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Blurb Books

Ashley Roach-Freiman Does the “Impossible”

The next installment of the “Impossible Language” series is the evening of Saturday, April 26th, and for those not in the know, it’s a series of poets reading from their work with visual artists often showing their work. It is also part of the wide range of artistic activities, including events spearheaded by Crosstown Arts, that have sprung up on North Cleveland in and around the Sears Crosstown building.

Ashley Roach-Freiman is playing her part. A poet in the MFA program at the University of Memphis and poetry editor for the program’s literary journal, The Pinch, Roach-Freiman heads “Impossible Language.”

What is all of this about? Let Roach-Freiman explain, as she did recently in another series — a series of emails:

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“The next event in the ‘Impossible Language’ series is at Story Booth, adjacent to the Cleveland Street Flea Market,” according to Roach-Freiman. “It’s a new space for the series, but I’ve been to other readings there, and it’s wonderful. This will be the first ‘Impossible Language’ without an art component, but I’m excited about the reading. It’s a smaller space, very intimate.”

Some background on “Impossible Language”: The series was your idea? Your goals?
Ashley Roach-Freiman (pictured): I started organizing it last summer, with the first reading in September. I’ve felt like there was an opportunity for something like this in Memphis for a long time. I have been to wonderful, intimate readings at Burke’s Book Store, and the River City Writer’s Series at the University of Memphis brings well-known writers to town. But there wasn’t a regular reading series like this.

I’d been trying to get my friend, the excellent poet Adam Clay, to come to Memphis to read, and it seemed like the perfect opportunity to create a space for other poets. At the time, I was a librarian at the Memphis Public Library, where I did a lot of programming, so planning a reading didn’t seem insurmountable, and I knew that Crosstown Arts had a gallery space for not much money.

I was also inspired by the whole “Crosstown aesthetic.” My goal has been to feature writers that might not have made it to Memphis otherwise — Adam Clay, Ada Limón, Abraham Smith, Sean Patrick Hill, Laressa Dickey — as well as writers who are local or regional and publishing incredible work: Tim Earley and Jessica Comola from Oxford; Caki Wilkinson at Rhodes. I also get to feature current students and graduates of the U of M MFA program (Ruth Baumann, John Owen May, Clay Cantrell), highlighting the good work being done in the city.

The series is also innovative, because it is not just a reading series but a gallery show, and the artists probably work the hardest, putting in a solid 10-hour day to make an incredible space for the events. All of the artists — John Garland (who designed the poster for the April 26th event), Ashley Luyendyk, Caitlin Hettich, Amelia Briggs, April Pierce, Meghan Vaziri, and Mary Jo Karimnia — are Memphis-based.

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You’ve had three events so far. How has the response been, the turnout? Future plans?
The turnout has been spectacular (up to 75 people at one event) — above and beyond what I expected for a poetry reading in Memphis. Which just goes to show: This city loves and supports its artists.

The creative energy has been enormous too. I’ve met some great people, which is how this thing keeps rolling. My philosophy is to keep my ears open. I’m interested in collaborative work, so when Clay Cantrell suggested a piece with Laressa Dickey featuring music and poetry, I was all for it. I don’t always know how things are going to look or sound, but I trust the writers and artists.

I’m definitely interested in expanding the concept of “Impossible Language,” and while I want to keep the core concept of the reading series, I also want to build the art “muscle.” I’d like to feature more collaborative work, with artists and poets getting together to plan something special.

The lineup of authors for the event on the 26th: Did they come to you, or did you invite them to read?
A mix of both. I’ve had Tara Mae in mind for a while now, and her book, Philomela, just came out. Heather’s book also just came out — In the Low Houses. Both are so strong, so good. Heather’s name has been in my ear forever, so it was only a matter of time before we met. I saw her read at Burke’s not long ago and was delighted to make her acquaintance. She jumped at the opportunity to read.

This latest event will be a straight reading, without an art component but with a nod to National Poetry Month. Representatives from The Pinch will also be present, with copies to sell. So it will be a good idea for attendees to bring a few bucks. They’ll be sad to leave empty-handed.

What do you mean by your series’ title, “Impossible Language”?
I wanted something evocative that would be a good fit for this sort of multi-genre experience — something that would help explain what it is that artists and writers experience when we enter the “creative space.” We really are trying to get across something that is impossible to convey in any other medium. I also wanted something that tied every reading or event together, even as it evolves and shifts, so that people know they are part of something ongoing.

Crosstown has it own energy going.
I am constantly trying to get people to move here to Memphis. I don’t think I would have been able to accomplish half the stuff I have been able to anywhere else. There’s so much goodness here. I love Memphis like crazy, especially in the spring. •
Poets Heather Dobbins, Caitlin Mackenzie, Tara Mae Mulroy, and Elaine Scudder Walters at 438 N. Cleveland on Saturday, April 26th, 6 to 8 p.m. Reading begins at 6:30 p.m.

To contact Ashley Roach-Freiman: impossible.language.memphis@gmail.com. Follow “Impossible Language” on Facebook at facebook.com/ImpossibleLanguage, on Twitter @impossiblelang, and impossiblelanguage.tumblr.com.

Categories
Intermission Impossible Theater

High School Musical Award Nominations, 2014

Spamalot at Memphis University School

  • “Spamalot” at Memphis University School

The Orpheum Theatre has announced nominees for the 2014 High School Musical Theatre Awards.

The award ceremony takes place Monday, May 12th at 7:00 p.m. Over 200 students will perform on the Orpheum stage and the winners in the Lead Actor and Actress categories will travel to New York to compete nationally in the Jimmy Awards.

Outstanding Chorus
The Sound of Music, Briarcrest Christian School
Urinetown, Cordova High School
Hairspray, Germantown High School
Shrek the Musical, Ridgeway High School
West Side Story, St. Benedict at Auburndale
Curtains, Lausanne Collegiate School

Outstanding Small Ensemble
The Office Staff in Cordova High School’s Urinetown
The Knights in Memphis University School’s Spamalot
The Cowboy Chorus in Northpoint Christian School’s
Annie Get Your Gun
Three Blind Mice in Ridgeway High School’s Shrek the Musical
The Jets in St. Benedict at Auburndale’s West Side Story
The Bottle Dancers in Tipton-Rosemark Academy’s
Fiddler on the Roof

Outstanding Student Orchestra
South Pacific, Collierville High School
Urinetown, Cordova High School
Hairspray, Germantown High School
110 in the Shade, Overton High School
Shrek the Musical, Ridgeway High School
The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee, St. George’s Independent School

Outstanding Music Direction
Jason Bell, Cordova High School’s, Urinetown
Stephen Womack, Evangelical Christian School’s Into the Woods
Steve Danielson, Germantown High School’s Hairspray
Cynthia Romoff, Lausanne Collegiate School’s Curtains
Patti House, Northpoint Christian School’s Annie Get Your Gun
Jordan Wells, St. Benedict at Auburndale’s West Side Story

Outstanding Dance Execution
Urinetown, Cordova High School
Hairspray, Germantown High School
You’re a Good Man Charlie Brown, Horn Lake High School
Annie Get Your Gun, Northpoint Chrtistian School
Shrek the Musical, Ridgeway High School
West Side Story, St. Benedict at Auburndale

Outstanding Featured Dancer
Chad Baker in Germantown High School’s Hairspray
Abigail Clements in Horn Lake High School’s
You’re a Good Man Charlie Brown
Margaret Shaul in Memphis University School’s Spamalot
McKenzie Brower in Tipton-Rosemark Academy’s
Fiddler on the Roof
Josh Oliver in White Station High School’s Hairspray
Gary Gwynn in Whitehaven High School’s High School Musical

Outstanding Production Number
“The Cop Song” in Arlington High School’s Urinetown
“Run Freedom Run” in Cordova High School’s Urinetown
“That a Way” in Lausanne’s Curtains
“Day by Day” in Millington Central High School’s Godspell
“Gee Officer Krupke” in St. Benedict at Auburndale’s
West Side Story
“Teyve’s Dream” in Tipton-Rosemark Academy’s
Fiddler on the Roof

Outstanding Hair and Makeup
Into the Woods, Evangelical Christian School
Hairspray, Germantown High School
Annie Get Your Gun, Northpoint Christian School
Shrek the Musical, Ridgeway High School
The Wiz, St. Agnes Academy
Curtains, Lausanne Collegiate School

Outstanding Costumes
Alice in Wonderland, Jr, Corinth High School
Into the Woods, Evangelical Christian School
Hairspray, Germantown High School
Annie Get Your Gun, Northpoint Christian School
Shrek the Musical, Ridgeway High School
The Wiz, St. Agnes Academy

Outstanding Set Design
Little Shop of Horrors, Bartlett High School
Into the Woods, Evangelical Christian School
Seussical the Musical, Hutchison School
Spamalot, Memphis University School
Annie Get Your Gun, Northpoint Christian School
Fiddler on the Roof, Tipton Rosemark Academy

Outstanding Artistic Element
The Plant/Puppetry in Little Shop of Horrors, Harding Academy
The Cartoon Scenery, in You’re a Good Man Charlie Brown, Horn Lake High School
The Shootout in Annie Get Your Gun, Northpoint Christian School
The Sun/Moon Set in 110 in the Shade, Overton High School
The Pumpkin Carriage in Cinderella, St. Mary’s Episcopal School
The Carriage in The Slipper and the Rose, Wynne High School

Outstanding Production Materials
Little Shop of Horrors, Bartlett High School
Beauty and the Beast, Bolton High School
Alice in Wonderland, Jr., Corinth High School
Annie Get Your Gun, Northpoint Christian School
The Wiz, St. Agnes Academy
Fiddler on the Roof, Tipton-Rosemark Academy

Outstanding Front of House
Urinetown, Arlington High School
Alice in Wonderland Jr., Corinth High School
Annie Get Your Gun, Northpoint Christian School
The Wiz, St. Agnes Academy
Fiddler on the Roof, Tipton-Rosemark Academy
The Slipper and the Rose, Wynne High School

Student Technical Achievement Award
Brandon Lau, Germantown High School
Nicolas Kleiderer, Northpoint Christian School
Kevin Rotzoll, St. Benedict at Auburndale
Sydney Valadie, St. Benedict at Auburndale
Joshua Joiner, Whitehaven High School

Student Creative Achievement Award
Bridgett Church, Bartlett High School
Summer Dawn Torian, Horn Lake High School
Maria Herrera, Germantown High School
Douglas McClew, Memphis University School
Catie Blackwood, St. Benedict at Auburndale

Outstanding Comedic Duo/Trio
Officer Lockstock & Sally, Urinetown, Arlington High School
Bloody Mary and Luther Billis, South Pacific, Collierville High School
Officer Lockstock & Sally, Urinetown, Cordova High School
Edna & Wilbur Turnblad, Hairspray Germantown High School
Arthur and Patsy, Spamalot, Memphis University School
Mrs. Meers, Ching Ho & Bun Foo, Thoroughly Modern Millie, Southside High School

Outstanding Featured Actress
Tamlyn Sampson as Penelope Pennywise in Cordova High School’s Urinetown
DeShara Edwards as Dragon in Ridgeway High School’s
Shrek the Musical
Micah Oxner as The Messenger in St. Agnes Academy’s The Wiz
Maddie Arnold as Anybodys in St. Benedict at Auburndale’s West Side Story
Sutton Hewitt as Logainne in St. George’s Independent School’s The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee
Olivia Bernabe as The Queen in St. Mary Episcopal School’s Cinderella

Outstanding Featured Actor
Daniel Moore as Cogsworth in Bolton’s Beauty and the Beast
Josh Vega as Lumiere in Bolton’s Beauty and the Beast
Chase Wyatt as Brother Maynard in Memphis University School’s Spamalot
Augie Van Deveer as Robin in Memphis University School’s Spamalot
Jordan Moye as Chief Sitting Bull in Northpoint Christian School’s Annie Get Your Gun
Robert Grissom as Leaf Coneybear in St. George’s Independent School’s The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee

Outstanding Supporting Actress
Lexi Jenne as Jack’s Mother in Evangelical Christian School’s Into the Woods
Katherine Sterling as Little Red in Evangelical Christian School’s Into the Woods
India Ratliff as Motormouth Maybelle in Germantown High School’s Hairspray
Erica Penninger as Penny Pingleton in Hernando High School’s Hairspray
Gabrielle Willingham as The Wiz in St. Agnes Academy’s
The Wiz
Reva Obenchain as Hodel in Tipton-Rosemark’s
Fiddler on the Roof

Outstanding Supporting Actor
Jeffrey Haddock as Officer Lockstock in Arlington High School’s Urinetown
Nautica Beauregard as Officer Lockstock in Cordova High School’s Urinetown
Baker Ball as Sir Galahad in Memphis University School’s Spamalot
Robert Dockery as Jimmy in Overton High School’s
110 in the Shade
Greer Harkness as Donkey in Ridgeway High School’s
Shrek the Musical
Kyle Van Frank as Action in St. Benedict at Auburndale’s
West Side Story

Outstanding Direction by a Teacher
Chris Luter, Urinetown, Cordova High School
Rene Cave, Into the Woods, Evangelical Christian School
Tim Greer, Spamalot, Memphis University School
Julie Reinbold, Shrek the Musical, Ridgeway High School
Ryan Kathman, West Side Story, St. Benedict at Auburndale
Marques Brown, The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee, St. George’s Independent School

Outstanding Actress in a Lead Role
Bethany Beckham as The Witch in Evangelical Christian School’s Into the Woods
Jada Tate as Georgia Hendricks in Lausanne Collegiate School’s Curtains
Logan Martin as Annie Oakley in Northpoint Christian School’s Annie Get Your Gun
Cedricka Simpkins as Lizzy in Overton High School’s
110 in the Shade
Mariatu Okonofua as Fiona in Ridgeway High School’s
Shrek the Musical
Arielle Labilles as Anita in St. Benedict at Auburndale’s
West Side Story

Outstanding Actor in a Lead Role
Jose Alpizar as Emile Debeque in Collierville High School’s South Pacific
Phillip Bond as Bobby Strong in Cordova High School’s Urinetown
Joshua Smith as The Baker in Evangelical Christian School’s
Into the Woods
Maclean Mayers as Edna Turnblad in Germantown High School’s Hairspray
Paul Stevenson as King Arthur in Memphis University School’s Spamalot
Ontario McGregor as Shrek in Ridgeway High School’s
Shrek the Musical

Outstanding Achievement in Musical Theater
Into the Woods, Evangelical Christian School
Hairspray , Germantown High School
Spamalot, Memphis University School
Annie Get Your Gun, Northpoint Christian School
Shrek the Musical, Ridgeway High School
The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee
St. George’s Independent School

Outstanding Overall Production
Cordova High School’s Urinetown
Evangelical Christian School’s Into the Woods
Germantown High School’s Hairspray
Memphis University School’s Spamalot
Northpoint Christian School’s Annie Get Your Gun
St. Benedict at Auburndale’s West Side Story

Categories
News

Hopson to Propose New SCS Goals/Standards

Louis Goggans reports that SCS superintendent Dorsey Hopson will propose new academic goals and standards to the SCS Board.

Categories
News News Blog

SCS Superintendent Requests That Board Adopt New Academic Goals

Dorsey Hopson

  • Dorsey Hopson

Tonight at the Shelby County Schools (SCS) board work session, Superintendent Dorsey Hopson will propose that the school board commit to a goal of having 80 percent of the 2013-14 school year’s first-graders ready for college and careers by the time they graduate in 2025. The goal is part of a strategic plan SCS hopes to have completed by December 1st.

This morning (Tuesday, April 22nd), Bradley Leon, chief innovation officer for SCS, met with members of the media to discuss several of the goals that have been established for the plan.

Leon said other key goals are raising the district graduation rate to 90 percent and assuring that 100 percent of the kids who graduate in 2025 enroll in post-secondary education, such as an university or trade school.

“This year’s first-graders, we’re committing that 80 percent of them will be college- or career-ready by the time they graduate in 2025,” Leon said. “When you have a goal that’s longer term in nature, there can be an expression created that maybe you’re putting off the day of accountability. Because those first-graders are in our system, we’re going to have aggressive goals along the way for every child throughout the system. We’re going to have some ambitious goals for third-grade reading, seventh-grade math, for those kids and all the kids in our system. That will tie into performance measures and accountability that the district will have for itself.”

Leon said currently, “only about five percent” of SCS students are college-ready. He said although the district doesn’t assess career-readiness yet, if measures used by other communities are applied to determine whether or not students are workforce-ready, there are about 25 percent of SCS students who are ready for a career.

The 2025 plan is primarily targeting the current school year’s first-graders but will encompass all grades. The plan will create concrete pathways for as many SCS students as possible to graduate college- and career-ready.

Leon said the district cannot accomplish the goals set forth in the plan single-handedly and will be seeking assistance from internal and external community stakeholders to leverage all possible resources to help improve the outcomes of SCS students.

Leon said there would be community meetings held on May 13th and May 15th for Memphians to learn more about the plan’s goals and to provide input on how they think SCS could achieve its goals.

Achieving the goals set forth in the plan is anticipated to benefit the community by helping reduce unemployment, increase civic engagement, lower crime, among several other positive effects.

Superintendent Hopson will propose that the school board adopts the goals during its board meeting tonight. The meeting will take place in the school board’s COE auditorium (2597 Avery). It starts at 5:30 p.m.

Leon said he’s unsure if the board will vote on the proposition tonight. He said tonight will only involve Hopson proposing a goal. He said they hope to have a strategic planning process completed and ready to implement by December 1st.

Categories
News

Memphis is Funny, Sort Of

In a survey of America’s Funniest Cities, Memphis is tops in Tennessee. Take that, Nash Vegas!

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News News Blog

Memphis Funnier Than Nashville

Memphis is funnier than Miami. Memphis is less funny than Philadelphia. But Memphis is definitely the funniest city in Tennessee.

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The results come from a new study that looks at surveys, tweets, the concentration of comedy clubs, and more to find the funniest cities in America. Journalist Joel Warner teamed up with Peter McGraw, a scientist at University of Colorado Boulder [UCB], for the study, which is part of a new book called “The Humor Code: A Global Search for What Makes Things Funny.”

McGraw runs UCB’s Humor Research Lab (or HuRL), which developed the Humor Algorithm (or HA) to rank the funniest cities in the country. The algorithm considers:
• Number of visits to comedy websites
• Number of comedy clubs per square mile in each city
• Number of famous comedians born in each city
• Number of comedy radio stations in each city
• Number of famous funny tweeters in each city
• Ratings by traveling comedians of audiences in each city
• Number of humor-related web searches in each city

Memphis ranked 26th overall, right in between Indianapolis at 25th and Baltimore at 27th. Nashville and Davidson County ranked 35th in between Dallas and Albuquerque.

The funniest city in America is Chicago, according to the study. The city is home to the world famous Second City comedy theatre, which has been the training ground for top comics from John Belushi and Bill Murray to Tina Fey and Stephen Colbert.

Atlanta ranked 3rd on the list and was the only Southern city to rank in the top 10. The study said the city leans heavily on racially-charged humor. But the region’s diversity also makes plenty of room for the redneck jokes of Jeff Foxworthy to the “gritty, urban humor” of Katt Williams, the study says.

Categories
Art Exhibit M

A Visit to Mary Jo Karimnia’s Studio

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I recently stopped by Mary Jo Karimnia‘s painting studio, a cement-floored building that backs up against the Cooper-Young railroad tracks and houses several Midtown artists. You might recognize Karimnia’s work from last summer’s Five-in-One Steamroller Printmaking day (her mammoth woodcut features a woman wearing stripey knee socks) or from the Cleveland Street Flea Market, where she helps craft displays. Mary Jo’s current group of beaded paintings and tie-dyed woodcuts seem at home next to her studio mate Mark Nowell’s half-assembled and colorful scrap metal sculptures.

Karimnia, who recently received an ArtsMemphis ArtsAccelerator grant, has been at work on the series of beaded paintings (most of which depict women in historical costume) for several months. The work is painstaking— she uses thousands of tiny “seed beads” to make each piece— but feels playful. Commenting on her preference for work that is bright and synthetic, Mary Jo told me, “I can’t stop. I can’t help it!”

She took a few minutes to speak with me about her work and upcoming shows.

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Flyer: I see that you have this giant woodcut over here from last summer’s Five-In-One Steamroller printmaking day.
Mary Jo: Yes! We’re going to do that again on the same weekend this year— labor day weekend. I have a lot of drawings to use right now… I have a lot of stripey legs.

Where do you source your images from?
A lot of them are from anime and manga conventions… my daughter likes to go. Some of them are at the Hyatt Hotel, where the have this really horrible, fabulous, funky carpet that I really like.

It looks like casino carpeting… yellow, brown, green.
Totally. It is really ugly in person but it comes off really well in the work…. Sometimes I’ll also take photos at Day of the Dead Fest, but this wood cut is based on a series that I did from a Con at the Botanic Garden. Over the last year, I took a bunch of pictures and I have kind of run out. I’ve just drawn them all up.

Are you looking for different things in your work now than when you started this series?
It has kind of evolved into this fancy dress kind of thing. What I am really striving for is the contrast between the fancy historical dress and the contemporary setting. I took this image at a Day of the Dead Festival in an old mall. There is this man hugging [a woman in historical dress] who is just wearing a sweatshirt. That is kind of what I strive for.

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How did you get started working with the beads?
I used to do a lot of mosaic work and I started using the seed beads to grout… I like the way light reflects off different sorts of beads. Another of my goals is to get this different sort of texture. [pointing to an unfinished piece] This is my experimental one. I am gonna ruin this one. That is my plan.

I heard you’re about to be in a group show with other female artists?
A couple, actually. Elizabeth Alley is doing a show; it is June the 6th at Marshall Arts and it is called “This Art Has Cooties.” It is all women whose work is feminine and who Elizabeth feels don’t get the attention they deserve. I also happen to be getting ready to do the “Unchained” show, which is the second in a series. I had the first one in this studio space last year. It’s where I invite the first artist and they invite the next artist and it self curates, up to eight artists. It just happened to work out that that show is all women, too. That show opens June 13th.

Categories
Politics Politics Beat Blog

Cohen Gets Another Endorsement From Obama

Cohen announcing Obama endorsement

  • JB
  • Cohen announcing Obama endorsement

For the third election cycle in a row, 9th District congressman Steve Cohen has been endorsed in the course of a contested Democratic primary by President Barack Obama.

Cohen, who is opposed in the primary by lawyer Ricky Wilkins, announced the presidential endorsement — an echo of previous primary-season endorsements in 2010 and 2012 — at a press conference at his Midtown home. Obama’s statement, released later via email, reads as follows:

“Congressman Steve Cohen has been a leader on justice and civil rights issues and has worked tirelessly on behalf of his constituents. His focus on bringing good jobs, affordable health care, and world class education to Tennessee is why I am proud to once again support his re-election.”

The formal response of Cohen, who was an early endorser of Obama’s presidential hopes in 2008, went this way:

“It has been my privilege to work with President Obama to make America more fair and just. Whenever I meet with him, we talk about Memphis and the needs of its citizens. I am always impressed with his compassion, dedication and determination on our behalf. I appreciate the President’s faith in me, together we will continue to work every day to ensure that America is a country where if you work hard and play by the rules you get a fair shot.”

At the press conference, Cohen, who affixed a 2012 Obama/Cohen button to his lapel in the course of the press conference, underscored the importance of the endorsement by saying that, in a time of Republican muscle-flexing in Congress, it was still possible to “get things done with the Administration,” and he enumerated a series of grants and appointments he said he’d been able to push through — aided both by the Administration and by what the congressman described as a good relationship with Tennessee’s Republican senators, Lamar Alexander and Bob Corker.

Looking ahead politically, Cohen said he’d always been close to Bill and Hillary Clinton, as well.

Asked about other matters:

Cohen said he was surprised by Monday’s announcement from the United Auto Workers that the union was dropping its appeal to the National Labor Relations Board regarding an adverse vote on representation of workers at the Chattanooga Volkswagen plant.

The congressman responded to suggestions that local Democrats had acquired a new political “boss” in Judge Joe Brown, the former Criminal Court judge and TV personality who is now a candidate for District Attorney General.

“Bruce Springsteen is ‘the Boss,” Cohen jested, adding, more seriously, that people didn’t need any bosses and should be free to make “their own free choices.” He applied that judgment retroactively to the erstwhile political reigns of Ed “Boss” Crump and former congressman Harold Ford Sr., though he gave both points for positive accomplishments.

Asked about endorsements of his own in this campaign year, Cohen mentioned the names of Assessor Cheyenne Johnson and County Commission candidates Melvin Burgess, Reginald Milton, Willie Brooks, and Van Turner. “So far, that’s it,” he said, eschewing any statement of preference in the Democratic mayoral field of Steve Mulroy, Deidre Malone, and Kenneth Whalum. “I’ve got too many friends in the race,” he said.

Categories
Politics Politics Beat Blog

District 3 Commission Candidates Stick Close to GOP Talking Points

Moderator Colvett lays out ground rules for (l to r) Simmons; Price; Fazullah; and Reaves.

  • JB
  • Moderator Colvett lays out ground rules for (l to r) Simmons; Price; Fazullah; and Reaves.

If there is one thing that suburban candidates for the Shelby County Commission tend to agree on, it is that tax increases are off the table, in regard to both existing problems and to governmental innovations going forward.

That much was made clear Monday night when the four Republican candidates for the new District 3 County Commission seat met at the Bartlett Community Center for a forum conducted by the Northeast Shelby Republican Club’s Frank Colvett.

Early on, all four hopefuls — Sherry Simmons; David Reaves; Kelly Price; and Nazer Fazullah — took the no-new-tax pledge, and when moderator Colvett later turned the screw, asking the candidates how they would decide if faced with a choice of cutting county fire and police services by 5 percent or raising taxes, they all held the line — though with various degrees of unease.

With a regretful look, Reaves said services would have to be cut, Price said essentially the same but promised to work with administrators to make the cuts as harmless as possible; and Fazullah and Simmons both suggested that more fine-tuning of the budget might allow the choice to be averted.

All except Reaves, who noted that the county tax rate had been increased last year and wanted further cuts, were willing to endorse County Mayor Mark Luttrell’s proposed $1.16 billion budget, however conditionally. Reaves suggested reductions could be obtained by eliminating out-sourcing of food services for county prisoners and using existing school nutrition sources, and by consolidating IT services, a one-time Luttrell proposal that had proved to be a bugaboo with various turf-conscious department heads.

Another given in Republican circles is skepticism about governmental controls, a fact that elicited outright disapproval from three of the candidates of the currently controversial Common Core proposal for educational standards. Simmons, whose 35 years of teaching experience in Shelby County schools made her the only educator in the group, gave a grudging approval of the concept of uniform standards, provided that students were given time to adapt to Common Core’s testing procedures.

Summing up what seemed to be a group disapproval of subservience to “national models,” Reaves, an exponent of more vo-tech to counter poverty, complained that local school systems “should quit sucking money out of Bill Gates and the rest of his buddies.”

The other three candidates had some one-liners, too. Simmons, agreeing with the others about swearing off free sports tickets and other perks, made a tongue-in-cheek exception for national championship games featuring the University of Alabama. Price, suggesting that recent public-school changes had been mainly cosmetic and not for the better, said that if he changed his name to “Dr. J,” he still wouldn’t be able to play basketball.

For his part, Fazullah, who proposed creation of a “fund” to assist small business, said that local government in the past had been subject to the Golden Rule: “Those who have the gold have made the rules.”

The candidates were split on some issues, like PILOTs (payment-in-lieu-of-tax provisions) to attract industry, with Reaves and Simmons approving PILOTs as necessary and Price and Fazullah expressing doubt about their efficacy.

All in all, however, the quartet stuck fairly close to the traditional GOP talking points of low taxes, less government, and greater efficiencies. Asked to choose a single highest priority, Simmons and Reaves named education, while Fazullah and Price suggested “entrepreneurship” and “small business,” respectively.

Colvett had cautioned the candidates to avoid “personal” disagreements, and, in fact, the event was devoid of any significant disharmony, though Simmons and Reaves — or, more exactly, their supporters — have hit some sharply competitive notes in social media.

Categories
Sports Tiger Blue

Tiger Trivia Tuesday

Joe Jackson led the Memphis Tigers in both scoring and assists his last two seasons with the program. He’s the fourth Tiger to lead the team in both categories (at least) two straight seasons since Memphis began charting assists in 1968. Name the other three.