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Politics Politics Beat Blog

Newly Introduced State Legislation Would Enable Student IDs for Voting, Ban Library Cards

State Senator Ketron

  • State Senator Ketron

A General Assembly measure that proposes a trade-off of sorts on two types of IDs that were formerly banned for voting purposes has drawn a cautious reaction from opponents of the state’s Photo ID law.

State Senator Bill Ketron (R-Murfreesboro) will present a bill in the Senate State and Local Government committee Tuesday that would allow photo IDS issued by state colleges and universities to satisfy the controversial state law but would disallow photo IDs issued by public libraries.

In a press release from his office, Ketron said, “This legislation allows photo IDs issued by state community colleges and state universities as an acceptable form of identification. We allowed the use photo identification of faculty members of our state colleges and universities under the original Tennessee law which passed in 2011. We believe that this state issued ID has worked as a sufficient form of identification and that students should also be included.”

Ketron said one intent of his bill was to “clear…up confusion” about the use of library cards at polls. In a pre-election ruling last year on a suit brought by the City of Memphis the state Court of Appeals approved the rule of public library cards as consistent with the state law.

The state has appealed that ruling. “We considered locally issued cards when debating the original bill, but after reviewing the process, decided that the safeguards were not in place to ensure the integrity of the ballot like state and federally issued identification,” said Ketron. “We continue to believe that the safeguards are not in place to use these cards as acceptable identification for voting purposes.”

City Attorney Herman Morris, who vigorously argued for the validity of public library cards in last year’s legal action, seemed to regard the Ketron bill as potentially affording “some progress” in widening the compass of acceptable state IDs, but emphasized that the City regards the Photo ID law itself as unconstitutional and is awaiting a ruling on the measure as a whole from the state Supreme Court.

That opinion was echoed by Van Turner, a lawyer who serves as chairman of the Shelby County Democratic Party. “Any advancement is a good thing,” Turner said of the bill’s intent to license student IDs, “but I’m disappointed that it would take library cards off the table.” That aspect of the bill would inconvenience “seniors and others who aren’t so mobile as students,” Turner said. “They’re picking and choosing.”

Like Morris, Turner said that the real issue was the fate of the Photo ID law itself.

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Memphis Gaydar News

First Openly Gay Mayoral Candidate for Clarksdale Brutally Murdered

Marco McMillan

  • Marco McMillan

Marco McMillan, the first openly gay candidate for mayor of Clarksdale, Mississippi, was beaten, dragged, and set on fire, according to a statement from his family that was released on Monday. His body was recovered last Wednesday from a levee along the Mississippi River.

McMillan, 34, was reported missing early last week after his SUV was recovered from a crash on Highway 49 near the Coahoma/Tallahatchie county line. McMillan was not driving his vehicle at the time of the crash. Instead, it was driven by 22-year-old Lawrence Reed, the man who police charged with McMillan’s murder last Thursday.

McMillan’s death remains under investigation.

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Opinion

On Civil War Monuments and Tennis Players

RICHMOND — Behold the monument of the great Civil War general on horseback! And behold the monument of the great tennis player, apparently preparing to thrash some children with a racquet.

Lee monument

By coincidence, I found myself in Richmond, Virginia, the Capital of the Confederacy, last weekend as the controversy over the Nathan Bedford Forrest monument in Memphis simmers. So I took a morning to visit Monument Avenue, with its majestic monuments of Robert E. Lee, Jefferson Davis, J.E.B. Stuart, Stonewall Jackson, and Arthur Ashe.

In case you don’t know, Ashe was an African-American tennis star, a Favorite Son of Richmond, and a late add-on to Monument Avenue. The other four guys were Confederate generals or, in the case of Davis, presidents.

Jarring, at least to this visitor. Very jarring, and also very understandable.

Ashe monument

I am a tennis fan, tennis player, and saw Ashe play in person a few times when he was in college and as a professional and many other times on television. He was unusually stylish, dignified, reflective, and good. He beat bratty Jimmy Connors when Connors was at the top of his game and Ashe looked like he was doing transcendental meditation on every changeover. Sportswriters had a field day with that one. In 1993, Ashe, 49, died of AIDS. He believed he contracted H.I.V., the virus that causes AIDS, through a transfusion of tainted blood during his second round of heart-bypass surgery in 1983.

He learned the game on the public tennis courts of Richmond when he was not allowed into the whites-only clubs. His monument went up in 1996, not without controversy over its appropriateness on Monument Avenue. The Lee monument was unveiled in 1890. The other generals got their due early in the 1900s, when the last of the Civil War veterans were dying. A final salute to the cavaliers who, according to historians, brought their soldiers to tears. At around the same time, the monument to Forrest, who fought mainly in and around Tennessee, went up in Memphis, but Jefferson Davis, notably, didn’t get his Memphis monument until 1964.

Richmond went through some of the monument agonies Memphis is going through now. As a visitor, I found it convenient to see all the monuments on one street. I can see how placing a monument to Ashe somewhere else could have been perceived as a snub. But it also struck me as jarring, if only for a moment, in both its placement and pose, and probably as a journalist as much as a tourist. I have the same feeling about adding more statues to Forrest Park.

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Blurb Books

David Williams: Under the Spell

long_gone_daddies.jpeg

“Newspaperman on their time, fiction writer on mine.”

That’s how David Wesley Williams describes the writing life — his life. He’s served as sports writer and now as sports editor at The Commercial Appeal for 25 years. But he’s a writer of short stories and novels too. And this week sees the publication of his debut novel, Long Gone Daddies (John F. Blair, Publisher), on March 5th, which happens to be the 50th anniversary of Patsy Cline’s death — an important date given that Long Gone Daddies draws on the music that Williams loves most: country classics, Delta R&B, and early Memphis rock and soul.

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News

Lots of Trash to Clean Up at BSL

John Branston reports on the trash dilemma at the new Beale Street Landing.

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Opinion

Flotsam and Jetsam at Beale Street Landing

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  • Memphis Flyer photo

If you only get one chance to make a first impression then $42.5 million Beale Street Landing could be in a tough spot this Saturday when the American Queen steamboat with 430 passengers visits Memphis and 430 more board for the return trip to New Orleans.

They might need to be issued mud boots and blinders. The project, which the Riverfront Development Corporation says on its web site (“The Truth About Beale Street Landing”) was supposed to be finished in the summer of 2011, is far from finished today.

The gift shop and main building opened last Friday, and the steamboat is scheduled to make its first visit of the 2013 season in five more days. Barring a massive cleanup operation, passengers will step on to the new floating dock and see several months accumulation of trash trapped in the backwater around the dock and cylindrical ramp.

Jimmy Ogle, newly appointed general manager for Beale Street Landing, was at the park Sunday and Monday when I visited it and said he hopes at least some of the trash can be removed before the boat lands. His first thought was using john boats, but “we can’t get them in there” so he hopes that long rakes might work instead. The big logs that washed up on the banks will remain there for a while, said Ogle and Benny Lendermon, director of the Riverfront Development Corporation, who was also at the site Monday morning. Lendermon said the new completion date is November or December of this year, with a grand opening next spring.

An eddy in the river at the southern tip of Mud Island forces water and debris back toward the dock and ramp. Lendermon said the long-range solution is a screen or boom to block debris from reaching the landing. The river is expected to rise two feet by Saturday.

I have no urge to bash Beale Street Landing. Its cost overruns, construction delays, and unusual design choices such as the “pixilated sunset” colors on the roof are a well-reported matter of record. I work near the landing and hope it works, but the RDC seems to have bitten off more than it can chew. Appointing Ogle was a good move. He is as pleasant and diligent an ambassador as any city could have.

I was walking the riverfront Sunday afternoon with developer Henry Turley. We entered the building, which was open for business and selling souvenirs from the Memphis Queen, which was taking passengers out for a cruise. We saw what any visitor will see. Signs that say “Please Excuse Our Mess While We’re Under Construction” might earn BSL some points for caring, but the reviews could be brutal.

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News

The Grizzlies’ Florida Weekend

Chris Herrington analyzes the Grizzlies’ weekend trip to Florida, where they took on the best and the worst teams of the east.

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News

Tigers Times Six

Frank Murtaugh has six thoughts on the Memphis Tigers and their chances for a decent seeding in the NCAA tourney. Most of them aren’t very encouraging.

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Beyond the Arc Sports

Weekend Road Recap — Florida Split

Marc Gasol had a massive weekend.

The Grizzlies failed to set a new franchise record for consecutive wins this weekend, their eight-game win streak coming to an end Friday night in Miami against the defending champion Heat. But the Grizzlies’ 1-1 Florida road trip was probably as encouraging as anything in the streak.

The Heat were winners of 12 in a row coming into Friday’s game, but the Grizzlies played them tight — neither team led by more than seven points — in their building, despite Zach Randolph turning an ankle on the opening play and being less than full strength the remainder of the game. It was a one-point game with 24 seconds to play when Lebron James hit a straightaway three to put the Heat up four and force the Grizzlies to foul. James’ free throws extended the final scoring margin. Up until that point, James had scored only 10 points on 3-13 shooting, Tayshaun Prince and the Grizzlies’ stellar team defense perhaps more effective against James than any team has been this season.

On the other end, the Grizzlies were able to rebound from their troubling recent offensive slide — it was their first game over 100 points per 100 possessions since before the All-Star break, per NBA.com — despite not generating many points off turnovers. The Heat’s lack of quality size had something to do with that, as Marc Gasol had one of his best all-around games of the season, going for 24-9-4 on 8-13 shooting. One wonders if the outcome might have been a little different if Gasol and Mike Conley had made it back into the game a little earlier in the fourth. (They each checked in at the 5:01 mark.) But it’s easy to second-guess and Gasol and Conley did play 36 and 34 minutes on the game.

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News

Squashed!

John Branston says you ought to see the shot he witnessed this weekend, and helpfully provides a video.