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Politics Politics Feature

POLITICS: Peete’s Last Take

Last Wednesday night, on the eve of the Willie Herenton-Joe Frazier faux fight for charity, and on the eve, too, of what would turn out to be a dark day for his career and reputation, city councilman Rickey Peete was an attendee at a pre-fight gala at the Hard Rock Café on Beale Street.

Brimming over with bonhomie and self-confidence, Peete sat down at a table containing two reporters and assorted pols and discoursed for well over an hour on a variety of subjects, mostly political. The ground rules of the conversation included an off-the-record provision; so the substance of what Peete said will have to go undetailed.

Suffice it that Peete displayed good humor and considerable acumen about both recent election results and the future prospects of various political figures — including himself and, hypothetically, members of his family.

No, he didn’t see it coming.

When last seen by this reporter, he was standing in the foyer of the Hard Rock eagerly perusing an article in last week’s Flyer in which the mayoral chances of various potential contenders, including himself, were estimated.

After his arrest on bribery charges Thursday, that may turn out to have been Peete’s last opportunity — for a while, at least — to think optimistically about the future.

 

  A placeholder or somebody for the long haul? That, says county commissioner Steve Mulroy, is the key decision — or should be the key decision — facing members of the Shelby County Commission as they contemplate the choice of a successor to state senator Steve Cohen, the 9th District congressman-elect who resigned from his District 31 Senate seat over the weekend.

 Commissioner George Flinn thinks precedent requires an interim appointee who won’t run in a special election next year. And one candidate who agrees is his son Shea Flinn, a Democrat unlike his Republican father and a onetime candidate for the legislature. 

 Other hopefuls, like former Cohen campaign manager Kevin Gallagher and ex-city attorney Robert Spence, want the interim appointment as a stepping stone to that election.

 Two other possible aspirants, state representative Beverley Marrero and longtime activist David Upton, have been having discussions as to which one of them should enter the sweepstakes. “He can just sit down” is the dismissive commentary on Upton from influential commission newcomer Sidney Chism, who from time to time has been on opposite sides politically.

 Chism says he is most favorable to Gallagher and Spence but is open to others.

 The commission, which officially advertised the vacancy Monday, has set Wednesday, December 13th, as a date for interviewing candidates. It will choose someone at its next regular meeting on Monday, December 18th.

Cohen, who held an open house for constituents at his former campaign headquarters on Union Saturday, received favorable mention in a summation of the political year for Roll Call by veteran political reporter Stuart Rothenberg, who included the congressman-elect prominently in a category entitled “Non-Incumbent Candidates I Liked … Who Won.”

Cohen was also listed as the right answer to a trivia question in Congressional Quarterly: “Who delivered a eulogy at the funeral of rock musician Warren Zevon, known for the hit “Werewolves of London?” Cohen and Zevon, who died in 2003, had been close friends for a decade after meeting during the runup to Cohen’s 1994 gubernatorial bid.) 

Two members of the Ford family made one of Rothenberg’s lists as well. Outgoing Democratic congressman Harold Ford Jr., who lost his U.S. Senate bid to Republican Bob Corker, was included in a column headed “Best Unsuccessful Candidate/Campaign.”

The congressman’s brother Jake Ford, who attempted unsuccessfully to succeed him, running as an independent against Cohen and Republican Mark White, made a list, too, one entitled “Worst Showing by a Famous Name.”

And Tennessee’s now senior senator, Republican Lamar Alexander, who is up for reelection in two years, figured in a Rothenberg list, too, entitled “Dumbest Press Release of the Year.” Rothenberg cited this one: “Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, on Senator Lamar Alexander: ‘Alexander Suffers First Setback of 2008 Campaign.’”

 Nobody was more surprised Monday than Tipton County Republican Jeff Ward, founder of TeamGOP, to see his grass-roots organization listed by the state Election Registry as having made $1,000 donations to the state Senate campaigns of two Democrats: Ophelia Ford in District 29 and Reginald Tate in District 33. 

The problem, said Ward, was that TeamGOP, famous (or notorious) for its hard-line Republicanism, never gave a dime to the two Democrats.

What was it, then — a practical joke? “No,” said Ward. “Not a joke. A crime.” It was a case of money laundering, he suggested, in which somebody contributed over the limit and the extra amount got assigned arbitratrily to a list of political organizations pulled off the Web.

The bottom line: Ward will insist on an investigation by the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation and file charges if necessary.

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News

Dana Buchman Comes Home

Former Memphian Dana Buchman is one of four fashion designers — the others are Anne Klein, Ellen Tracey, LaFayette — anchoring the re-launched petite section at Saks.

Six months ago, buyers for Saks decided to do away with their petite’s section, citing lagging sales. Scores of diminutive women complained and the store listened.

Buchman, interviewed by The New York Times, says she likes to dress real women and that making clothes for petites feels like coming home.

Wait, does that mean she’s calling Memphians shorties?

Read the full story.

Categories
Sports Sports Feature

FROM MY SEAT: A Hull of a Night

I’ve long been convinced that a healthy passion for sports is a key ingredient to staying young. The vigor, suspense, emotion, and drama of the games we play are a healthy booster to both mind and body. Play them — and cheer them — and age becomes a much less imposing antagonist. If my belief holds true, 2006 has turned into a proverbial fountain that will do for me what Ponce de Leon so wished Florida might do for his band of explorers.

I grew up with heartfelt loyalty to a single franchise in each of America’s four “major” team sports. During football season, it’s been the Dallas Cowboys (thank you, Roger Staubach). This affection made it easy for me to adopt the nascent Dallas Mavericks when they drafted my college basketball hero, Dale Ellis, in 1983. And it was my baseball blood — St. Louis Cardinal red now for four generations in my family — that led me to adopt the National Hockey League’s St. Louis Blues shortly after my family’s move to New England in 1982. (This was survival, folks. Between all the Canadiens and Bruins fans in Vermont, I had to make up for pronouncing Guy LaFleur’s first name as though it rhymes with “buy”

Considering the four corners of my sports-cheering foundation, the current calendar year has been, beyond question, the happiest of my life. The Mavericks beat their longtime nemesis — the San Antonio Spurs — on their way to the franchise’s first appearance in the NBA Finals. In August, I witnessed the induction of not one, but two Dallas Cowboys (Troy Aikman and Rayfield Wright) into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in Canton, Ohio. Then in October, pure bliss: St. Louis won its first World Series in 24 years, and the 10th in franchise history.

Which leaves you wondering (if you’re paying attention): what about that hockey team? Well, I’m taking care of this part of the equation Tuesday night, when I’ll be at the Scottrade Center in St. Louis to see the jersey retirement of my Staubach on skates (my Wizard on ice?), Brett Hull.

The St. Louis Blues are in recovery. Having reached the NHL playoffs for an astounding 25 straight years, the team collapsed last season, a victim of< the wiped-out 2004-05 season and a drawn-out sale of the team by one Bill Laurie (he of the Wal-Mart family and the 1973 Memphis State Tiger NCAA basketball runners-up). They finished with the league’s worst record last spring, and only appear to be marginally better this season under new owner Dave Checketts and new team president John Davidson. Which makes memories of a certain Hall of Fame-bound right wing — who wore number 16 for 10 years in St. Louis — all the more precious. With Wayne Gretzky and Mario Lemieux still very much in their primes, Hull lit up the all-too-dim world of hockey when he scored 72 goals in 1989-90, then followed that season up with 86 more and an MVP trophy in 1991. While he didn’t win the Stanley Cup until he moved on to, ahem, Dallas (and later, Detroit), Hull gained a popularity in St. Louis that to that point had been reserved for the likes of Stan Musial and Ozzie Smith. His 527 goals in a Blues uniform are 175 more than the second-most prolific scorer in team history. Like Musial and Ozzie, Hull will have his moment of honor Tuesday night, one where his number will be permanently reserved for story telling and legend making. And I’ll be there, cheering the Golden Brett like I would if he, one last time, drilled a goalie-killing slapshot into the back of an opponent’s net. The four-hour journey north is the least I can do for a decade of winter memories. Two championship series (one victorious), a pair of Hall of Fame inductions, and a number retirement. I’m counting my sports blessings with each keystroke. And wondering — as my heart thumps to a beat I’m not likely to feel again anytime soon — where do I turn in 2007?

Categories
News

Council Will Take Up Issue of Resignations

The Memphis City Council will decide Tuesday whether to call for the resignation of members Rickey Peete and Edmund Ford.

Ford and Peete were named in criminal complaints last week alleging that they took bribes to support a billboard proposal. Both men have given no indication so far that they will resign, and the council can censure them or ask for their resignations but cannot vote them off.

Councilman Scott McCormick on Monday joined colleagues calling for Peete and Ford to resign. McCormick and Carol Chumney cast the only no votes against the billboard proposal, which was passed in October on a 9-2 vote after the Land Use Control Board and planning office opposed it.

“The public’s trust and the integrity of the council far supersedes any individual council member,” said McCormick. “We have many serious and important issues facing the city of Memphis that will require the full and uncompromised attention of everyone.”

He said the scheduled vote on annexation of Bridgewater and Southeast Extended will probably be put off until next year.

McCormick, Jack Sammons, Chumney, Tom Marshall, and E. C. Jones have so far indicated that they would support a resignation resolution. Marshall also said he will sponsor a censure resolution.

City Council Chairman TaJuan Mitchell could remove Peete and Ford from their committee assignments and chairmanships. Peete has already said he will step down as chairman of the board of the Center City Commission.

“Quite frankly, I don’t believe the public’s faith will be restored if the only action we take is to censure these men,” McCormick said.

Peete and Ford are black, and so far no black council members have joined in the call for resignation. The executive committee meets at 9 a.m.

The billboard proposal was for a planned development and two billboards north of Interstate 240 near Prescott. The applicant was attorney William H. Thomas. He has made other interstate billboard applications to the council and also unsuccessfully sought approval for a warehouse in Whitehaven.

Thomas did not return calls seeking comment.

Categories
News

Three 6 Mafia Settles Three-Year Dispute

Memphis rap group Three 6 Mafia has finally reached a settlement — the details of which have not been disclosed to the public — in the case of a fan who was supposedly beaten during a particularly rowdy rendition of “Let’s Start a Riot” at a club in Pittsburgh in 2003. The Associated Press reported late last week that Ramone Williams was financially compensated by the rappers for the toe-up compilation of injuries that allegedly resulted from lyric-to-action-driven fans at the concert. Williams’ physical damage from the incident includes a broken jaw from a foot in the face.

The rappers will now presumably tell fans not to take the song literally before performing it live.

Categories
Sports Sports Feature

Rodney Carney the Magnificent?

Stephen A. Smith can be a little grating on the ears when it comes to his NBA commentary, but in his latest column in the Philadelphia Inquirer, Smith argues that the future of his hometown Sixers may well rest on the shoulders of former University of Memphis All-America Rodney Carney. Read Stephen A.’s take here.

Categories
Politics Politics Feature

GADFLY: Time to Pull the Plug

Imagine this scenario: a wacko takes hostages, and instead
of negotiating with the police to release them (and surrender himself), starts
killing them instead. How long do you think it will take for the authorities to
take control of the situation, one way or another? They don’t wait for
additional hostages to be killed, and when they’re told by the hostage-taker
that they can go **** themelves, the negotiations end and the end game begins.

That is exactly where we are with George Bush and Iraq.
Bush has taken this country hostage, and, as he has made perfectly clear, he
isn’t interested in negotiating our release. Every day Bush continues in his
pig-headed intransigence, more Americans die, as do many more Iraqis. Instead of
acknowledging what almost everyone in a position to know (Kofi Annan, Colin
Powell, NBC, etc.) is telling him, namely that Iraq is in the midst of a civil
war, he continues to deny that fact, probably because the conventional wisdom is
that our military does’t need to be in the middle of a civil war. He also
refuses to recognize the need to pull out of Iraq, despite the clear message the
voters of this country sent him on November 7th, namely, that it’s time for us
to go. Sixty percent of Americans, in a recent poll, favored withdrawal of our
troops. But if allowed to, Bush will “stay the course” until who knows how many
more thousands will be killed or maimed. As we’ve recently learned, he doesn’t
really care what anyone else thinks about this. He ignored the
recently-disclosed, last-minute, face-saving recommendations of his secretary of
defense, and he’s even telegraphed his intentions to ignore the recommendations
of the Baker-Hamilton commission. Damn the torpedoes; full speed ahead!

Now we see that Bush (and his puppet, Maliki) are playing
for time, with their latest announcement, at their laugable “summit” in Amman,
that the handover of security responsibility to the Iraqis will be “speeded up,”
with a target date of June 2007. But anyone who’s followed the progress of the
“Iraqis stand up so the U.S. can stand down,” knows this latest announcement is
a ploy intended to allow Bush to continue to pursue his failed policies, and, in
part, a subterfuge for the fact that, one way or another, American troops are
going to have to be withdrawn from Iraq. Every piece of information we’ve gotten
about the success of “standing the Iraqis up” has indicated this is a fool’s
errand. The Pentagon has issued conflicting reports about the number of Iraqis
who have been trained, culminating in its recent decision to stop reporting that
number. Recent published reports indicate that the training component of the
mission has been badly mismanaged, and that the Iraqis are not being trained at
anything close to an acceptable rate, primarily because they are untrainable,
but also because of the substantial disincentive to Iraqis (i.e., death) to
serve in their army and police. The best estimates of how long it may take for
the Iraqis to handle their own security indicate it may be as long as 10 years,
and the Iraqis have no incentive to take over their own security as long as Bush
continues to intone statements like he did recently, namely that we’ll be there
as long as the Iraqis want us to be.

So, what to do. The answer is simple. Pull the plug on the
hostage taker. De-fund the war.  This is the only way the Congress will
effectuate the mandate it was given in the mid-term election. Oh sure, we can go
through all the machinations of waiting for the Baker Commission report, gnash
our teeth while the Democrats try to reconcile their differing opinions on how
to end our involvement in Iraq, and watch in exasperation as Bush and Cheney
continue to throw good military people after bad foreign policy, but why should
we. Bush has no intention of pulling troops out of Iraq (no “graceful exit” for
him), apparently oblivious to the outcome of the election and, presumably, to
what the newly Democratic Congress has to say about it. So, we can assume that
even if the Democrats formulate a unified policy about Iraq, and even if that
policy is for a “phased withdrawal,” the president, who has the last word on
troop deployment, will ignore what the Democratic congress has to say.

That leaves the Congress only one alternative: it must
exercise the only authority it has in wartime, namely to de-fund the war in
Iraq, and it must do so sooner than later, before too many more American troops
are killed in the pursuit of this misadventure. The unfortunate fact is, George
Bush, as the commander in chief, controls our military, and its deployment. If
he wants to keep our troops in Iraq indefinitely, he can, and there’s very
little we, as citizens, can do about it. But the fact also is that while he may
control our troops, we, through our elected representatives,  control the purse
strings for the war, and we must demand that they cut off funding for this crazy
war. The argument against de-funding the war is that it endangers our troops.
Not as much, I suggest, as keeping them there. But, as we saw in Vietnam, when
de-funding was the only thing that finally extricated us from a war a similarly
intransigent president, at the time, refused to recognize, funding can be
withdrawn in a manner that doesn’t threaten our troops.

The time has come to take control of the situation in Iraq
away from a president who has obviously become disconnected from reality. End
the hostage-taking now.

Categories
Politics Politics Feature

The, Er, Fight’s Over, Thank God

It was blessedly brief. It was bizarre. It was for a good
cause.

But is it a good cause when a proud man, Joe Frazier,
former heavyweight champion of the world, a boxer of unbelievable courage, plays the fool? When he staggers across a ring on crippled knees, crippled back, and with a mind that was thinking who knows what to trade three minutes of pulled love taps with the mayor of Memphis?

Sorry, it was like watching Johnny Unitas at 62 trying to
throw a 60-yard spiral or Larry Finch in his later years trying to hit a
three-pointer. It was borderline indecent, especially in the third “round” when
Frazier stumbled, tumbled, and nearly fell through the ropes and out of the
ring. Herenton, as gentlemanly as he is athletic, immediately grasped the
situation and barely laid a glove on the former champ. It was like watching a
grandfather playing with his infant grandchildren.

The mayor, aka “The Duke,” wearing electric blue trunks
with a white stripe, white shoes, and high white socks, looked fit, rangy, and
ready for some actual sparring. He danced backwards, ducked in, and generally
looked like a boxer. Frazier, wearing green and yellow, looked ready for a bed
at the Campbell Clinic.

The money raised from the event at The Peabody will go to
benefit the drug court. It should not be repeated.

John Branston

Categories
Music Music Features

Justin’s Ring(tones)

Justin Timberlake not only brought SexyBack to the pop charts, but to cell phones worldwide. When Nielsen RingScan unveiled its new mastertone sales data this week, Timberlake’s “SexyBack” was the top-selling mastertone to date, with 1.1 million units sold.

What’s a mastertone, you ask? It’s a ringtone comprised of an actual sound recording rather than the squeaky polyphonic ringtones — or synthesized reproductions of songs — that dominated the cell phone industry just a few years ago.

Akon’s “Smack That” came in at number 2, with 988,000 sold and Hinder’s “Lips of an Angel” was number 3 with 986,000 sold. But there’s more good news for our favorite former boy-bander: “My Love,” the second single off Timberlake’s new album, came in at number 6, selling over 690,000 mastertones.

Categories
Sports Sports Feature

Knicks Beat Grizzlies, 98-90

(AP) – Eddy Curry scored 26 points and the Knicks beat the Memphis Grizzlies 98-90 on Monday night for just their second home victory of the season.

David Lee added a season-high 20 points, teaming with Curry to wear out the Grizzlies’ frontcourt. Curry, who had his career-best seventh straight game with 20 or more points, grabbed 15 rebounds before fouling out, and the Knicks shot a season-best 56.3 percent from the field.

Quentin Richardson also had 20 points and Stephon Marbury finished with 16 points and six assists.

The Knicks snapped a four-game losing streak at Madison Square Garden, where they are 2-7. Coach Isiah Thomas said his team’s home woes were mental, with players worried too much about boos from the home fans.