
Recall, Surveys, and Larry
Updates on 3 On-going Stories
California voters defeated the Recall vote that would have ousted Governor Newsom. The leading Republican among the candidates was Larry Elder. Photo: People.com
With homage paid to retired Modesto Bee columnist Ron Agonstini who came up with the concept of telling readers how long his sports feature would be, the total reading time for this piece is about four minutes.
Family and friends of mine not living in California seemed fascinated with the recent recall effort.
With voters soundly defeating the recall by about a three-to-one margin, it seems the issue is closed. There was a brief period of time when the polls showed a much tighter race.
I’m reminded of the first race for President in which I was eligible to vote. President Gerald Ford was defeated by Jimmy Carter in 1976. The polls showed President Ford closing in on Carter in the days leading up to the election.
Had the election been held a few days later, pundits believed Ford would have been successful.
In the case of the California recall, it appears if the race had been held about a month earlier, there might have been a different result. We’ll never know.
The American Recovery Plan Act survey document mailed to residents in the City of Merced.
The survey sent to homes recently on how to spend federal COVID relief dollars is a fast and easy way to let our City of Merced leaders know what we think.
The survey document includes the CityofMerced.org web address allowing for on-line entry of responses.
The survey features a ranking for priorities in order of preference, a question about the biggest challenge faced during the crisis, and a request for the top three priorities the City should address.
There is room to write in thoughts and points either not covered in the survey, or to expand on particular questions.
Former Merced County District Attorney Larry Morse passed away on September 14. Photo courtesy Roger J. Wyan Photography, used with permission from the photographer for this specific purpose of this column only.
The community is remembering former Merced County District Attorney Larry Morse who died on September 15.
While I did not know him well, we would often cross paths during the early years of his service as District Attorney and my year as CEO of the Greater Merced Chamber.
After I left that job for my work at a utility company, we’d catch one another at community fund raising dinners. He was often tapped as a Master of Ceremonies for these events; I was usually filling a seat from a table purchased from my former employer.
I recall one time watching him carrying a book and walking briskly up the steps to the Main Branch of the Merced County Library.
He looked at me and said the book was overdue. I asked “where was the investigative reporter when we needed it?”
He gave a quote to the Merced Sun Star at the time his office successfully prosecuted a murder case.
That quote provided the perfect introduction to my murder mystery novel Ten Minutes to Air.
I used that quote at the beginning of my book:
“Murders are almost always about the amount of time someone has to evaluate their actions to stop themselves.”
Larry Morse, Merced County District Attorney.
Larry’s quote was the essence of my fictional story. If a would-be killer could take a few minutes to think about what he or she was about to do, maybe he or she might change their mind. That can apply to a lot of things.
There’s going to be more about the life and career of Larry Morse in social media and our local news outlets.
I will be grateful to him for letting me quote him for the introduction to my third book.
Steve Newvine lives in Merced.
The Night Kenny Rogers Held Them in the Central Valley
Singer’s 2014 Merced Performance Brings Back Memories
Kenny Rogers belts out one of his classic hits at the Merced Theatre concert from October 2014. Photo: Merced Theatre Foundation
When Kenny Rogers sang the lyrics to his hit song The Gambler, “You’ve got to know when to hold them”, in a Central Valley show back in October of 2014, it was just another packed house for the entertainer. But it was a big deal for the Merced Theatre to host the singer.
It had been about two-and-a-half years since the Theatre completed renovations. A number of lesser known musical acts had taken to the stage during that time. But landing this Grammy and Country Music Association award winning artist was risky.
Would the crowds show up? Would the show be a success? As it would turn out, those fears about whether audiences would respond were erased.
“The Theatre re-opened after renovations in April 2012,” said managing director Heather Holt. “Kenny was our first sold out show.”
The marquee at the Merced Theatre points out that over one-thousand tickets were sold for the October 2014 concert by Kenny Rogers. Photo: Merced Theatre Foundation
Necola Adams remembers the night she met Kenny Rogers following that performance in Merced.
“We shook hands,” she said. “He had the softest hands I’ve ever touched.” Necola, who owns Mrs. Adams Gormet Cookies, had taken six dozen of her cookies to Kenny’s road manager.
The manager asked her to wait until the show was over so that he could introduce her to his boss.
“I heard the whole show from inside Kenny’s tour bus,” she said.
Necola Adams with Kenny Rogers. Photo: Necola Adams
After the show, Nicola was the first person Kenny met as security escorted him from the stage to his bus.
Following an introduction by the road manager, Kenny suggested a photo opportunity.
“I was the only person to get a picture taken with him,” she said.
Kenny Rogers had a career in music that dated back to the late 1950s. In the 1960s, he was the lead singer for the rock group First Edition (later to be called Kenny Rogers and the First Edition).
The group disbanded in the seventies and Kenny pursued a solo career in country music.
Kenny Roger’s October 2014 show at the Merced Theatre was a sell-out. Photo: Merced Theatre Foundation
He had a number of hit records in that decade including the iconic story song The Gambler.
That record sold three-million copies, led to a TV-movie career, and made him an arena-packing performer.
In 1983, he teamed with Dolly Parton for the song Islands in the Stream.
That hit record cemented his place in Country and Pop music. In the nineties and into the 2000s, he continued performing and releasing new music sporadically.
Then in the early twenty-teens he accepted the opportunity to play The Art Kamangar Center at The Merced Theatre
The Merced audience responded enthusiastically to Kenny Roger’s October 2014 show at the Merced Theatre.. Photo: Merced Theatre Foundation
By the time the Merced Theater show, he was just a few months away from announcing the start of a farewell tour.
“He was the first really big name to come to the Theatre since the renovation,” Heather Holt said.
That farewell tour started in 2015 and ended in 2018 with an announcement he would end performing on stage based on advice from his doctors.
A bladder cancer diagnosis led to his decision to end his touring.
He died in hospice care on March 20, 2020.
Nicola was saddened when she learned of Kenny’s passing, but she hangs on to pleasant memories of how nice he treated her right after his Merced show. “You can meet some really nice people if you don’t act crazy around them,” she said. “He was a genuinely nice guy.”
Steve Newvine lives in Merced.
His book Can Do Californians is available at Lulu.com and at BarnesAndNoble.com.
He had planned this column at the time of Kenny’s passing, but COVID closures kept him away from the Merced Theatre.
He thanks Tom Frazier and Susan Walsh for the information that helped this column.
To explore Steve Newvine's complete collection of books, simply click on the link below.
CLICK HERE
Steve is also open to delivering speeches for service club programs and other public speaking engagements.
Contact him at: SteveNewvine@sbcglobal.net