers an animal rescue training class, and once completed, volunteers receive a photo ID allowing them access to areas blocked off by the National Guard after a disaster.

“Many people helping after Katrina were not experienced in animal rescue,” says Wingfield. “When volunteers started coming in and doing their own thing, people got bitten, and animals died.”

Snyder says about 15 people in the county are currently certified through TEMA, but he would like to see more people take the course. Those who have completed training are forming a Disaster Animal Response Team, responsible not only for saving domestic pets but livestock and exotic animals.

In recent years, the Memphis Emergency Management Agency (EMA) has developed a disaster plan for local animals that includes shelters, crates, food, and leaving some roads open to transport livestock.

However, the EMA recommends that all county residents have personal disaster plans to care for themselves and their pets for up to a week after a disaster.

Since the EMA is involved in disaster plans for local animals, Snyder hopes Memphis won’t see a repeat of the New Orleans situation where people were forced to leave their animals behind.

“The worst thing you can do is leave your pets behind,” says Snyder. “You may think you’ll be back in a day or two, but that may not happen. It’s been proven that pets left behind are in greater danger.”

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Letter From The Editor Opinion

Letter from the Editor: “11 Million Instant Felons”

Half a million people rallied in Los Angeles last Saturday to protest an immigration bill passed by the House of Representatives. A hundred thousand marched in Chicago. Tens of thousands more gathered in Denver, Phoenix, and Milwaukee.

House Resolution 4437 is intended to “strengthen enforcement of the immigration laws and to enhance border security.” Parts of the bill make sense, but what has so many people up in arms are provisions in the bill that would make the United States’ 11 million illegal immigrants instant felons, subject them to immediate deportation, and levy harsh penalties for Americans who employ or assist illegal aliens.

It is simply nonsense to imagine that we can solve our immigration issues by deporting 11 million people. Children of undocumented immigrants who are born here are U.S. citizens. This bill would separate families and punish millions of hard-working people whose contributions to our economy and culture (and tax base) are immense. The Republicans behind this bill know how absurd the provision is, but they are playing to their red-meat base, using the immigration issue as a potential “wedge” for the 2006 elections — in much the same way the party used gay marriage in 2004. Only 36 Democrats voted for the bill. Sadly, included in that number were four Tennessee Democrats, including Memphis’ own 9th District representative, Harold Ford.

Raúl M. Grijalva, an Arizona congressman, put it succinctly: “I am ashamed of the Republican leadership for bringing this bill to the floor. … It includes penalties for employers, but no provisions allowing them to attain needed employees. It criminalizes immigrants, but provides no solutions for a legal venue for entry.”

Fortunately, in the Senate, wiser heads have prevailed. A coalition of Democrats and Republicans in the Senate Judiciary Committee has voted to strip out the harsher elements of the bill, clearing the way for undocumented workers to seek citizenship. This is a good omen. The immigration issue is too important to be allowed to become a political football for demagogues and opportunists.

Bruce VanWyngarden, Editor

brucev@MemphisFlyer.com

Categories
Letters To The Editor Opinion

Letters to the Editor

Farewell, Wendi

Chris Davis’ parting shot (Fly on the Wall, March 16th issue) to departing Commercial Appeal columnist Wendi Thomas was a little harsh.

Maybe Thomas went a little overboard with her “everyday sin tax” ideas, but her heart was always in the right place. Thomas’ columns were about getting people to think and to live responsible, moral lives. She held all politicians to high standards, never playing the race card in her call for all of us to look at ourselves and try to live better lives. Thomas is a brilliant writer, wise beyond her years. Baltimore’s gain is Memphis’ loss.

Randy Norwood

Memphis

Snake Oil?

Every time I hear George Bush on TV, I feel like I need to take a bath in extra-strength degreaser. This guy is the slimiest snake-oil salesman on the planet. For him to say that he tried to avoid the Iraq war is ludicrous. Bush did everything in his power to make sure we went to war so he could get the regime change he desired.

Joe M. Spitzer Memphis

The president is on tour promoting the idea of “staying the course” in Iraq, using the same platitudes he has used for three long and bloody years. He’s speaking in front of giant signs that read “Plan for Victory,” which is ironic, since he has yet to present one.

As former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright noted recently: “Good versus evil is not a strategy.” Under the guise of being a “wartime president” (in the endless “war on terror”), Bush has abused the Constitution and stripped a weak-kneed Congress of its ability to offer checks and balances. If we, as a people, don’t rise up soon, our liberties will be taken and America as we know it will disappear.

Warren Hagan

Memphis

George Bush ran for reelection by avoiding discussion of his own record and by demonizing John Kerry. Republicans up for election in 2006 may well try the same smear tactics to deflect attention from the issues and how they’ve failed at those issues. As the campaigns begin, listen closely to see if candidates are really answering questions. “He is partisan,” for example, does not answer questions about the deficit, war, torture, spending, corruption, or illegal activities. Representative Marsha Blackburn and Senator Bill Frist would rather talk about the “far left” or “liberals” rather than the details of their records on the issues. What they say “most liberals” think is absolutely not what most liberals think.

If you’re in doubt, ask us what we think. Don’t let Republicans or Fox News tell you. You can be sure that when a question is deflected or another candidate is smeared, there is a reason. Let’s not allow candidates to turn our heads with emotional rhetoric. Let’s demand the truth from everyone. And let’s demand that smear tactics stop immediately.

Brandy Branigan

Memphis

A Worthy Cause

Although we greatly appreciate Bianca Phillips’ story on the closing of our no-kill home (February 23rd issue), the article failed to mention a few important points: 1) Furry Friends did not close down altogether. We merged with Guardian Angel Pet Rescue. 2) Our remaining dogs were placed at the Memphis Humane Society through the support of its executive director, Ginger Morgan. 3) Our shelter was open for six months, not four.

Most importantly, we would like to thank all of our donors whose contributions paid for 76 dogs and cats to have food, shelter, spaying/neutering, and medical care. Furry Friends was and is — in conjunction with Guardian Angels — a worthy cause.

Susan Mah, Furry Friends founder

Memphis

Selling Memphis

How do you sell Memphis (In the Bluff, March 23rd issue)? That’s a no-brainer: Memphis music. Yeah, we all know about our musical heritage. And I’m thankful we have places like the Rock ‘N’ Soul Museum and the Stax Museum and other appropriate homages to our illustrious past. But I’m talking about Memphis music today. We have a vibrant, creative, and talented community of musicians who play all kinds of music. These artists represent a diversity that reflects the Memphis that we are now, not the Memphis we used to be.

No need to hunker down with a bunch of high-priced strategic brand designers. As Christopher Reyes from LiveFromMemphis.com would say, “Get off your ass and go see some music!”

Joann Self Memphis

Categories
News The Fly-By

Bridging the Gap

Talk about a war of the sexes.

A recent proposal to protect women’s rights to equal pay in Tennessee has divided legislators between those protecting the interests of women and those protecting the interests of business. And so far, outspoken combatants on both sides have been female.

“I was in the government operations committee the other day, and one of the young Republican women just picked the bill to pieces,” says Representative Beverly Marrero from Memphis. “She seemed to be more concerned with how it might affect business and whether they were going to be happy with it. I guess that’s why I’m a Democrat and she’s a Republican.”

The bill was introduced by state senator Kim McMillan and is opposed by the Tennessee Chamber of Commerce and Industry, headed by President Deb Wooley. Both women acknowledge the existence of a wage gap — women earn about 75 cents on the dollar in the same job as men — but are split over the effects of the new bill.

The law currently protects against wage differences based on factors other than education, training, and experience. A 2004 law dictates that employers found to have knowingly violated equal pay statutes must make up the difference to their employee. The second time, employers must pay double; the third time, triple. But the proposed legislation would allow women to sue for punitive damages beyond the wage difference.

“The current legislation, in my opinion, doesn’t have this kind of teeth in it,” McMillan says. “I think this bill will encourage individuals who feel they have been the victims of wage discrimination to seek redress.”

For Tennessee chamber president Wooley, the bill’s punitive damages are part of the problem.

“This bill creates a new cause for class-action lawsuits,” says Wooley. “At the same time, we’re really trying to get court reform under control because we recognize that it is not good for the economy. While it sounds good in an election year to talk about doing something for gender equality, it’s a disguise for what this bill will really do. What it will end up doing is being counterproductive.”

McMillan argues that the bill does more than increase the punishment for wage discrimination. “The bill deals with the issue of retaliation,” she says. “You want people to be able to find out if they are being discriminated against without worrying that they might be fired.”

She says the bill also discourages litigation by creating an amnesty program for companies.

“We have a part of the bill which gives companies the chance to step up voluntarily and say audit my business and make sure I’m not doing anything wrong, intentionally or otherwise. If they do that, they cannot be held liable, so long as they volunteer for the audit and make the requisite changes.”

But Wooley contends that the current legislation, if employed forcefully, is enough. “I think the bill would dramatically expand and alter the government’s power in terms of defining the market. I don’t want to sound like I’m ignoring it [the wage gap], but it takes time,” says Wooley.

Marrero sees things differently.

“This is kind of the carrot and the stick approach.” And as for waiting for the wage gap to close naturally, she says, “It’s 2006. I’m 67 years old. And I’ve been waiting my whole lifetime to get fair and equal treatment. I just hope it happens before I die.”

The bill still has to go through several legislative committees. The final vote is expected within four or five weeks.

Categories
News The Fly-By

Paint the Town Red

Once crumbling and forgotten, the South Main Arts District has come a long way in recent years.

Art galleries, shops, and restaurants now dominate the area, and in keeping with the district’s overall improvement, the South Main Association (SMA) is hosting a series of neighborhood cleanups this spring. To start, four volunteers painted the railroad trestle near Front and Butler streets red last week.

“We’re painting the bridge to add to the artsy quality of the neighborhood,” said Becky Beaton, a member of the SMA. “A group of artists had a meeting, and red was the color they chose.”

But red entered into the project another way too. Beaton says the association feared there would be too much red tape if they asked for the city’s permission to paint the bridge.

“We thought it’d be best to do it first and apologize later,” she said.

Last year, the trestle over G.E. Patterson was painted red, and on April 29th, the trestle on Butler near South Main will be painted as well.

The April 29th event will also be a neighborhood-wide cleanup and planting in conjunction with the Hands On Memphis Servathon.

Three weeks ago, Memphis City Beautiful helped the South Main Association organize an event to pick up litter.

“We cleaned up some eyesores [and trash] that businesses had accumulated in their alleys,” said Beaton. “We cut down tall weeds, trimmed some trees, and picked up some garbage. We just want the neighborhood to have an overall cared-for feeling.”

The association is also organizing an effort to have artists paint their work on parking meters along South Main.

“When I used to come down here in 1996 for the Blues Music Awards, this area was a ghost town,” said SMA member Priscilla Hernandez as she painted. “With all the galleries and residential construction, the neighborhood’s made a phenomenal change for the better.”

Categories
News News Feature

Failing Papers?

I don’t so much mind that newspapers are dying. It’s watching them commit suicide that pisses me off.

What is the unexamined assumption here? That the newspaper business is dying. Is it? In 2005, publicly traded U.S. newspaper publishers reported operating profit margins of 19.2 percent, down from 21 percent in 2004, according to The Wall Street Journal. That ain’t chopped liver. It’s more than double the average operating profit margin of the Fortune 500.

So who thinks newspapers are dying? Newspaper analysts on Wall Street. In fact, the fine folks on Wall Street just forced the sale of Knight Ridder Inc. to McClatchy Co., a chain one-third Knight Ridder’s size. So if newspapers are so ridiculously profitable, how come there’s panic on Wall Street about them? Because we’re losing circulation — 2 percent in 2004 and down 13 percent from a 1985 peak, says the Newspaper Association of America.

So we’re looking at a steady decline over a long period, and many of the geniuses who run our business believe they have a solution. They think we need to cut the number of reporters, cut the space devoted to the news, and cut the amount of money used to gather the news, and this will solve the problem. For some reason, they assume people will want to buy more newspapers if they have less news and are less useful to people. I’m just amazed the Bush administration hasn’t named the whole darn bunch of them to run FEMA.

What cutting costs does, of course, is increase the profits, thus making Wall Street happy. It also kills newspapers.

If newspapers were just another buggy-whip industry, none of this would be of much note. But while Wall Street doesn’t care, nor do many of the people who own and run newspapers, newspapers do, in fact, matter beyond producing profit. They have a critical role in democracy. It’s called a well-informed citizenry.

We are in trouble.

The Project for Excellence in Journalism, run by Columbia University, has a new report out that finds the number of media outlets continues to grow, but both the number of stories covered and the depth of reporting are sliding backward. Television, radio, and newspapers are all cutting staff, while the bloggers of the Internet do not have the size or the interest to go out and gather news. Bloggers are not news-gatherers but opinion-mongers. I have long argued that no one should be allowed to write opinion without spending years as a reporter. Or, as author-journalist Curtis Wilkie puts it, “Unless you can cover a five-car pile-up on Route 128, you shouldn’t be allowed to cover a presidential campaign.”

Tom Rosenstiel of Project for Excellence says: “It’s probably glib and even naive to say simply that more platforms equal more choices. The content has to come from somewhere, and as older news-gathering media decline, some of the strengths they offer in monitoring the powerful and verifying the facts may be weakening as well.”

The McClatchy-Knight Ridder merger emphasizes the perils of ever fewer outlets. Twenty-five years ago, about 50 corporations owned most of the media outlets. Today, there are between eight and 12. McClatchy and Knight Ridder both have fairly decent reputations for journalism, so what difference does it make if they merge?

Here’s one: McClatchy intends to merge the Washington bureaus. Guess which Washington bureau has the distinction of being the only one to report skeptically on the administration’s claims about Iraq’s weapons of mass destruction before the war? Knight Ridder and its terrific reporters Warren Strobel and Jonathan Landay. They didn’t have to go to Iraq to get the story. They found it in Washington: “Lack of Hard Evidence of Iraqi Weapons Worries Top U.S. Officials.”

I’ve thought for years that newspapers should all be owned by nonprofits. There is a chance something like this will actually happen. The Newspaper Guild, in alliance with the Communications Workers of America, is getting ready to bid on the 12 Knight Ridder papers McClatchy wants to sell. Eight of the 12 are Guild papers with a combined employment of 7,000 and circulation of 1.3 million. Among the 12 are such outstanding newspapers as The Philadelphia Inquirer, San Jose Mercury News, and St. Paul Pioneer Press.

McClatchy can’t swallow all of them, and so the two unions have turned to a “worker-friendly” investment fund to back their bid. Keep an eye on this: It is a most hopeful development.

Categories
News The Fly-By

Q and A: Glen Fenter

West Memphis was in high spirits during last week’s dedication of Mid-South Community College’s Workforce Technology Center. The new $7 million center, part of a four-school consortium that includes Mid-South, Arkansas Northeastern College, East Arkansas Community College, and Phillips Community College, includes multimedia classrooms, automotive manufacturing training areas, and diesel maintenance technology equipment. The schools have joined forces to stimulate large-scale growth in Arkansas’ manufacturing sector, as well as the more immediate goal of training workers for the Hino Motors plant in Marion. We asked Mid-South president Glen Fenter why the group, known as ADTEC (Arkansas Delta Training and Education Consortium), is so important.

By Ben Popper

Flyer: How did this consortium of colleges begin?

Fenter: Necessity is the mother of invention. When we started having conversations locally with the Hino Motors officials, we came to understand very rapidly that in order to maximize the opportunities of Hino and other foreign investors, one community college would not be enough to provide the wealth of workforce programs we would need for the region. So we began to communicate with our other members as to the rationale of commingling our efforts. The formalization of that effort really was a large part of the Department of Labor’s recent decision to give us a $5.9 million grant. Automotive manufacturing represents a huge opportunity for growth in our region, and we want to make sure we’re prepared for that.

At the dedication, Mike Beebe, the attorney general of Arkansas, spoke about adapting the curriculum to the needs of industry. Does tailoring yourself to one company limit your ability to grow in the future?

As we develop our school, we are allowing dozens of different kinds of industry to have input, not just automotive. The end result of this curriculum is to be prepared for all manufacturing areas.

What is the central goal of your facility?

To be successful in creating a workforce. That is our only true goal. This isn’t about growing enrollment; our goal is to make eastern Arkansas the absolute best location for industry to choose in North America. The equation that we use is “world-class geography plus world-class infrastructure plus world-class education equals world-class economy.” We have the interstates, airports, and intermodal facilities. We have the river, flat, cheap land, and are located in the center of the country. We have a population that, when educated, could meet any workforce demand.

What does your student body look like?

There are several populations. The first is the unemployed, and we have everything from literacy to adult education and work-based learning for those who may have missed some of their educational background. Then you start targeting the underemployed, those who want better jobs, so we will have night and weekend programs. The group missing from that is our kids. How do we capture and excite them? We are going to aggressively add programs to the public schools here to encourage our kids to consider this opportunity.

When and how did you make connections with industry in Japan?

The first model we had for creating this training consortium was based on distribution, warehousing, and logistics. We knew that was a big part of our economy and all those geographic variables are important to us. When a Hino location appeared here, we knew we would be shifting our focus from distribution and logistics into the manufacturing arena. We went to Japan in September of 2005 and began to establish relations with the Hino training models so we would be able to make as much progress as possible in terms of making them comfortable. While there, we saw the Hino High School, which is a great opportunity to see how they handle education. We saw their factories and the level of technological intensity there. A lot of what we saw in Japan reinforced what we already had in play.

Has there been any formal study of the center’s economic impact on the region?

There have been a number of projections. We’ve seen some estimates for the initial hiring at the new plants. The cumulative estimates are 1,000 new jobs, and that’s conservative. More aggressive estimates look to see that number grow many times over if these companies are as successful as we want to make them.

At one point, the Japanese auto industry was considered a threat to American jobs. Was there any negative reaction to foreign investors in Arkansas?

I think people are happy to see great education, job opportunity, and economy. It is something our citizens have longed for. I don’t think it matters to them who the company is. If they are willing to invest, we want to support them and grow them, as long as they are putting people in eastern Arkansas to work. We are offering classes today and have been training workers for the Hino plant for months.

Categories
Politics Politics Feature

Smorgasbord

You know it’s a political season when you have six events on your calendar within a two-hour time span — stretching geographically from downtown Memphis to east Shelby County. That was the case on Monday night of this week. Highlights from four of these:

Earnestine Hunt Dorse fund-raiser at the Best Western on Union Avenue downtown: A more-than-respectable turnout from members of the legal and political communities graced this affair for Dorse, a Memphis municipal judge who is running for Juvenile Court judge.

Interesting Twist #1: Criminal Court judge Loyce Lambert reflexively returned to her roots as a defense attorney and public defender, energetically presenting various legal scenarios by means of which Mary Winkler of Selmer, accused of killing her minister husband in a currently sensational case, might successfully defend herself at trial.

Interesting Twist #2: Criminal Court clerk candidate Vernon Johnson Sr. vigorously defended himself against a charge by Democratic primary opponent Kevin Gallagher (also present) that Johnson, who entered diversion some years ago on a felony charge of theft, was technically ineligible to pursue his current livelihood of bail bondsman.

Asked for an informal opinion, Lambert ruled in favor of Johnson — that he had purged himself of any legal recriminations by completing the diversion process and possessed the same rights as any other citizen. “We turn ’em on and turn ’em off,” she said. “He got turned back on.”

Interesting Twist #3: Dorse’s husband, Fred Dorse, one of the more thoughtful members of the local political community, laid out a somewhat counterintuitive theory as to how his wife could win in a field that includes both former U.S. attorney Veronica Coleman and retiring state senator Curtis Person.

Conventional wisdom would hold that Coleman and Judge Dorse — both women, both African Americans — would split the same voter pool, giving Person, a white Republican, the edge. Not so, said Fred Dorse: “Veronica Coleman lives up in Millington, and she has more ties with the white establishment than with the black community. It’s she and Person who’ll divide up their vote.”

J.W. Gibson fund-raiser at the Inn at Hunt Phelan on Beale: A well-connected local businessman, Gibson, a Democrat, African-American, and candidate for the County Commission, boasted a diverse and influential sponsor list that included the likes of Beth Gallagher, Ron Belz, Harold Byrd, the Rev. James Netters, Robert Spence, and former Shelby County mayor Bill Morris. He was also being promoted by former Commercial Appeal columnist Susan Adler Thorp, currently doing TV commentary and working in business and public relations.

Gibson’s position is iffy by definition, a true gamble. He could be running in a three-man primary field against Derrick Harris and longtime incumbent Walter Bailey, or, if the state Supreme Court, which held hearings on the matter last week, upholds a 1994

countywide referendum in favor of term limits, against Harris alone.

It makes a difference how the cards fall, in that influential veteran Bailey, one of three plaintiffs in the current suit, would be heavily favored if he stays in. In case he does, both Gibson and Thorp came armed with an argument against his incumbency. Bailey has had a long and distinguished career, both said, but now it’s time for fresh blood. “What can he do now that he hasn’t accomplished in the 30 years he’s had to do it?” asked Thorp rhetorically.

Regina Morrison Newman fund-raiser at Palm Court in Overton Square: Newman is one of three candidates for the Position 4 General Sessions judgeship being vacated by longtime incumbent Russell Sugarmon. Opponents so far (April 6th is the deadline for filing) include Tony Kizer and Joseph K. Wilcox.

The turnout for her affair included a number of well-known figures in the political and legal communities. Two in particular stood out: Judge Sugarmon, who is enjoined by the judicial code and by long tradition from involvement in political races and therefore issued no endorsement as such, and his wife, Gina Sugarmon, who isn’t so constrained and, as one of the organizers of the event, does in fact endorse Newman.

Another factor in Newman’s favor is her sheer ubiquity at political events of various kinds during the last year. She is almost as much a fixture at such gatherings as is Sheriff Mark Luttrell, who rarely misses anything. There is a logic to such a steady presence and something intangible as well. In a metaphysical sense, the gods seem to favor such determination, and, in a more practical way, it surely helps out in name identification down the line.

Especially in judicial races, where explicit talk about issues is limited by the nature of the judicial canon, just being there is half the battle.

Campaign kick-off for 9th District congressional candidate Ralph White at the University of Memphis Holiday Inn on Central Avenue: White, pastor of Bloomfield Full Gospel Baptist Church, is a likable, gregarious sort, and his politics reflect the breadth of his relationships.

Democrat White has, in fact, a number of Republican supporters (including campaign manager Burns Landess and former three-time congressional candidate Rod DeBerry) — a fact White met head-on in remarks to his faithful Monday night. “I’ve always been a Democrat,” he said, “but I’m not going to be the Democratic congressman from the 9th District, nor the Republican congressman from the 9th District. I’m just going to be the congressman for the 9th District!”

By virtue of his profession, White knows how to pump up a crowd and did so Monday, ending by standing at the doorway, Baptist preacher-style, and greeting each attendee on their way out.

The crowded 9th District Democratic field may be about to add two new filees. Intimates of state senator Steve Cohen say he will file for the congressional seat either Friday or Monday, and Tyson Pratcher, who has resigned his position with U.S. senator Hillary Clinton, e-mailed supporters that he would shortly be doing the same.

In sum, these four events offered a taste of the ample smorgasbord that will be offered Shelby County voters during election year 2006. A fifth event during the same brief time frame Monday night was a fund-raiser for incumbent Shelby County mayor A C Wharton at the Germantown home of Al and Ruby Bright and a sixth was a League of Women Voters meeting at the Benjamin L. Hooks Central Library on matters relating to urban sprawl — destined to be one of the key issues, both spoken and unspoken, in this year’s mayoral and County Commission races.

Other events Monday relevant to the campaign year included a forum for U.S. Senate candidates in Nashville, sponsored by the Tennessee Health Care Association, and an address on health-care issues by Governor Phil Bredesen to a joint session of the General Assembly.

The governor, who has been roundly buffeted by proponents of TennCare for his significant budget reductions in the program last year, offered an innovation of his own called “Cover Tennessee,” which would guarantee portability of health insurance for working adults and arrange for joint public-private funding assistance for low-income Tennesseans seeking coverage.

It remains to be seen how serious a challenge Democrat Bredesen will face from the Republicans, but declared GOP candidate Carl “Two Feathers” Whitaker promptly sent out an e-mail denouncing the governor’s plan as woefully insufficient, and another possible Republican entry, state senator Jim Bryson of Franklin, was reported by the Tennessee Journal to be preparing his own health-care proposals.