Categories
Opinion Viewpoint

The Root Cause

Even as we mourned last week’s indescribable horrors, we Americans waved
the flag and vowed to take the fight to the evil bastards responsible for such
heinous acts. We were told by the president that the battle would be long and
hard but eventually we would “smoke the terrorists from their holes” and “wipe
out terrorism.”

Such words are brave and no doubt necessary to rally the country toward a
task that will tax every fiber of our national will. Our leaders are trying to
build a coalition of nations to join us in the fight. Our military is
preparing for a long campaign, getting ready to take on a conflict with
uncertain boundaries, a fight where the first assault — a horrific sneak
attack — was waged on U.S. soil. We are, all of us, forced to face the
sobering reality that we will soon be at war.

But really, what will it take to “wipe out terrorism”? Is such a thing
even feasible? Or are we in danger of falling into a trap, allowing ourselves
to be drawn into one of the world’s great never-ending cycles of vengeance.
The Serbs and Croats have been killing each other for centuries; the I.R.A.
and Irish Protestants manage to keep hate alive year after year with
retaliatory acts of bloodshed; Israel and the Arab nations surrounding that
country haven’t come close to establishing a peace after 50 years of trying.
Every week there are more innocent victims, more bloodshed. And now we’re
going to fix it?

Maybe we can. Maybe the magnitude of the most recent atrocities will
allow us to forge a real alliance for change. Maybe this time the world has
finally had enough. But it seems to me it’s going to take more than bombs to
solve the problem of terrorism.

Let’s say we manage, with the help of a coalition of nations, to track
down and kill Osama bin Laden; that we bomb his camps and kill thousands of
his followers; that we destroy “terrorist cells” in all of the many countries
that now harbor them. Would the “war” then be won? Not likely.

Destroying terrorism is like trying to step on fleeing roaches when the
lights go on. A few will escape, no matter how hard you stomp or how pointy-
toed your boots are. With every terrorist we kill, we’ll create potential for
more, as surviving sons, brothers, and friends seek revenge. Unless we have a
plan that goes beyond smoking them from their holes, we shouldn’t be surprised
if five years from now another misguided evildoer plants a nuclear device next
to Disney World.

It’s easy to be united now; we’re all outraged, all sympathetic to the
suffering endured by those who’ve lost friends and family. But will we remain
united when American body bags begin to return from the mountains of
Afghanistan? Will we truly be willing to send our sons and daughters — not
just our high-tech weapons — if the fighting lasts years instead of months?
We will likely have the chance to find out.

One thing is certain: To remain united we must avoid finger-pointing and
small-mindedness. The recent attacks killed Christians, Jews, Muslims, Hindus,
Buddhists, Republicans, Democrats, gays, lesbians, pro-choicers, and pro-
lifers without discrimination. We need to recognize that statements such as
those made (and later recanted) by Jerry Falwell blaming gays, lesbians, those
who are pro-choice, and the ACLU for the World Trade Center attacks are part
of the very problem we’re trying to fix. Intolerance in the name of “God” is
misguided, no matter who’s pointing the finger.

There’s little doubt, given recent events, that we must respond
militarily with all the precision and power we can muster. But after the war
is over, we should have a “Marshall Plan” of sorts in place to help smoke out
the root causes of fanaticism: poverty, ignorance, and powerlessness. If we
don’t, the merry-go-round of vengeance will continue.

Bruce VanWyngarden is the editor of the Flyer.

Categories
Letter From The Editor Opinion

September Morning

As the sun climbed into a cloudless blue sky the city went about its business as usual. At the Starbucks on Union the line of commuters waited for their mocha lattes. On the radio George Lapides was offering sports trivia. Joggers were jogging. The birds were singing. Life was good. Memphis was getting ready for another day, and a beautiful one it was.

It was Tuesday, our deadline day, and we were preparing a cover story on Memphis nightlife.

And then we started hearing the news, the horrible, unbelievable news that transfixed the country and that will probably forever change the way we see ourselves and our place in the world.

It began as an unfolding kaleidoscope of images, each more horrific and unbelievable than the last. First, we learned that a plane had crashed into one of the World Trade Center towers. Was it terrorism or just a terrible accident, we wondered. Then 18 minutes later, another plane struck the other tower and the intentional nature of the attacks became more apparent. Before we could begin to let the enormity of these events sink in, we learned of yet another suicide-plane attack on the Pentagon. Then the towers collapsed, one after another, taking countless more lives; then another plane crashed near Pittsburgh. Rumors flew over the airwaves and around the office as reports came tumbling in from various sources. There were four planes, no, five. More attacks would come. The airports were closing …

What the hell was happening?

The horror grew with each new revelation, with each numbing report of more death and destruction. Then came the queasy fear, the certain knowledge that America was no longer a safe haven, insulated from the messy but distant terrorism that plagues so much of the rest of the world. We seemed suddenly vulnerable, at the mercy of an evil too big to comprehend. Was there more to come?

We called friends and family, no matter where they were, seeking assurance that they were okay, seeking affirmation that they too had seen the news, had shared the nightmare. Our nightlife cover story seemed trivial now, pointless, a remnant of an easier, happier time, a time that suddenly seemed long ago and far away.

The terrorist suicide-plane attacks in New York, Washington, D.C., and Pennsylvania were a wake-up call for all of us. A “Pearl Harbor” moment for a new generation. Only this time there is no enemy country to invade, no clear way to fight back. The Japanese attack of 1941 was merciless and a surprise, but at least we knew where Tokyo was. This time it will do no good to mobilize our industries or stage a draft. The “enemy” is faceless, anonymous, and uses our own commercial airliners against us. Sophisticated missile defense systems and smart bombs are useless in the face of such actions.

Diplomacy seems equally futile. We are dealing with a foe whose soldiers find their greatest victories in suicide killings of civilians, whose hatred of America justifies any act, no matter how heinous. How we travel, how we live, how we view ourselves and our relations with the rest of the world are irrevocably altered.

As a weekly newspaper, the Flyer cannot offer breaking news in a situation such as this. That job is best left to television and the daily papers. We can, however, offer some perspective on the situation, some analysis of the events and their aftermath. And that’s what we’ve attempted to do this week. The paper is a day later than normal, but events have transpired to make it so.

As I left downtown at day’s end Tuesday, I couldn’t help noticing the utter normalcy everywhere. Carpenters pounded nails on a new house; the trolley clattered by; runners jogged along the the Bluff Walk; the river ran as it always does, reflecting the setting sun. It all seemed the same as ever. But it wasn’t. Not really.

Bruce VanWyngarden

The Memphis Flyer encourages reader response. Send mail to: Letters to the Editor, POB 1738, Memphis, TN 38101. Or call Back Talk at 575-9405. Or send us e-mail at letters@memphisflyer.com. All responses must include name, address, and daytime phone number. Letters should be no longer than 250 words.

Categories
Letter From The Editor Opinion

EDITOR’S NOTE

As this issue of The Memphis Flyer hit the streets Wednesday, former Flyer editor and current sports editor and director of Internet services Dennis Freeland was on an operating table undergoing brain surgery at Baptist East hospital. Over the years we at the Flyer have faced some tough deadline pressures, but this is ridiculous.

It’s ridiculous that our brave, gentle friend and colleague has been dealt such a crummy hand. At 45, Dennis should be in the prime of his career, happily gearing up for another football season and enjoying the company of his beautiful wife Perveen and their 5-year-old daughter Feroza. Instead, he’s in the fight of his life.

But he’s playing that hand with considerable grace. Dennis is one of our best people, in every sense of the word. He’s a compassionate listener, an honest writer, and a reporter who manages to be hard-hitting and informative while keeping the friendship and respect of newsmakers and colleagues. He’s been keeping many of them informed about his condition via e-mails, which he likens to casting a net in the ocean.

“Regardless of the day of the week or the time of the day, within 30 minutes your positive messages start coming back from all over the world. It is so cool.”

As regular readers know, Dennis’ byline has been missing from the paper for several weeks. At first he thought the headaches and problems with his vision were the after-effects of a stroke he suffered in 1999 or possibly multiple sclerosis. No such luck.

“I have cancer and the doctors tell me it’s incurable,” he told his friends last week.

After the surgery, which is quite risky, he’ll undergo radiation treatments and possibly chemotherapy.

“I made the decision to have surgery based on wanting to spend more time with my family,” says Dennis. “My doctor says this is the most promising time they have ever known in cancer research. The only way to treat it is real aggressively, and that is what I have chosen to do. I actually thought of doing nothing, but ultimately I had to go with the possibility of life.”

By Dennis’ count, people of 11 different faiths have been saying prayers for him, which is appropriate in light of his past work with the interracial, interfaith Camp Anytown and long involvement with the National Conference for Community and Justice.

We join them all in wishing him our best and keeping him constantly in our thoughts and prayers.

The Memphis Flyer encourages reader response. Send mail to: Letters to the Editor, POB 1738, Memphis, TN 38101. Or call Back Talk at 575-9405. Or send us e-mail at letters@memphisflyer.com. All responses must include name, address, and daytime phone number. Letters should be no longer than 250 words.

Categories
Cover Feature News

Drive On!

Tom Lehman

It’s a week before the FedEx St. Jude Classic at the Tournament Players Club at Southwind, and it’s raining. As Phil Cannon mounts the stairs to the viewing stand overlooking the 18th green, his foot slips. Cannon’s on his walkie-talkie faster than a downhill putt on ice.

“Hey,” he says, calling maintenance, “these steps on 18 are slick.”

“Yeah, they are pretty slick, aren’t they?” comes the proud response.

“No, I don’t mean they’re good slick,” Cannon says. “I mean they’re slippery! We almost fell on our butts coming up here.”

“Oh … uh, well, we’ll come see what we can do.”

It’s crunch time for the director of Memphis’ annual PGA TOUR stop and after 33 years of working the tournament, Cannon has learned to sweat the small stuff. Slick steps during the tournament could mean trouble, and trouble is what he needs to stay one step ahead of. Cannon has seen it all through the years: horrible weather, great weather, miraculous comebacks, temper tantrums, meltdowns, tears of joy. He’s been around some of the giants of the game — Player, Trevino, Norman, Price — and seen obscure journeymen take home an unexpected victory.

But Cannon doesn’t talk about that much. If you look up “modest” in your Webster’s Unabridged you’ll see Cannon’s picture. He prefers to pass along the credit to his staff and volunteers. He prefers to talk about what it feels like to hand a big check over to St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital each year. He prefers, in short, to remain well outside the beam of the spotlight. “The story,” he says firmly, “is not about me.”

Phil Mickelson

And he’s right, of course. The stories during this tournament week should be about the game and its players. Can Phil Mickelson, the second-ranked golfer in the world, shake his recent putting yips? Will John Daly play well, or fling a putter into a lake? Can Nick Price win in Memphis yet again? Will home cooking help Germantown’s young phenom David Gossett find his game? Will Jesper Parnevik wear those fabulous pink pants?

Or maybe one of the PGA’s young guns will use Memphis to step forward, like last year when Notah Begay snared the trophy with a brilliantly precise 6-iron over water to the 18th green. And what about the other relative newcomers — David Toms, Frank Lickliter, and Chris DiMarco — all of whom have played well this year?

The field is rich, perhaps the best ever. Tom Lehman, Lee Janzen, Steve Elkington, Bernhard Langer, and Nick Faldo, who have all won Majors, will lend their luminance to the tourney.

So who will emerge? Who will kiss the trophy? That’s the story.

Still, a little more about Phil Cannon couldn’t hurt.

“When I was a sophomore at White Station,” Cannon says, “I became a volunteer at what was then the Memphis Open. I went to college as a journalism major at Memphis State and worked in the sports information office with SID James Bugbee, who also worked for the tournament. He got me even more involved.”

After “cramming four years of college into eight,” Cannon stayed in the sports event business, eventually working for the Mid-South Coliseum for a number of years in the 1980s. In 1990 he went to work for the tournament full-time.

So what does a tournament director do the other 11 months and three weeks of the year?

“My old boss used to joke, ‘We wake up, play 18 with Arnie and Jack, then go to the office and answer a few phone calls,'” Cannon laughs. “But that’s hardly the case. Much of what we do is raise money to fund the purse and our operations.”

Bernhard Langer

Cannon manages a full-time staff of four, plus nine part-time workers and 1,500 volunteers. “Our volunteer Committee of 100 raised $1 million this year,” he says. “That’s a big story.” The money comes from sponsors, the sale of $35,000 “hospitality chalets,” ticket sales, and various other revenue sources. The tournament’s biggest sponsor is, of course, FedEx, which contributes “something well into seven figures,” according to Cannon. “Basically, it takes us 11 months to raise the money,” he says, “and one month to spend it. We’re a 501.C3 nonprofit charity, so what’s left over goes to St. Jude.”

And there has been more than a little left over. Since 1970 the tournament has donated more than $11 million to the children’s hospital.

Cannon, who doesn’t play golf, compares his job to running Memphis in May or an outdoor festival. “It’s event management and all that that entails,” he says. It’s crowd control and logistics and food and beverage service — and keeping the steps from being too slippery.

But the best part of his job, Cannon says, is working with the volunteers. “I always say to the media, ‘You want a story? Write about our volunteers. What they do is incredible.’ It doesn’t hit home until you see it. We had a father and daughter who buried their wife and mother the Tuesday before the tournament started last year. On Wednesday they were here working. It’s an amazing group of people.”

What’s the worst part of his job? Cannon likes it all. Except for one thing. “Every year I’m surprised by the number of people who come out to the tournament and get mad because they have to walk. I’m not sure what they expected, but I would tell Flyer readers, ‘Be prepared to walk.'” ·

The Local Angle

Want to root for a hometown hero? There are plenty to choose from at this year’s tourney.

Loren Roberts

Loren Roberts

The Germantown-based Roberts had the best year of his long career in 2000, with one victory and nine top-10 finishes. Known as the “Boss of the Moss” because of his pure putting stroke, Roberts’ victory at the Greater Milwaukee Open made him the oldest winner on tour (at 45) since Tom Watson won at age 48 in 1998. He ranks 87th in 2001 money earnings ($288,937), with his best finish being a tie for fifth at the Sony Open. He is a former member of the USA President’s Cup and Ryder Cup teams.

Doug Barron

The 31-year-old Barron won nearly $200,000 his rookie year (1997) and finished 108th on the money list for 2000. He currently ranks 181st in earnings, with $52,449 for 2001. His three top-10 finishes in 2000 were a career best.

Shaun Micheel

Playing out of Ridgeway Country Club, Micheel, 31, had his best year on tour in 2000, with three top-10 finishes and four top-25 finishes. His best tournament this year was the BellSouth Classic, where he tied for 11th. He ranks 119th on the money list in 2001, with $193,608 in earnings.

John Daly

David Gossett

Gossett is ranked 20th on the Buy.Com tour this year, with $45,217 in earnings. After failing to earn his PGA card last year in the seven tournaments he entered, Gossett received a sponsor’s exemption to play in this year’s FedEx St. Jude Classic. He has finished fifth twice on the Buy.Com tour in 2001. Gossett, who is from Germantown, has played the FedEx classic twice, making the cut as an amateur in 1998 (after shooting a first-round score of 66) and missing the cut as a pro in 1999.

John Daly

Though now playing out of Philadelphia, Mississippi, Daly, 35, remains a local favorite. The long-hitting, mullet-headed blond won two majors before he was 30, but well-publicized troubles with alcohol, gambling, and his marriage have eclipsed his early promise. He has only won two other times in his career. This year he leads the tour in driving distance (301.4 yds.) and ranks 100th in earnings with $254,260. · — BV

FedEx St. Jude Classic Facts and Figures

· 44th Annual Tournament

· Title Sponsor: FedEx Corporation (since 1986)

· Beneficiary: St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital ($11,498,416 since 1970)

· Economic Impact: According to a recent study, FESJC annually impacts the Memphis-area economy by more than $15 million; 88 percent of attendees are college-educated; 63 percent are at executive-level jobs.

· More than 1,500 volunteers contribute 20,000 hours.

· Attendance: Estimated at 150,000 annually

· Site: Tournament Players Club at Southwind

· The Course: Par 71; 7,030 yards. Eight lakes and three streams affect play on 11 holes.

· Field: 156 golfers. After 36 holes, field will be cut to lowest 70 scorers and ties.

· Purse: $3,500,000; winner’s share, $630,000

· Television Coverage:

Thursday, June 7th — ESPN, 2-5 p.m.

Friday, June 8th — ESPN, noon-2 p.m.

Saturday, June 9th — ABC, 3-5 p.m.

Sunday, June 10th — ABC, 2-5 p.m.

A Reporter’s Memories

bobby Hall covered the Memphis stop on the PGA tour for The Commercial Appeal from the late 1960s until last year. He retired from the CA in February and does some part-time work editing the tournament’s publications. We asked him to talk about some of his favorite tournament memories.

First on Hall’s list was Al Geiberger’s 59 in 1977: “In those days,” Hall recalls, “we had only a couple of staffers covering the tournament. There weren’t any high-tech scoreboards so we didn’t have a real idea of what was happening out on the course. I remember the day well because several cars caught on fire out in the parking lot and I had to go out and cover that. By the time I got back, the word was out that Geiberger was doing something marvelous. I was lucky enough to see him play the last hole.

“A million people will tell you now that they saw the whole round, but they didn’t because it was only the second day of the tournament and no one knew what he was doing.

“I do remember that he wasn’t a flamboyant guy. He made the putt on 18 and kind of threw up his hands and walked off. There really weren’t a whole lot of people there.”

Hall also witnessed tourney winner Jerry Pate jumping in the lake in 1981. “He pretty much told people as a joke,” Hall recalls. “He said, ‘If I win it I’ll jump in the lake.’ As it turned out, of course, he did win and people held him to it. He didn’t even hesitate.”

Through the years weather has wreaked havoc on the tournament, including torrential rains, blistering heat and humidity, and even tornadoes. “During a tournament in the 1960s,” Hall says, “there was a tornado warning. Everybody — spectators, players, caddies, officials — swarmed into the lower clubhouse. They were packed in like sardines, Arnold Palmer and everybody else. I remember there were some little old men — club members — coming out of the shower wrapped in towels. They walked out of the shower with no clue what was going on and here was this huge throng of people in their locker room.”

Two-time winner Nick Price also has a spot reserved in Hall’s memory bank. In 1993 the personable South African was on the leader-board every day of the tournament but didn’t know if he’d be able to stick around long enough to finish since his wife was in Florida expecting a child.

“Each day,” Hall recalls, “at the end of the round Price would say, ‘I may get a call and I won’t be here tomorrow. If I get a call from Florida, I’m out of here.’ But he was kind and cooperative enough to let me call him each night where he was staying and let me know if he was going to be around the next day. He was really a likable guy and very popular here. He had a caddy named Squeaky who died of cancer.”

Memorable shots? Hall’s seen a few in his time. He followed Greg Norman as he made his three-consecutive-birdies charge to victory in 1997. He saw Notah Begay‘s pin-point chip shot on the 17th hole last year. But the one that sticks with him the most came in 1990, and it also came on the 17th.

Tom Kite was stuck behind a tree about 190 yards out. He had to hit a huge banana slice around it to get to the green — a nearly impossible shot. He hit it to within a couple feet of the hole and made the birdie putt. Kite said at the time it was the best shot he’d ever hit in competition.”

How has all the new high-tech equipment affected the game? “How to judge that, I don’t know,” Hall says. “Sure it’s affected the game. People say, ‘What if Hogan had this new equipment, how would he play?’ But what if these [current players] had to play on the courses he played? Back then they weren’t manicured like they are today. Basically, I think a good pro could take a set of clubs off the shelf from Wal-Mart and play scratch golf, but I know everybody, including the pros, wants the top-of-the-line stuff.

“Of course, with my swing it doesn’t matter.” — BV

The FESJC –A Brief History

The tournament was founded in 1958 as the Memphis Open with an initial purse of $20,000. It was held at the Colonial Country Club, which was then in East Memphis. Billy Maxwell won the first event and collected $2,800.

In 1960 the name was changed to the Memphis Invitational Open. In 1969 entertainer Danny Thomas agreed to lend his name and influence to the event, which was renamed the Danny Thomas Memphis Classic (DTMC). In that event’s first year, 1970, St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital became the event’s sole charity. Dave Hill won the first DTMC and collected $30,000 from the $150,000 purse.

In 1972 the event was moved to the new Colonial Country Club in Cordova. Lee Trevino won the first tournament at the new layout.

In 1977 the tournament saw two notable events. President Gerald Ford shot a hole in one on the 5th hole during the celebrity pro-am. And just two days later tour veteran Al Geiberger pulled off what Sports Illustrated called “one of the most significant athletic achievements of the 20th century” by shooting a 59. No small feat when you consider that the Colonial course was at that time the longest on the tour. Geiberger’s 13-under-par 18 holes still stands (though it has been tied twice since then) as a PGA tour one-round record.

In 1985 the tournament’s name was changed yet again — this time to the St. Jude Memphis Classic. One year later the Federal Express Corporation became the tournament’s title sponsor.

In 1989 the tournament moved to its current location at Southwind. · — BV

Categories
Opinion Viewpoint

Unforced Error

Drumroll, please.

We screwed up. Last week’s cover story, “Prescription for Disaster,” asserted that the taxpayers of Shelby County had paid out more than $40 million to settle lawsuits filed by inmates at the Shelby County jail since 1996. This is incorrect. The county has only paid out around $7 million to settle lawsuits from all departments since 1996.

In point of fact, pending legitimate lawsuits totaling much more than $40 million have been filed by inmates, but these have not been adjudicated yet. The reporter made an error and the editors failed to catch it. The buck stops with me.

This error became “news” when county commissioner Cleo Kirk raised questions about the story at the tail end of this week’s commission meeting. In an attempt to clarify the situation, Flyer senior editor Jackson Baker — who was covering the meeting — told the commission that the paper had been apprised of the likelihood of error and would not hestitate to take whatever corrective measures proved necessary. A Commercial Appeal reporter then filed a story on the incident, which became top-of-the-page news in last Tuesday’s CA. Rather than simply running a “correction” in this week’s Flyer, as is standard practice for newspapers, I felt that the added coverage of our mistake warranted a fuller explanation.

The most unfortunate aspect of this affair is that the solid reporting in the rest of the story has perhaps now become overshadowed by the error in its lead paragraph. Correctional Medical Services, the company hired by the county to provide health care to downtown jail inmates, has had more than its share of troubles across the country — and now here in Memphis. Inmates and their families have filed hundreds of suits against the company totaling millions of dollars nationwide. It’s a story that had not heretofore been told locally.

Our reporter documented CMS’s hiring of doctors with questionable backgrounds — including sex offenders and drug abusers — doctors the company could get to work for the $55 an hour it pays physicians. In Shelby County, CMS’s director of inmate services — John Perry — is called “Dr. Perry” even though he only holds a master’s degree in administration and psychology. We also reported on the eight suicides at the jail since 1993, which included two 16-year-old boys. Suicides that could have been prevented if the jail had been run better.

There are huge problems with the jail, problems that don’t seem to be getting better, as we’ve reported over the past few months. Federal judge Jon McCalla has ordered the Sheriff’s Department to come up with a plan to reduce crowding or be held in contempt. Gangs have ruled various aspects of the jail, even going so far as to stage mock gladiator-style fights between hapless inmates. Wrongful deaths, assaults, and rapes have occurred far too often. The citizens of Shelby County are already out millions of dollars in lawsuit settlements due to problems with the Sheriff’s Department and the jail. We will all keep paying until the problems are fixed.

The mistake in last week’s Flyer can be, and should be, publicly corrected. The mistakes being made down at 201 Poplar are going to be much more difficult and costly to fix.

And you can take that story to the bank.

Bruce VanWyngarden is the editor of the Flyer.

Categories
News News Feature

BEHIND THE SHRINKING APPEAL

Noticeably absent Sunday in a Commercial Appeal story about the daily decreasing the size of its pages was a disclosure about the potential millions of dollars in paper costs the newspaper stands to save after the switch.

The story, penned by the paper’s editor and president Angus McEachran, mentioned several other benefits the smaller paper size will yield, such “less clutter” and being easier to read in cramped spaces. But the paper failed to mention that in reducing the size of the printed page, The Commercial Appeal will be reducing its operating expenses and possibly reducing its news hole Ñ the amount of space available for news stories.

When there’s less paper space, stories must be cut or shortened. And when papers elsewhere have used smaller print to keep from reducing the number of stories, as the CA’s new design does, some readers have gotten upset.

In his column, McEachran maintains that by using a new, smaller, typeface the paper will be able to reduce the size of the paper without cutting into the number of stories. He goes on to write that the “letters will be clearer and appear bigger although their computer-assisted design actually makes each word more compact.”

McEachran did not respond to the Flyer‘s request for comment.

The Commercial Appeal is not the first newspaper to adopt the “smaller is better” logic. Papers nationwide, including USA Today, The L.A. Times, and The Washington Post have already made the switch. Major newspaper publishers have discovered that by going from 54 to 50 inches they can save a bundle on the cost of newsprint. And with the cost of newsprint currently on the rise, many papers have succumbed to temptation and cut back on paper usage. The Boston Globe, which recently reduced its paper size, expects to save about $4 million this year. News industry experts estimate that newsprint can constitute as much as 60 percent of a paper’s total costs, so the Memphis paper’s profitability could improve significantly.

Nationwide, page sizes aren’t the only newsroom causalities. At many of the other shrinking papers the editorial staff has also been cut. At The Asbury Park Press, the second largest paper in New Jersey, newsroom staff has dropped from 240 to about 180 since 1997. And The Akron Beacon Journal announced earlier this month that it will lay off some 60 employees in order to meet financial goals set by Knight Ridder, its parent company.

According to sources at The Commercial Appeal, the paper has a hiring freeze on new reporters and positions left empty after the departures of Sara Derks, Bobby Hall, and Larry Rea. Warren Funk, The Commercial Appeal‘s director of human resources, did not respond to calls from the Flyer, nor did Deputy Managing Editor Otis Sanford.

It’s possible The Commercial Appeal is feeling pressure from its parent company, Scripps Howard, to help maintain the company’s impressive profit margin of nearly 30 percent in its newspaper division. As the second largest paper in the Scripps chain, the Memphis paper would seem to be in a position to greatly impact profit margins. But the newspaper division is the slowest growing of the Scripps ventures. (The cable channels Home and Garden Television, the Food Network, and Do it Yourself are more aggressive properties).

Whether or not the CA will have less news when pages are reduced a couple of inches remains to be seen. And the new size may be indeed be easier to handle in cramped spaces and beneficial to trees. But other beneficiaries will no doubt include Scripps Howard and its stockholders.

Categories
News News Feature

RAP PROTEST HITS NARAS

A Germantown woman prominent in Republican affairs, Cherrie Holden, has decided to publicly resign from the 32-member Board of Governors of the local chapter of the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences.

Holden, who is also a member of the state Board of Education from Tennessee’s 7th Congressional District and was a state coordinator of the Bush-Cheney presidential campaign, has for the last year been one of five officers in the local NARAS chapter, holding the position of secretary-treasurer. She is business manager for High Stacks Records, which specializes in gospel recordings but recently did a retro album featuring the music of former Stax artists.

Her resignation is not meant primarily as a statement directed at the local chapter or even at NARAS at large, Holden says. She intends it as a protest against what she sees as alarming tendencies in the popular music industry — notably its acceptance of that nitty-gritty street variety known as rap.

Holden’s letter of resignation from the Board of Governors goes as follows:

“Our chapter has grown so much in the past several years and our industry has greatly changed. Along with these changes has come a very different focus for our organization. We have moved from a representative organization to a membership organization. The recognition of our art has also changed. No longer is there honor in rewarding the music industry’s finest for bringing the world music as a form of art. We find our industry now rewarding and lifting up the avocation of hate and violence through anger-filled lyrics of spoken-word obscenities known as Rap. We applaud beautiful young teenagers dressed up to allure, singing words that imply explicit knowledge well beyond their years. These are the role models that influence the youth of our nation.

“Thomas Carlyle once said, ‘Music is well said to be the speech of angels; in fact, nothing among the utterances allowed to man is felt to be so divine.’ I believe, as did Carlyle, the unique gifts we are given by God are to be used to offer this world refreshment from the daily struggles we face. So strongly do I believe that we have lost our focus that I feel I must resign from the organization that is lauding these things of which I wholeheartedly disagree. Once I believed that my service on this board could perhaps slow down or even reverse this disturbing trend by filling one position to hold an anti-vote. I was wrong and perhaps thought too highly of my personal ability to influence in this matter. I encouraged several of you serving now to join me in this effort. My apologies to you for leaving though I do encourage you to listen to your convictions.

“I hope that one day soon our country will understand the significance of rewarding that which is pure and wholesome and uplifting. I love you all and appreciate the opportunity to have worked with you.”

Holden said she had been somewhat aggrieved when the Memphis rap group Three 6 Mafia won a Premier Player award from the local NARAS chapter. “They’re angry and hate-filled,” she said. “We should not glorify that stuff. I’ve mainly been on the board to represent the local gospel community and spotlight them. If that [rap] is what the people want, I can’t approve it. I guess I’ll just make room for somebody that agrees with the philosophy of the organization.”

Holden said she had a telephone conversation Tuesday with local NARAS director Jon Hornyak, who called her from Los Angeles, site of this week’s Grammy Awards celebration. “He understands my position,” Holden said. “He said his position was one of free speech, that he didn’t want to exclude any genre of music. I can understand that, too.”

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News News Feature

TWELVE YEARS ON

The newspapers! Sir, they are the most villainous, licentious, abominable, infernal … Not that I ever read them. — Richard Brinsley Sheridan

Once upon a time, and what a time it was — February 16th, 1989, to be exact — the first Memphis Flyer hit the streets (though at a slim 20 pages, the sound of it hitting the pavement wouldn’t have made much noise). There was a Bush newly installed in the White House and a story in the Flyer about pollution coming from the Velsicol Chemical corporation. Actually, it was a lot like last week’s issue, come to think of it.

But not really. Last week’s issue didn’t have a column by the late Lydel Sims speculating on the feasibility of building The Pyramid. Nor did it have a sports column by Dave Woloshin, or a list of “celebrity birthdays.” (The latter feature didn’t last long. Mainly, I suspect, because Memphis only has about six celebrities. Seven, if you count Elvis.) That first Flyer did have a few — very few — advertisers, including the Sir Laf-A-Lot comedy club (324-JOKE) and eight personals. (Oddly, even in those faraway times the women liked long walks and sunsets.)

That brave little first issue didn’t lack for spunk — or ambition. In a letter to readers, publisher and Flyer founder Kenneth Neill promised that the new paper would be “bold, sassy, controversial, entertaining, and informative.” Those are still the standards we strive for, though there have been some weeks when I’d settle for three out of five.

When I meet someone and they find out what I do for a living they usually ask one of three questions. The most common of these queries is: Where do you find all the stuff for “News of the Weird”? My stock answer is: We have our sources, pal. If you do something weird, our highly paid weird news reporters will be on it in a flash.

This, of course, is a lie. “News of the Weird” is actually a syndicated column, like Ann Landers or William Raspberry. Isn’t that weird?

The second question I hear all the time is: How do y’all make any money since your paper’s free? The answer is simple. Money just isn’t important to us. We’re all volunteers for the great liberal mass-media conspiracy and we do this noble work because we believe in our cause, comrade.

This also is a lie. But you’d be surprised how many people nod sagely, as if I’d confirmed the obvious. The truth is we charge our advertisers a modest fee so they can reach our 200,000 wealthy and influential readers — including you, my dear friend — with their messages. We manage to scrimp by on this somehow.

The third question is: What’s Tim Sampson really like? This is an easy one. Tim is just like he is in his “We Recommend” column. He lives with cats, smokes incessantly, loves Elizabeth Taylor, wakes up in his yard occasionally, and he really doesn’t care what you do. This is not a lie. I should add that he also has a heart of gold and a fondness for the underdog. Tim used to be normal, but four years of editing this newspaper took its toll. He got the first shift, when the Flyer was struggling to become established, which it did in no small measure because of his ground-breaking column and his many long nights in the office burning the midnight, um, oil.

Dennis Freeland followed Tim as editor in 1993 and for eight hard-working years ushered the paper to new heights — and numerous regional and national editorial awards. Last summer, he passed the reins to me. And foolishly, I took them. Kidding. This is a great job, mainly because of all the groundwork done by the two editors who came before me.

I’d like to mention lots of other people who’ve contributed to the Flyer’s success through the years, but their names would fill this column. So I won’t do that. But when you’ve got a moment, turn to page 13 and take a look at the masthead. Without the efforts of every person listed there the Flyer

Finally, there’s you, our readers. I’m not kidding when I say we truly value your input — your letters, phone calls, e-mails, occasional death threats — all of it.

So thanks for helping us celebrate 12 great years. And here’s to being around for a few dozen more.

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News News Feature

A Sailor’s Tale

He was waiting at the reception desk when I came into work last Thursday. He wore dirty jeans, a rumpled sweatshirt, and a fisherman’s cap. He had a shaggy beard and as he shook my hand I noticed his fingernails were dirty.

The receptionist said he had a story for me. This is a line I hear often and it usually makes me duck for cover. But there was something about this guy, something that led me to usher him to my office to hear what he had to say.

“My English, she is not so good,” he began, sounding a bit like Inspector Clouseau. “But I have the story, maybe you would like to buy it?”

“A story you’ve written?” I asked.

“No. I am not the writer, but I tell you my story and maybe you pay me for it.” He set a weathered leather valise on my desk.

“We don’t really do that sort of thing,” I said, looking at the wall clock.

“Oh,” he said dejectedly, fingering the valise.

“Tell me the story,” I said.

And what a story it was.

Jean-Marie Malbranque left Paris on a bicycle in 1981 with 2,500 francs to his name. He cycled — with his dog in a pull-cart behind him — through Algeria, Tunisia, Italy, Greece, Egypt, Sudan, and then the length of Africa. After working in South Africa for several months, he caught a freighter to Argentina and then began cycling north through Uruguay, Paraguay, Brazil, and into French Guiana, where he met a woman who would become his companion. They remained in Giuana for several years, where Jean-Marie worked as a gold miner and welder.

Jean-Marie laid photo after photo of his adventures on my desk, along with letters from those he had met along the way and articles from newspapers in Africa and South America. They told of crocodile attacks on the Nile, camping with Sudanese bandits, a 600-mile raft voyage on the Zaire River, and the death of his dog, bitten by a snake in Brazil. I began to understand the magnitude of his journey and the measure of the quiet little man who had wandered into my office.

But there was more. A few years later he and his girlfriend bought a sailboat in Guiana and sailed north. They visited nearly every Caribbean island, then proceeded up the coast of the United States, through the St. Lawrence Seaway, through the Great Lakes, and finally down the Mississippi River — to Memphis. When he arrived here, someone told him the Flyer might want to buy his story, so he bicycled to our office.

After an hour or so, I thanked him for sharing his adventures but told him again we couldn’t pay for such information. “I understand” he said, and turned to go.

“How much money do you need?” I asked. He looked at his shoes and said he had $14 and needed money to buy boat fuel.

Wait here,” I said. I went to a nearby ATM and got $50. When I got back and gave him the money, he embraced me. “I will put you in my book,” he said. “I will not forget this.”

“Godspeed,” I said, and meant it. Then I watched him bicycle up the trolley tracks and out of sight.

That night over a glass of wine I was telling a couple of friends about my encounter with the mad Frenchman. “Yeah, right,” one of them scoffed. “He probably bicycled down from Frayser.”

“No, I saw the photos,” I said. “He said his boat’s down at the harbor. It’s probably still there.”

“Let’s go find him,” he replied. “If this guy’s real, I want to meet him.” And so we grabbed another bottle of wine (the man’s a Frenchman, after all) and headed to the harbor.

“We’re looking for a Frenchman in a sailboat,” I said to the security guard. “I’m a friend.” He looked us up and down, decided we were harmless, and pointed to a weathered but sleek-looking sailboat at the end of the dock.

We knocked on the hull and after a long moment Jean-Marie emerged, looking confused. We suddenly felt like intruders, three slightly lit-up Americans standing in the dark with a bottle of wine. Then he recognized me. “BRUCE! Mon ami! Come aboard, come aboard.”

We sat in the galley for an hour or so, looking at more photos and souvenirs of Jean-Marie’s — and his girlfriend Beverly’s — travels. We drank more wine, toasted each other, and when Jean-Marie brought out some of his leatherwork to show us we bought barrettes and tool holsters and insisted on paying more than he asked for them.

“No, you are too generous,” he said. “You give me too much.”

But he was wrong. What Jean-Marie had given us was worth every cent. Besides, if you can’t pay for a story one way, you can always try another.

The next morning his boat was gone.