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News The Fly-By

Custom Made

The Cecil C. Humphreys Law School at the University of Memphis may pride itself on its academic offerings, but soon it will be able to say it has brains and beauty.

Students and faculty alike have long objected to the state of the current law-school building on the U of M’s campus. The library floods. The heat and the air conditioning don’t always work. The building was in such poor condition that, last year, it threatened the school’s accreditation.

But last week, Bill Nixon of Askew Nixon Ferguson Architects presented the early schematics for the law school’s new home at the old Customs House and current post office on Front Street. Though the project has been in discussions for the last five years, it wasn’t until recently that it became a reality. The federal government agreed to sell the property to the law school for $5.3 million, and earlier this year, the state included $41 million in the budget for the renovation of the building. The law school is expected to move in 2009.

And when Nixon said the school’s new home will “far exceed the beauty of the campus on Central,” he was probably telling the truth.

The original building, done in an Italian style with Tennessee marble, dates back to 1884. An addition was made in 1903, and the facility was renovated in 1929. But since then, it’s remained about the same.

“It fairly shouts, ‘I’m a law building,'” said James Smoot, dean of the law school. “It’s important to us to keep that look.”

The preliminary plans call for a five-story law library in the south wing. A legal clinic will be housed in the basement, along with perhaps a coffee shop or a bookstore in what was once a vault.

“The outside will remain unchanged,” said Nixon. “The interiors will be rebuilt. There will be slope flooring in some of the classrooms.”

In addition to a reading room overlooking the Mississippi River and two areas where students will have access to a rooftop patio, the plan also includes a 270-seat auditorium that will host the school’s large classes and lectures open to the general public.

And the original courtrooms — which now house post-office employees — will hear oral arguments again.

“The courtrooms are in almost the same condition they were in in 1929,” said Nixon. “[The building has] been very well kept-up. The post office has done an incredible job.”

And even after the renovation, some evidence of the postal service’s tenure in the building will remain. The drop ceilings that were added over — er, under — the stenciled ceilings, no. The institutional carpet, probably not. But some of the tinier details — the grills where customers would buy stamps, for instance — will stay.

It’s been years since anyone from the general public has been allowed into the inner sanctum of that building. But judging from the pictures, it’s an elegant, stately facility. There are elaborately carved doorknobs and hinges. Wainscoting runs down the hallways. A number of offices on the third floor still have their original fireplaces.

It might seem like everyone and their mother is heading downtown, but I can’t help think that this move is one of the most important. In terms of growing a creative class, an education node is a must, both in terms of attracting and producing young, vibrant workers. (Let’s face it, the law can get pretty creative when it wants to.) And by locating the school on Front Street, it shows that an educational institution has faith that downtown is a safe and engaging place to be. Maybe more businesses will follow.

Of course, it’s not an open-and-shut case. Student parking is still a question, but then again, student parking is a question on the main campus, too.

“The issue of parking will have to be resolved,” Nixon said in response to an audience question, “whether [parking] comes from this area or one of the garages across the street.”

Either way, I’d say it’s a smart move.

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News The Fly-By

A Secret Crush

Rich Janikowski isn’t just a criminology professor. He’s the backbone of Blue Crush, the Memphis Police Department’s (MPD) data-driven strategy that identifies concentrations of criminal activity.

Each morning, the University of Memphis professor and a team of three others enter police-incident data into a computer program. The program then creates a map, pinpointing areas where recent crime has occurred.

“The MPD does do some level of their own mapping, but they don’t have every fancy whiz-bang that we’ve got,” says Janikowski. “When they do it, they get a bunch of dots. Often, when they would look at hotspots, they’d look at it by ward. [But our program will show] that it’s just this little area of a ward that’s driving everything up. It’s an apartment complex or a street segment.”

Janikowski uses statistical programs to further focus hotspots. For example, they can determine the distance from one offense to another or what days and times offenses most often occur.

This method, dubbed Blue Crush by the MPD, has resulted in 1,477 arrests in the past nine months, and now the Shelby County sheriff’s office wants to do a similar operation. But the job is too big for the small group at the U of M responsible for compiling the data.

“We’ve been talking back and forth with the sheriff’s office, but we’re at our maximum,” says Janikowski. “Soon we’re going to be rolling out maps for every precinct [in the MPD], and there’s only so many of us.”

Currently, the MPD is trying to determine a protocol for training officers on the software so they will not have to rely on the U of M. Public Information Officer Vince Higgins says they would like to have enough officers trained by the next calendar year to work in each precinct. Currently, Blue Crush is only utilized in selected areas of the city due to a lack of trained manpower.

“The police department will need a crime analyst in every precinct and a crime analyst downtown to look at the bigger picture. You’re talking about 12 to 13 people,” says Janikowski.

The sheriff’s office does perform some level of crime mapping, though not to the extent that Blue Crush does. County Public Information Officer Steve Shular says they often use mapping to target car-crash hotspots. Then they send officers out to run radar in those places.

“It’s not like years ago when officers would go out to these honey-holes and catch speeders, say over a certain hill where people might naturally speed,” says Shular. “Now our traffic enforcement efforts are geared in places where we have the most accidents.”

Other cities are also looking at the Blue Crush model. Next month, members of Detroit’s police department will be in Memphis to observe the MPD’s model in action. The city of New York has been using a similar model for the past 15 years, reducing their overall crime rate by 70 percent.

“[New York City has] reduced crime tremendously, going from a time when everyone was scared of New York to New York being an incredibly safe place,” says Janikowski. “People say, why isn’t it down 70 percent here? It took them 15 years.”

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Opinion The Last Word

The Rant

After spending Sunday morning as a political-junkie couch potato, I’ve decided that the best way to gauge the B.S. factor coming out of the White House is to watch spokesman and counselor to the president

Dan Bartlett. You can tell how much at a loss he is to answer a question truthfully — or answer it at all — by how far under his front teeth he rolls his upper lip. I mean, sometimes it downright disappears and he looks like a dog I once had that used to do that when he wanted to go outside to go to the bathroom. And did Bartlett ever have reason to curl his lip last weekend! Poor thing. It looked like everyone in the White House had gone into seclusion, leaving him as the only Bush-Cheney puppet left to go in front of the cameras. And it hasn’t been a very good couple of weeks for the Evil Duo. First, there was the Clinton interview on Fox News. Ouch. If Chris Wallace could roll his upper lip under like Dan Bartlett, it would have disappeared completely. But at least it has given the geniuses at Fox plenty of fodder for their “A-List” roundtable discussions. Just what the “A” stands for I’m not quite so sure, but I have my own ideas about what it should stand for (no offense to the local Fox-13 station). The great part about the Clinton interview is that Condoleezza Rice disputed what Clinton said. I cannot wait to see what happens if she decides to go up against him. I wonder how long she would be able to sit there alternating that vacuous smile on her face with the concerned furrowed-brow look and make up those answers that contain no sense at all. I think she is becoming her boss. And then there’s the Bob Woodward book, State of Denial, which had everyone in the White House running around like little chipmunks trying to figure out how to respond to its allegations that the administration ignored multiple warnings about a terrorist attack. What gets me is that that news has been out there for a year. Bush was given a report outlining how bin Laden was going to attack America with airplanes and that he spent the rest of that afternoon fishing. And now Rice says she doesn’t remember having a meeting with the then-head of the CIA about the threats? She doesn’t remember? I wonder if she remembers how much those Italian leather shoes were that she was buying while half the population of New Orleans was facing the Katrina floods. But she’s always been a little slow that way. And then there’s the secret NIE report that was leaked, outlining just how bad the situation is in Iraq: At least a couple of news sources compared it to the “redacted” report released by the White House telling us how great things are. And to top it all off, Republican representative Mark Foley of Florida resigned because he got caught sending sexually charged e-mails to teenage male pages. And then it came out (no pun intended) that many of his Republican cohorts, including the House leaders, might have known about it for some time and did nothing. And now, of course, Foley has checked himself into an alcohol rehabilitation program, claiming that the disease of alcoholism made him do it. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I think it was boner-time at the congressional office building that led him to do it. So we have an administration that pretty much ignored specific warnings about the terrorist attack or now says they can’t remember the meeting where they were warned. We have Condoleezza saying that Bill Clinton is lying about it, when we know he’s not. We have a secret report outlining what the real situation in Iraq is (like we didn’t already know that). And we have a drunk old Republican queen in Congress sending out dirty e-mails to teenage boys. When, again, are the upcoming mid-term elections?

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News

An Odd Number

Memphis Mayor Willie Herenton this week announced that — somehow — the city had acquired a budget surplus of $31 million.

Something about that particular figure seemed familiar to us, and sure enough, it seems to come up a lot in the news these days.

• Last week, a Cook County (Illinois) grand jury awarded a large settlement to the family of a man who died after a drugstore gave him the wrong prescription. The amount: $31 million.

• Last week, a Chinese food company named the Tiens Group pledged 260 yuan to needy families and organizations in China. 260 yuan equals, yep, $31 million.

• Last week, a Spanish company, Barcelo Hotels and Resorts, recently purchased the luxury hotel in Puerto Vallarta that was used to film the classic Night of the Iquana. Purchase price: exactly $31 million.

• Last week, the U.S. government announced it was giving some rather generous grants to schools in 19 states. The total amount of the grants: $31 million.

• Last week, the Alkek Foundation — which sounds like a branch of the Dharma Initiative from LOST — donated money to Baylor University to fund biomedical research. Albert and Margaret Alkek’s gift: $31 million.

And on and on.

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News

Ouch

You couldn’t make up this headline: “Flying Elvis Suffers Broken Pelvis.” But alas, it’s true, much to the dismay of Paul Moran, the member of the 10-member skydiving team that “misjudged” his landing at the grand opening of the Glacier Peaks Casino in Browning, Montana. “The Flying Elvi” are 10 Elvis impersonators who also skydive. But don’t worry, Paul seems to be doing just fine.

Read all about it here.

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News

Very Crafty

The Pink Palace Crafts Fair starts today and runs through Sunday. Now in its 36th year, the fair features all types of artisans working in wood, wax, glass, metal, fibers, and more. There’s also live music, demonstrations, food, and other attractions.

For more information, go here.

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News

Elvis Cup Guy Latest

Let no one accuse Wade Jones, “The Elvis Cup Guy,” of ever passing up an opportunity, however inane.

Jones’ claim to fame is styerfoam cup of water that he says Elvis took a sip from at one of his last concerts. Jones sold some of the water in an auction on eBay. Recently, he put up for auction a bagel he said looked like Mel Gibson.

Now this: a corndog that looks like scandal-ridden congressman Mark Foley. (As a bonus, he’s offering a photo of Foley and entertainer Wayne Newton.)

We can’t see the corndog’s resemblance to Foley. See if you can here.

Categories
Politics Politics Feature

Shades of O.J. and Time: Dark Deeds in the Corker-Ford Race

We’ll let this item (from Rick Maynard’s The Freedonian blog) speak for itself: “’They have darkened Harold Ford’s image to make a racist statement,’” Tennessee Democratic Party Chairman Bob Tuke told the Knoxville News Sentinel in reference to the photograph of Representative Harold Ford Jr. (TN-9) used in a recent piece of direct mail distributed by the Tennessee Republican Party on behalf of the Bob Corker Senate campaign.

“The campaign literature in question features a very dark image of Harold Ford Jr. next to a solicitation of “emergency contributions” for the Corker campaign.

“The image in question is an edited version of a photograph taken on June 29, 2004 when he met with the staff at Baptist Hospital to discuss healthcare issues. The original photograph can be found on Rep. Ford’s congressional website.

Flyer: Below is the progression from the original to the version used by the Corker camaign.

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News

Singer’s Shooter gets 36 Years

The man who shot singer Marc Cohn last year during a carjacking in Denver was sentenced to 36 years for attempted murder. Cohn is best known for his 1991 hit “Walking in Memphis,” but he did not deserve to get shot in the head for it.

Read all about it here.

Categories
News

Judge Dismisses Election Suit

It took a while, but after hearing several days of testimony in the Shelby County election-challenge suit, special presiding judge Donald P. Harris of Franklin granted defendants’ motion for dismissal in Chancery Court on Thursday, making happy four Republican clerks whose election was challenged by their Democratic opponents.

In his ruling, Judge Harris suggested that the local election “system” could stand revision but said there was insufficient evidence to alter the narrow election victories of (l to r) Criminal Court clerk Bill Key, Probate Court clerk Chris Thomas, Juvenile Court clerk Steve Stamson, and Shelby County clerk Debbie Stamson. They were challenged, respectively, by Vernon Johnson, Sondra Becton, Shep Wilbun, and Otis Jackson.

Harris ruled that garbled ID numbers and alternate addesses for several hundred voters were not by themselves grounds for continuing the litigation.

One bystander, State Rep. Ulysses Jones, commented wryly, “What’s the difference between several hundred and 13?” His reference was to the number of disqualified votes that resulted in the voiding of last year’s special election in state Senate District 29.