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News

City Attorney Upheld as Chancellor Evans Deals Rebuff to Lowery

Chancellor Walter Evans made what was a Solomonic decision in the strict sense Wednesday afternoon. Declining to split the middle on the issue of city attorney Elbert Jefferson’s suit against acting mayor Myron Lowery, Evans upgraded Jefferson’s restraining order into a fully-fledged injunction which prevents Lowery from arbitrarily firing him or apparently even suspending him for anything short of demonstrated “mis-feasance,mal-feasance, or non-feasance.”.

The decision came after a four-hour hearing in which Jefferson, Lowery, and city council attorney Allen Wade all testified about various aspects of the case.

JB

His judgment was based, Evans said, on city charter provisions which clearly require a majority vote by the council to approve the kind of termination which Lowery tried to impose on Jefferson within minutes of becoming mayor pro tem last Friday. As the bashful-seeming city attorney explained from the stand Wednesday, he had barely finished applauding the conclusion of Lowery’s ceremony when the new mayor approached him and offered him a choice between alternate employment and an immediate firing.

Lowery, who would confiscate Jefferson’s building pass on the spot and have him ushered from City Hall by a policeman, announced his action at an impromptu press conference with members of the media. That Lowery’s abrupt action, apparently meant to demonstrate his take-charge attitude toward his new job, had backfired became evident in the next few days when a negative reaction developed among the council members who would have to approve such a move.

Essentially the council’s six other black members formed a bloc to oppose Lowery, who, an African American himself, had pointedly joined the council’s six whites in several recent 7-6 votes that resulted in the declaration of a mayoral vacancy and the calling of a special election. The six blacks were all, to one degree or another, supportive of outgoing mayor Willie Herenton’s withholding a formal letter of resignation in an apparent effort to maintain control over the time and mode of his departure.

Among the issues debated by Jefferson, Lowery, and their legal teams was that of whether the tenure of a department head like Jefferson should be regarded as co-terminous with the period of service of the appointing mayor or with the full term to which that mayor was entitled. Evans seemed to opt for the latter sense, or at least not for the narrow interpretation desired by Lowery.

Not only was the verdict a total victory for Jefferson, Lowery was even prohibited from impeding with the city attorney’s conduct of his job. Left in limbo was the question of how much authority could be exercised by Veronica Coleman Davis, the former U.S. attorney whom Lowery had intended to appoint city attorney in Jefferson’s stead. Coleman Davis had been named instead as deputy city attorney.

JB

Somewhat valiantly, Robert Cox, the lawyer who functioned as Lowery’s hearing attorney Wednesday, attempted in an impromptu press conference afterward to represent the outcome as a victory for the mayor pro tem,contending that Lowery, too, had always maintained that council approval was necessary to terminate Jefferson. On the stand, Lowery had characterized the matter as a chicken-and-egg question in which his action in firing the city attorney should logically have come first. “I acted properly,” he said.

A truer indication of the Lowery team’s reaction had come when Cox and co-attorney Dale Tuttle first emerged from post-hearing consultations, along with Jefferson’s legal team, in Chancellor Evans’ chambers. Cox and Tuttle had each touched their client’s elbow softly in what could only be seen as a consoling gesture. Then Evans made his ruling.

Most political observers had seen Lowery — who, along with the rest of the field in the mayoral race, has been polling far below the presumed leader, Shelby County Mayor A C Wharton — as being in a Catch-22. His initial series of bold actions, including his attempted firing of Jefferson, were seen as the means by which Lowery could demonstrate his determination and prowess as an activist chief executive and thereby gain on Wharton.

Instead, the mayor pro tem — who declined to say whether he would pursue Jefferson’s termination but likely won’t — seems to have been handed a setback that will force him into a caretaker’s role and limit his potential in the special election, scheduled now for October 15.

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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

A Sneak Peek at Ballet Memphis’ Connections: Food

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  • Basil Childers

Normally, mixing choreography with cuisine might result in an on-stage food fight, but for Ballet Memphis and several local chefs, the collaboration results in a mouthwatering and visually stunning event. This October, for the fifth year in a row, Ballet Memphis is presenting Connections: Food, a fund-raiser that features four original dishes from local chefs and complementary original dance works.

“The preparation of food is similar to creating a new dance work,” says Dorothy Gunther Pugh, Ballet Memphis founder. “Chefs work with color and design, they have to anticipate what people want, and they have to create a menu that makes sense and fits together.”

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News

A’blogging We Will Go

Good stuff in the staff blogs today: an Adam Sandler Movies List in Sing All Kinds; an Orpheum sneak-peek at Intermission Impossible; a possible post office closing from In The Bluff; legal troubles in City Beat; and a whole lot more.

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Sing All Kinds We Recommend

The Movies List: Adam Sandler

Chris Herrington was on assignment this week (I’ve always wanted to say that!), so Chris Vernon asked if I would fill in for the “Movies” segment on Vernon’s show.

I’m an avid listener, but there’s a reason I write for a living rather than work in broadcast journalism. That said, this one was a no-brainer: It was on.

You can hear how it went down yesterday if you click on that Vernon link and go to the MixPod feature on the website. Keep clicking back on the track listing and you’ll eventually get to me. Each segment is its own track.

I took a bit of abuse from the host and callers, but I was expecting it, and, I must admit, thirsting for it a little. Baptism by fire, they say.

Without further ado, the top five Adam Sandler movies:

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Sing All Kinds We Recommend

Where’s MSNBC?

196d/1249486787-keith-olbermann.jpgThe short answer, for those who haven’t figured it out on their own, is that MSNBC has moved to Comcast channel 81. Well, sort of. It’s on channel 81 for customers with the kind of digital converter box that Comcast told its lucky customers in countless pre-digital-switch advertisements they wouldn’t be needing. For basic expanded cable viewers without a box, MSNBC has been moved to Channel 105. That means that fans of Keith Olbermann and Rachel Maddow who currently only have expanded basic are probably going to require an upgrade. The big question, obviously, is “Why only MSNBC?” Why not CNN? Why not Fox News?

Comcast customers who call the cable giant’s Memphis office to find out why they now need a digital box to keep watching MSNBC have been getting answers ranging from “Government regulation” to “We’re phasing out analog cable.” After being told there was nobody in management who could field questions and explain the decision in detail, one customer service rep told the Flyer that the decision to move away from expanded basic and into cable box-only territory was made by the network. MSNBC, she said, thought it would be “beneficial.” MSNBC says none of this true.

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Intermission Impossible Theater

Invest in “Memphis.” The Orpheum gives locals a sneak peek at a not-yet-opened Broadway musical.

fc76/1249499420-memphismusical.jpgOn Monday evening Orpheum CEO Pat Halloran reminded an audience he’d recently plied with free booze and finger food that investors lucky enough to back Andrew Lloyd Webber‘s first shows were all probably driving Maseratis today. Halloran’s line earned a chuckle or two at an investor-recruiting party the Orpheum hosted for playwright Joe DiPietro, Bon Jovi keyboard player David Bryan, and the creative team behind Memphis, a new musical slated to open on Broadway this fall. But the Orpheum exec’s fantasies about fast cars and the glamorous lifestyles of Broadway investors didn’t capture the audience’s imagination nearly so much as the talent on display at the event. Here’s a clip of Bryan playing two songs with the stars of Memphis and an intro by DiPietro.

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News

Proposed Post Office Closing?

In an effort to save some of the $7 billion it expects to lose this year, the U.S. Postal Service has proposed closing a number of post offices nationwide.

They’re currently reviewing 3,200 branches, and ABC had a list of 700 slated for possible closures.

I know, you don’t care about all that. You just me to get to it and tell you if your favorite post office is going to close.

Well, it might … if it’s Lee Finance Station.

It looks like that’s the George W. Lee post office at the corner of Mississippi Blvd. and Crump. It’s a little slip of a post office, really, and used to be right next to a fire station that has since been torn down. (I think. I may do a drive by a little later to confirm.)

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Opinion

Everybody Goes Legal

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Today’s troubling trend: Throwing problems into the courts that ought to be resolved by leadership, compromise, debate, common sense, and a vote in a public meeting by elected officials.

The latest for-instance is the hearing Wednesday afternoon in Chancery Court over Myron Lowery’s authority to replace Elbert Jefferson as city attorney.

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Sports

Sports Boom or Sports Hype?

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Tennis is booming. Skateboarding is booming. Lacrosse is booming. So are soccer, Ultimate Frisbee, cycling, rock-climbing, extreme kayaking, running, yoga, crew, ju-jitsu, and Pilates. Oh, and football and basketball are doing pretty good. And Americans of all ages are really getting in shape.

Except they’re not. And we’re not. At least not all sports and certainly not all Memphians.

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Sports

A Runner’s Lament

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Paul Sax teaches tennis and running, played college tennis, and won the Memphis Marathon in 1987. He would still be one of the best two-sport athletes in Memphis — if he’d trained differently.

To see our Q&A with Paul Sax, click here.