Month: April 2010
Calling Cohen on Gay Rights
- Steve Cohen
On Tuesday, April 27th, Congressman Steve Cohen will host a Telephone Town Hall meeting, basically a virtual town hall conducted via conference call.
Gay rights advocate Tommy Simmons is asking supporters of the federal Employment Non-Discrimination Act (ENDA) and those backing the repeal of the military’s Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell (DADT) policy to call in and urge Cohen to take more action on issues.
Though Cohen is a co-sponsor of ENDA and legislation asking for the repeal of DADT, Simmons says “at this critical time, simply supporting the legislation is not enough. He must aggressively fight to secure passage.”
Register here to join the conference call. For more information about the call-in campaign, check out this Facebook event.
- burgerbusiness.com
Well, “glamorous” isn’t the word I would use to describe Memphis, be it the city or the hamburger from the new Glamburger line from the Cheesecake Factory, but to each his own.
The Memphis burger (pictured top left) is a beef patty topped with shredded pork, melted cheddar, cole slaw, pickles, and mayonnaise.
Other place-inspired Glamburgers: Sonoma Burger (herbed goat cheese, mushrooms, oven-roasted tomatoes, arugula, red onion, and mayonnaise) and Monterey Cheeseburger (avocado, melted jack cheese, arugula, red onion, and honey-mustard mayonnaise).
Urban blight of one kind or another is suddenly very much on the agenda of local politics. In the last few days, two significant independent initiatives have issued from office-holders on the city council or county commission, and Shelby County government itself is now involved in an overall program entitled “Clean Green Shelby.”
“A meeting on the rat problem in Memphis” has been called by Shelby County Commissioner Mike Carpenter and Memphis City Council member Jim Strickland for the Memphis Botanic Gardens this Thursday night, April 29.
And county commissioner Steve Mulroy held a press conference Sunday on the site of the once thriving, now deserted and dilapidated Marina Cove apartment complex on Winchester Ave. in Hickory Hill, calling for its immediate demolition.
- •RATS
- JB
- Carey, Mulroy, and Casey at Marina Cove
- •MARINA COVE : Commissioner Mulroy, who has worked on the Marina Cove issue with Councilman Harold Collins, said the property has become “a breeding ground for vermin of six legs, four legs, and two legs” and called for concerted city and county action to come up with demolition costs — estimated as “between a million and a half and two million dollars.”
- •CLEAN GREEN SHELBY : Interim Shelby County Mayor Joe Ford, who convened a meeting week before last of area environmental activists, held a press conference at Shelby Farms last week on “Earth Day” to announce his “Clean Green Shelby” initiative.
: Strickland said that “over the last 12 months or so,” he had received numerous complaints from residents of his Midtown/East Memphis district complaining of rat infestation. “One from a lady who found a live rat in her toilet,” Strickland said. He added that he had experienced “three rats in the last year and a half” at his own residence, off Poplar Avenue in the University of Memphis area.
He said his pest control service-person had given the name of “Rat City” to the upscale Poplar corridor — although he acknowledged that other areas of the city had perhaps even more serious rat problems.
Strickland said he had teamed up with Carpenter to seek a solution to the problem because the commissioner represented essentially the same geographic area and because “the county is actually in charge of rat abatement.”
The councilman said this week’s meeting was meant to inform the community of activity over the past 9 months of an ad hoc committee formed by himself and Carpenter, who chairs it, and to solicit community reaction.
“Currently, all of us pay 75 cents a month for vector control on our MLGW bill,” Strickland said. “But the Health Department is very clear that they are not exterminators.” Any more serious action would involve additional costs and would require action by the council and/or commission.
Those costs could ultimately be recovered from the property’s absentee owners in California, said Mulroy, who proposed a lawsuit to force the property into receivership.
Such action was needed, Mulroy said, because nothing thus far had resulted from “four different administrative or [previous] legal actions taken against this project,” involving something like 75 court appearance in the last six years.” The absentee owners are meanwhile using the property for a tax write-off, he said.
Flanked by area residents Jesse Carey and James Casey at Sunday’s press conference, Mulroy noted that the project’s last residents were moved out of Marina Cover six years ago when the Health Department closed it down.
At present, debris of all kinds litters the grounds and the interiors of the housing units, which have been stripped of appliances, cooper wiring and tubing.
“We’ve got to get this 500-pound elephant out of our neighborhood,” said Casey, who argued that it held back potential economic progress in the entire Hickory Hill area. He and Mulroy suggested that a non-profit organization could be formed to plan redevelopment of the grounds.
The project will focus on five areas:
the “Wolf River Brownfields Assessment Program,” which would avail itself of $400,000 in federal funds to develop several blighted areas along the Wolf River basin in accordance with green concepts;
recycling, involving a pilot program employing county corrections inmates; air quality, focusing on an immediate inventory of greenhouse gases;
environmental infrastructure, involving concerted between the county’s municipal mayors to reduce pollution from waste water treatment plans;
ground water, undertaking a long-range undertaking, in concert with federal agencies and the University of Memphis to address “long-term protection and sustainability of the Memphis Sands Aquifer.”
“On this 40th anniversary of Earth Day, we should all vow to take this opportunity to build on the progress of the past 40 years,” Ford said.
Conference Shopping?
Frank Murtaugh speculates on the pros and cons of various theoretical conference options for Memphis.
Conference Shopping for Memphis
There’s been a lot of discussion over expansion among the elite BCS conferences. Locally, we’re left to wonder where the University of Memphis might fit after all the musical chairs have been filled. Here’s one man’s view of potential new homes for a program desperate to consider itself among the big boys. (With respect to “nonrevenue sports,” this league shuffling is all about football and basketball, so I’ve kept the observations largely to the moneymakers.)
SEC:
This is a pipe dream. Sad truth: If an SEC-Memphis marriage was meant to be, it would have happened years ago. This league will poach members from the ACC before it approaches the U of M.
BIG TEN
PROS: These are all mighty athletic programs, among the largest in the country. And every school can claim some historical success on either the gridiron or hardwood or both. Tiger basketball would be fun to watch in the Big Ten, especially early in the transition, as Josh Pastner’s emphasis on running, frenetic play contrasts with the bruising reputation of programs like Purdue and Michigan State. In addition to big athletic programs, these schools have big student bodies, all but Northwestern with an enrollment in excess of 20,000. (Northwestern belongs in the Big Ten about as much as Sewanee belongs in the SEC.) Road trips would be to cooler climates, but would end up at many of the most famous football and basketball venues in the country.
CONS: The southernmost campus is Indiana’s, in Bloomington. Memphis would be the only school in a noncontiguous state. And in a league known foremost for its football, it’s hard to envision the Tigers competing with behemoths like Michigan, Ohio State, and Penn State, or even second-tier (but quite successful) programs like Iowa, Wisconsin, and Purdue. On top of all the packed football stadiums and tradition, though, every last school in the Big Ten has an endowment that tops $1 billion. The U of M isn’t even in that ballpark. This is a partnership that will never happen.
BIG 12
PROS: Similar to the Big Ten, this league features huge campuses (meaning lots of alumni, meaning big TV ratings). While Tiger football would have a hard time with the powers from Texas (the Longhorns and Texas A & M), Oklahoma, and Nebraska, one could imagine an upset over the likes of Texas Tech, Missouri, or Iowa State. Basketball season would feature one of the five most elite programs in history (Kansas), along with regular NCAA-tournament teams like Oklahoma State, Missouri, and Kansas State. A bonus would be seeing one of the best baseball programs in the country (Texas) visit FedEx Park.
CONS: Memphis would be an anomaly (along with Baylor) in not representing an entire state in its title. Seven of these schools have endowments in excess of $1 billion, the Longhorns leading the way at — wait for it — $16 billion. There are haves and have-nots in college sports. The Tiger program would be a have-not in the Big 12. By the way, seven Big 12 programs have football stadiums smaller than the Liberty Bowl. What’s wrong with this picture?
BIG EAST
PROS: Memphis basketball vs. Louisville, twice a season. That’s really all the argument needed here, but there’s more. Among the 16 member schools (counting Notre Dame, which does not compete as a football member), only three — Cincinnati, South Florida, and Rutgers — are significantly larger than the U of M. Six schools have enrollments of less than 10,000. Only four schools have endowments of more than $1 billion (Notre Dame, Cincinnati, Georgetown, and Pitt). Five schools, like Memphis, take their name from the city where they are located. The day South Florida joined the Big East, the league gave up any semblance of a regional boundary, so Memphis would fit as a charter Mid-South member. Not only would the basketball team contend among some of the sport’s giants, but the Tiger football team would join an eight-member league with at least a fighting chance for three or four wins each fall.
CONS: The Tigers and Cardinals can’t play four times a season.
“I was still trying to figure out what the hell I was gonna do,” author Hampton Sides said when we talked recently.
It was three years ago when we last talked, and back then, Sides was about to embark on the research for his next book.
“I was having to ask: How am I to make a dent in the literature that exists on this subject?”
The subject is the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. The site of that killing was Sides’ hometown, Memphis. And three years ago, Sides was just starting on his reconstruction of the events leading up to and following April 4, 1968. This week, that book finally hits stores. It’s called Hellhound on His Trail: The Stalking of Martin Luther King Jr. and the International Hunt for His Assassin (Doubleday).
Sides continued:
Sleeping Beauty
Live! It’s Saturday Night!
The growing notoriety of my son Andrew’s band, MGMT, has long been something of a dicey issue for the Flyer‘s music writers. I feel their pain. It’s a lose-lose proposition for them. If they are critical, they risk pissing off or at least irritating their boss. If they praise the band, it looks like they’re sucking up. No matter that MGMT has been praised and dissed and profiled by every major music publication and music blog around the globe, it’s still a ticklish deal for our guys.
I don’t have that problem. I feel free to tell you that Congratulations, MGMT’s second album, is dense, lush, textured, difficult in places, absolutely euphoria-inducing in others. It is, as they say in the music business, a “grower” — that is, repeated listens reveal more depth and complexity. The lyrics blossom and begin to live in your head. The songs become earworms. It was the second-best selling album in the U.S. last week. So yeah, I’m proud of my son.
As you may or may not know, MGMT played Saturday Night Live this past weekend. Was I there? No, I was in a cabin on Beaver Creek in the Laurel Mountains of Pennsylvania, near Frank Lloyd Wright’s Fallingwater. I go to Beaver Creek for trout-fishing every year on the last weekend in April with two old friends. This was our 24th year. The cabin is rustic, set on a tiny stream amid towering hemlocks and rhododendrons. The cable is basic. The television is a 13-inch Magnavox. The D is not H. But we weren’t going to miss SNL. These guys have known Andrew — and my daughter, Mary — since they were tots.
So we old farts poured ourselves some scotch and inched close to the set as Gabourey Sibide introduced MGMT. I admit to having some vicarious butterflies, but I shouldn’t have worried. The boys absolutely killed. They looked sharp, they mugged for the cameras, and they played with confidence and swagger.
This has been a completely biased report on a Memphis kid who’s doing pretty well in the music business. (Click the image to enlarge.)
In the Mood for Mexican?
Hannah Sayle has the details on the newest location of Swanky’s Taco Shop and El Toro Loco in this week’s Food News.