June 18 Collierville Weekly

Page 1

Thursday, June 18, 2015

FREE

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2015 FEDEX ST. JUDE CLASSIC

CELEBRATE DAD THIS WEEKEND

Gomez plays like seasoned champion in capturing first PGA Tour title. Page 17

Happy Father’s Day to all the dads and granddads who leave a lasting impression on our lives.

Look inside for your Lowe’s insert *SELECT ZIP CODES

Collierville Weekly COLLIERVILLE

Spray park passes needed Residents can pick up free cards now Special to The Weekly

PHOTOS BY JIM WEBER/THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL

Volunteer Jim Leetham gets tangled up in Boston’s enthusiasm at the Germantown Animal Shelter, where Boston and many other would-be pets await adoption. Germantown is considering an ordinance that would allow the city to neuter or spay an animal found running around loose twice in a 12-month period.

GERMANTOWN

Animal control City considering spaying and neutering loose pets

By Jennifer Pignolet

A kitten makes a break for it as Germantown Animal Services manager Alina Lesniak collects cats from the play room so they can be fed their morning meal.

pignolet@commercialappeal.com 901-529-2372

ecie Nix and her daughter were driving through their Poplar Estates neighborhood on a recent afternoon when they spotted a mud-covered Labrador retriever gleefully prancing down the street.

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They took him home for a bath and some games of fetch while they tracked down his owners. Nix posted his picture on a Germantown Facebook page, noting his

sweet face, collar without tags and the fact that he was not neutered. Within a few hours, his home had been located on the other side of several busy roads and train

tracks. Nix was relieved — partly because she couldn’t be tempted to keep him along with the two cats See ANIMALS, 2

Since the W.C. Johnson Spray Park opened 15 years ago, Collierville’s population has grown by almost 20,000 people. Even with the addition of the Suggs Spray Park, the two locations are extremely busy during the hot summer months. To better regulate overcrowding, the Collierville Parks, Recreation and Cultural Arts Department is implementing a new Spray Park Pass system at the W.C. Johnson location starting in July, pending fence construction completion. Visitors to the W.C. Johnson Spray Park, 419 Johnson Park Drive, will need a pass upon entry. Spray park passes may be obtained at the Collierville Parks Administration Oice, 440 West Powell Road, Monday through Friday, from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. For Collierville residents, a season pass is free by showing proof of residency, such as a current utility bill or a driver’s license. For nonCollierville residents, a fee of $10 per person must be paid at the administration oice. The $10 fee includes one visit to the pray park, however, multiple days may be purchased. A stamped receipt will be required to show the attendant at the spray park entrance. W.C. Johnson spray park. Passes for residents and nonresidents cannot be obtained over the weekend. Spray Park hours are Monday through Saturday, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. and Sundays, from 1-5 p.m. For more information visit colliervilleparks.org or call the parks administration at 901-457-2770.

ACHIEVEMENT

Inside the Edition

C’ville’s Albonetti honored for 30 years of service

TALKING TRASH Shelby County doubles inmate work crews to lend a hand cleaning up litter. NEWS, 2

Special to The Weekly

WHAT’S HAPPENING Whether you’re looking for a date-night idea or entertainment for the kids, check out our local event listings. CALENDAR, 24 © Copyright 2015

LOOK INSIDE FOR

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On June 8, the Collierville Board of Mayor and Aldermen honored Capt. Michael Albonetti for his 30 years of service with the Collierville Police Department. Albonetti was hired in June of 1985. The chief of police at that time was Dennis Joyner, and he asked the new patrolman about his plans for the future. Albonetti told Joyner that he would like to retire from the department. As a patrolman, Albonetti served in almost

every area possible — ield training, DUI, canine, trafic and training/public relations. He also served as a SWAT team member. He was promoted to the rank of sergeant in 1990 and to the rank of lieutenant in 1994. He reached his present rank of captain in January 2008. Since then, he has served as division commander for the special operation division, uniform patrol division and his current assignment in support services. In addition, Albonetti is a certified trainer in sobriety

Capt. Michael Albonetti (left) is congratulated by Collierville Police Chief Larry Goodwin at the recent Collierville Board of Mayor and Aldermen meeting for 30 years of service.

testing, in-car video systems, emergency vehicle operations and ethics. Albonetti thanked Joyner for mentoring him and also thanked police chief Larry Goodwin for promoting him. He thanked his wife, Cindy, for accepting the life of a police spouse and all that comes with it — late-night phone calls, weekend work schedules and keeping him

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grounded in his home life. Finally he made it clear to Mayor Stan Joyner and everyone in attendance that as Employee No. 21 out of 2,326, he isn’t ready to retire from the Town of Collierville just yet. “Mayor, I don’t have 30 more good years to give you, but I do have a few, and I look forward to spending them right here,” he said.

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In the News GERMANTOWN

City wins $10K grant to host The Big Read Will focus on Le Guin’s “Wizard of Earthsea” By Stacey Ewell Special to The Weekly

The City of Germantown is a recipient of a grant of $10,000 to host “The Big Read.” A program of the National Endowment for the Arts, The Big Read broadens our understanding of our world, our communities, and ourselves through the joy of sharing a good book. Managed by Arts Midwest,

this initiative ofers grants to support innovative community reading programs designed around a single book. The city is one of 75 nonproit organizations to receive a grant to host a Big Read project between September 2015 and June 2016. The Big Read in Germantown will focus on “A Wizard of Earthsea” by Ursula K. Le Guin. Activities will take place in October and November. “Germantown is honored to be a Big Read community. Our residents are committed to education and lifelong learning and this is

Germantown Police Reports

the perfect way for us to come together to celebrate that commitment,” said Germantown Mayor Mike Palazzolo. NEA chairman Jane Chu said, “The Big Read is a powerful example of how the arts can bring communities together and help us to connect with one another. These 75 organizations, including the City of Germantown, are creating valuable opportunities for their communities to share wonderful stories and characters and to have meaningful conversations.” The Big Read provides com-

munities nationwide with the opportunity to read, discuss, and celebrate one of 37 selections from U.S. and world literature. The 75 selected organizations will receive Big Read grants to promote and carry out community-based reading programs. The NEA also has developed high-quality, free-ofcharge educational materials to supplement each title, including reader’s guides, teacher’s guides, and audio programming, all of which are available to the public on neabigread.org.

Germantown’s Big Read celebration will include programs at Germantown Community Library, Germantown Performing Arts Center, Germantown Community Theatre and Germantown Municipal Schools. The book, “A Wizard of Earthsea,” was chosen for its appeal to readers of all ages. For more information about The Big Read, visit neabigread. org. Stacey Ewell is the assistant to the City Administrator.

In brief

SHELBY COUNTY

A R O U N D G E R M A N T OW N JUNE 5

Wings’ run/walk to close Wolf River

■ oicers arrested an adult for possession of marijuana at poplar pike and Southern at 3:44 a.m. ■ oicers arrested a suspect for attempting to use a fraudulent debit card for a cash advance in the 7600 block of poplar at 2:40 p.m. ■ Two vehicles collided in 7600 block of West Farmington at 12:25 p.m. ■ Two vehicles collided at poplar and South Germantown at 4:40 p.m.

The Wings Cancer Foundation’s “WINGS on the Wolf’ 5K run/walk and Family Fun Run will cause road and lane closures on Saturday. Beginning at 4 a.m., Wolf River, between Kimbrough Road and Farmington Boulevard, will be closed. Races begin at 7:30 a.m. Germantown Police will direct traic along all routes and roads are expected to re-open no later than 2 p.m. To register, go to wingsonthewolf. racesonline.com.

JUNE 6

■ oicers arrested a juvenile for motor vehicle theft and possession of burglary tools at South Germantown and Farmington at 1:29 a.m. ■ Steaks were stolen from a store in the 2100 block of Exeter at 3:11 p.m. ■ Several cell phone accessories were stolen from a store in the 7600 block of poplar at 5:08 p.m.

Staf reports B O TA N I C GA R D E N

phoToS by MikE broWn/ThE CoMMErCiAl AppEAl

JUNE 7

■ An oicer arrested two subjects for possession of marijuana at poplar and Scruggs at 2:35 a.m. ■ A computer was stolen from an unlocked vehicle in the 2100 block of Cornwall at 8:11 a.m. ■ A window broken out of a vehicle and cash was stolen in the 2100 block of Cornwall at 8:21 a.m. ■ Coins were stolen from an unlocked vehicle in the 7200 block of Stamford at 8:45 a.m. ■ An unlocked vehicle was entered, but nothing was stolen, in the 2000 block of Cornwall at 9:34 a.m. ■ An unlocked vehicle was entered, but nothing was stolen, in the 2100 block of Cornwall at 11:32 a.m. ■ A victim’s locked vehicle was stolen from a parking lot in the 7700 block of Wolf river at 6:40 p.m. ■ A vehicle struck pedestrian causing possible injuries at kimbrough and Farmington at 7:28 p.m. JUNE 8

■ A victim was threatened by a neighbor in the 1700 block of Magnolia Tree at 9:35 a.m. ■ Two vehicles collided at West and poplar pike at 9:10 a.m. ■ Two vehicles collided at Turpins Glen and regents Walk at 11:28 a.m. ■ A vehicle struck brick wall causing possible injuries at Forest hill irene and Dogwood at 3:34 p.m. JUNE 9

■ A vehicle window was broken in the 7200 block of pittsield at 5:36 a.m. ■ Cash was stolen from a purse in the 7600 block of West Farmington at 1:54 p.m. ■ Three vehicles collided causing possible injuries at West and Second at 9:04 a.m. JUNE 10

■ lawn equipment was stolen from a trailer in the 3000 block of Wetherby at 9:35 a.m. ■ A male subject exposed himself to a female and was seen masturbating in the 1800 block of East poplar Woods Circle at 7:01 p.m. ■ lawn equipment was stolen from a garage in the 6800 block of Great oaks at 9:33 p.m. ■ A victim is receiving threatening text messages in the 7600 block of poplar at 11:01 p.m. ■ Two vehicles collided on poplar at 2:41 p.m. ■ Two vehicles collided at South Germantown and West brierbrook at 4:24 p.m. JUNE 11

■ oicers arrested a driver for possession of marijuana and drug paraphernalia at Forest hill irene and poplar at 1:06 a.m. ■ A counterfeit check was presented to a bank in the 7800 block of Wolf river at 11:12 a.m. ■ A vehicle struck a deer at Wolf river and Farmington at 7:28 a.m. ■ Two vehicles collided at Wolf river and South Germantown at 9:02 a.m.

Franklin cancels upcoming show

Litter getting double the attention with more work crews

The Queen of Soul won’t be coming home, as Memphis-born diva Aretha Franklin has canceled her upcoming show at the Memphis Botanic Garden. Franklin was scheduled to kick of the annual “Live at the Garden” concert series with an appearance on June 26. Rather than scrap the show, “Live at the Garden” has decided to move forward with a replacement. Chaka Khan, will step in to perform on June 26.

By Linda A. Moore

bob Mehr

lmoore@commercialappeal.com 901-529-2702

COURTS

A Shelby County Department of Corrections inmate throws trash in a truck after collecting garbage near Bolen Huse and Coleman in the Raleigh area.

Twice the trash Shelby County inmate work crews pick up about 40 tons of trash that’s tossed from car windows or dumped from the backs of trucks each month. But the county’s heavy load of collected garbage is about to increase. County Mayor Mark Luttrell has issued an order to double the number of correctional center inmates sent to the unincorporated areas to clean up what others throw out, with 24 inmates clearing roadways and right-of-ways daily. “We’ve got a lot of trashy roads across Shelby County,” Luttrell said. The mayor included in his 2016 budget a request for an additional $600,000 for blight control, which includes cleaning up trash and mowing properties taken over by the county because of delinquent taxes. “I like to say these are our storefront issues,” Luttrell said. It’s what people see when they irst come to town, and a negative impression impacts the entire community, he said. “So we’re just going to get a little bit more aggressive in trying to make our storefront look nicer,” he said. Inmate crews work ive days a

ANIMALS from 1 and two dogs she already owns. “My husband probably would divorce me if I brought another one home,” she said. Less than 24 hours before the Lab’s great escape, the Germantown Board of Mayor and Aldermen considered an ordinance change designed to crack down on loose animals running through the city. Under the change, the city’s animal shelter could spay or neuter any animal found loose two or more times in a 12-month period or ive or more times over any time period. The animal’s owner would be billed

Convicted teacher gets new trial

Department of Corrections inmates collect garbage on the side of the road on Egypt Central in Raleigh. Oicials said inmate crews collected nearly 40 tons of garbage each month, which is expected to increase after Mayor Mark Luttrell doubled the size of the inmate work crew.

week, 12 months a year, weather permitting, said Danny Daniels, a supervisor in the vegetation department of Shelby County Public Works. Crews hit the same spots every week, like the intersection of Bolen Huse and Coleman roads north of Raleigh, where on Tuesday they collected household garbage and a broken tabletop hair dryer. Another crew drove past with a mattress on the truck. “It’s sad, and we can’t hardly stop it,” Daniels said. The extra workers are a huge help. “Because I can’t do it with just three crews. It means we’re going to get more areas covered and more consistency,” Daniels said. “It’s going to help us out a lot. It’s going to be good.” Correctional center inmates are required to work to ofset the

for the surgery. The ordinance passed on irst reading, but will require a public hearing next month and a third reading two weeks after that. The earliest it could go into effect is July 27. Animal shelter manager Alina Lesniak said there are a handful of dogs in the city that are found running loose frequently. “I have their addresses and phone numbers memorized,” she said. Lesniak said spaying and neutering of animals has been shown to make them less likely to leave enclosed areas because they no longer have the desire to mate. While she said it won’t completely stop animals, particularly dogs, from roaming the streets of Germantown on occasion, it should help.

cost to taxpayers to house and take care of them, said William Gupton, corrections division director. Inmates also receive 15 days of their sentence for each month they work, Gupton said. “So that’s a huge incentive for them to work,” he said. “It helps them to reach their parole hearing date or, if they’re going to complete their sentences, it helps them get to completion quicker.” And the inmates help the county respond to citizen complaints. “The more emphasis you put on these things, the more people become aware of it. And the more they notice it the more they complain,” Luttrell said. “So complaints really aren’t bad. I think it’s starting to capture the attention of the public, and maybe they’ll think twice before they throw their Big Gulp cup out onto the roadway.”

Ultimately, Lesniak said, it boils down to a safety issue for both the loose animal and the other animals and humans they may encounter while loose. “You don’t want them to get hit by a car or cause an accident,” she said. Pet owners will be notiied of the new policy, if it passes, the irst time their animal is found running loose. Public Works director Bo Mills said the same courtesy of notification would be given the second time, but that the animal would have to be ixed. He said he only expects it to happen two or three times a year. A second proposed change to the ordinance will more clearly deine a “proper shelter” for animals kept outside. Mills said the

current language is not speciic and the new language would require outdoor shelters to have four walls, a solid loor and a solid roof. The animal would also have to be able to turn around inside the shelter comfortably. Mills said most Germantown residents are conscious of the needs of their animals, but occasionally some need a reminder. He said it’s extremely rare that someone would refuse to comply, but the more specific language “gives us something in the ordinance to back it up.” The shelter also received a $14,000 grant from Petco, which Mills said will be used to trap feral cats in the city to have them spayed or neutered before being released back into their colonies.

A judge sentenced a Collierville teacher to 20 years in prison for trying to kill his wife, then minutes later granted him a new trial. It’s an odd twist in the already bizarre Shelby County case against Germantown resident Michael Halliburton, 55, that has baled both prosecutors and the defense. Criminal Court Judge Carolyn Wade Blackett didn’t articulate her reasons during the sentence hearing, saying she would reveal that later. Staf reports

THE

WEEKLY The Commercial Appeal Volume 3, No. 15 The Weekly, a publication of The Commercial Appeal, is delivered free on Thursdays to select residents throughout Germantown and Collierville.

Mailing address: The Weekly The Commercial Appeal 495 Union Ave. Memphis, TN 38103 To suspend or cancel delivery of The Weekly, call 901-529-2731. THE WEEKLY EXECUTIVE EDITOR

David Boyd • 901-529-2507 boyd@commercialappeal.com CONTENT COORDINATOR

Matt Woo • 901-529-6453 woo@commercialappeal.com THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL PRESIDENT AND PUBLISHER

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Say Cheese! We asked people:

“Being in Portland, Ore., riding my bike to the Columbia River just to dip my feet in the cool water.”

“What place or activity best captures ‘summer’ for you as a child?”

KEN BAUER

“Going to my grandmother’s house in Clarksdale, Miss. and jumping rope with my cousins.”

“Going to basketball camps all over the city.” DOMINIQUE MALONE

CANDACE HILL

“Going to the Point Mallard Water Park in Decatur, Ala.” KRIS WALKER

“Going to the swimming pool, eating footlong hot dogs and drinking Delaware punch.” ANN SCHULTZ

“Swimming in a creek in Gamaliel, Ky.” GENE ELLIOTT PHOTOS BY EMILY ADAMS KEPLINGER

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Community SUMMER FUN

Mudbug mayhem Members of St. Patrick scoop up crawfish to eat during the church’s annual mudbug boil event.

St. Patrick members devour crawfish during annual boil By Sara Holland Special to The Weekly

O

n June 7, not only were 120 pounds of crawfish boiling, but so were the 200 members and guests attending the 12th annual St. Patrick Church event. The crawfish boil was held at the church’s current location, 463 Highway 72. St. Patrick anticipates hosting this event next spring at their new location at White Road and Byhalia. The temperatures were in the 90s but the crowd was in full force as the church members devoured crawfish, shrimp, sausage, corn on the cob, new potatoes, broccoli, mushrooms, grilled hot dogs, and homemade desserts. As an additional highlight, there was live blue grass music from the Memphis band Blue Day.

Don Zerillo and St. Patrick pastor Jim Holland enjoy the Cajun feast.

Don (Kaz) Kaczmarek, John Holland and Colin Hutto man the grill and cook up sausages and hot dogs. The band Blue Day group performed a few bluegrass tunes at St. Patrick’s crawfish boil.

Sara Holland is a member of St. Patrick Church.

SEND US YOUR NEWS, PHOTOS AND COMMENTS We want The Weekly to be your go-to for community news. Tell us what you like, what you don’t like. Better yet, be a part of our team by sending us your news. Brag on your kids (or pets!), tell us about upcoming events or special people in the community. Send us photos of church events, youth sports, summer vacations and everything happening right here. E-mail JPEG images 1-2 MB in size to Matt Woo at woo@ commercialappeal.com. Please include first and last names of everyone pictured, the city in which they live, and all the pertinent details.

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In the News

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LAKE HOMES AND CONDOS

MINGLING WITH GRIZ AND GIRLS ABOVE: Derrick Higgenbottom, 6, is held upside down by Grizz, the mascot of the Memphis Grizzlies, beside cutouts of Grizzlies players Zach Randolph and Mike Conley at the Orpheum theater before a matinee of “Space Jam.”

City Wide Tour

RIGHT: Seven-year-old twins Caleb and Caden Lauderdale pose for a photo with Grizz Girls Asha (left) and Callie beside cutouts of Memphis Grizzlies players Marc Gasol and Tony Allen.

Lakeview & Lakefront Homes

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UT HEALTH SCIENCE CENTER

Wendy Likes has been named Fairfield Bay, AR permanent Dean of Nursing Call Dale Tice Tice Realty principal investigator or co-investigator for more than $1.2 million in grants and special project funding from organizations that include the National Institutes of Health and Department of Energy.

By Peggy Reisser Winburne Special to The Weekly

Steve J. Schwab, MD, chancellor at the University of Tennessee Health Science Center, has named Wendy M. Likes, Ph.D., DNSc, APRN-BC, permanent dean for the College of Nursing, after more than 10 months as interim dean. In this role, Likes will serve as the lead administrator for the college with responsibility for managing a team of more than 105 faculty and staf members. The college serves some 400 nursing students each year who acquire degrees at all levels — baccalaureate and master’s as well as both practice and research doctorates. The permanent appointment became efective on June 10. “As a nursing faculty member since 2004, Likes has consistently demonstrated a spirit of innovation and a commitment to teamwork,” said Schwab. “As interim dean, she has established herself as a collaborative and insightful leader whether working with partners, faculty, staf or students. The reputation and industry connections she has built over her years in this discipline will serve Wendy and our institution very well. We are pleased to welcome her to this new, challenging role.” A three-time alumna, Likes earned her MSN, DNSc and Ph.D. from the UTHSC College of Nursing and has been a nurse since 1994. Prior to her appointment as interim dean, she served for more than two years as associate dean and chair for Advanced Practice and Doctoral Studies. As dean, she will also hold the Ruth Neil Murry Endowed Chair in Nursing. Likes is also executive director for UT Medical Group’s Center for HPV and Dysplasia, which focuses on the detection and treatment of HPV-related conditions. She has been evaluating and treating diseases of the lower genital tract for more than 15 years and was instrumental in making the center one of a few practices in the South offering a procedure to detect pre-cancerous anal cancer, providing an essential service for the community. “It is the development I received as a student at UTHSC that gave me the conidence and ability to share my knowledge with others through my faculty role. It is the resources and support I have received as a faculty member at UTHSC that have aforded me the opportunity to do what I

Peggy Reisser Winburne is with University of Tennessee Health Science Center.

501-884-4169 120 Lost Creek Pkwy, Fairfield Bay, AR 72088

Wendy M. Likes served as interim dean for the College of Nursing for 10 months. She has now been named permanent Dean.

love, and to explore meaningful ways to improve the care we provide to our patients and the community, and to grow as a nursing leader,” she said. “I look forward to working with UTHSC leadership as well as with the College of Nursing team to continue the proud tradition of nursing leadership and innovation. Our College of Nursing is uniquely positioned to lead the state of Tennessee and the region in nursing research, education and practice to have a meaningful impact on the health of our community. I am honored to enter into the role of permanent dean for the College of Nursing and to have the opportunity to work side by side with our creative faculty and forward-thinking chancellery.” During her tenure at UTHSC, Likes has worked in the Colleges of Nursing, Medicine and Graduate Health Sciences, irst as an assistant professor for more than ive and one-half years, then as an associate professor in the same three colleges from July 2009 to the present. She also served for four months as chair for the Acute Care and Chronic Care Department in the College of Nursing before being named the associate dean for Advanced Practice and Doctoral Studies in November 2012. Her hospital appointments include work as a hospice, agency and staf nurse with Methodist Alliance Healthcare, Nurseinders, and Le Bonheur Children’s Hospital, respectively. She also spent six years as a staf nurse with St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, and has served as a nurse practitioner since 1999 in hospital, clinical and medical practice settings. Additionally, since 2005, Likes has been teaching a range of courses to nursing students, including pharmacology, adult health gynecology and techniques in evidencebased practice. Likes has served as

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Schools GERMANTOWN

Board approves funding start time changes One of many funding jumps By Jennifer Pignolet pignolet@commercialappeal.com 901-529-2372

A lengthy list of priorities put on hold for lack of funding in the Germantown Municipal School District got the green light June 11, including changing start times for the 2016-17 school year. The district allocated about $2.7 million during a school board meeting in front of about 25 members of the public, many of whom cheered during the vote that oicially funded

the change in start times. The district set aside $300,000 for the change that will eliminate the 7 a.m. opening at Houston Middle and High schools. Also on the list that received funding was $700,000 for an initiative to put a technology device in the hands of every student, a 2 percent raise for all classiied staf, funding for teachers who have advanced degrees and $440,000 to reduce student-teacher ratios. The funding came from additional money the system received from the county and state for higher-than-expected perpupil funding calculations based on enrollment and

These two things will have the greatest impact on student achievement that we can do with this money.” Mark Dely, board member

attendance. A not her rou g h ly $130,000 was set aside for funding future employee retirement beneits such as health care. An intervention position, which helps students who are lagging behind academically to catch up to the rest of their grade, also was added. “We’ve accomplished of a majority of the district’s goals,” Supt. Jason Manuel said. Manuel also received

a $10,000 bonus with the extra funding. The largest point of contention was the approval of budget amendments that included ive additional central oice staf members. All ive together are worth about $262,000, which includes beneits for four of the ive positions. One position will be a public relations person for the district. Manuel said the addi-

tional positions will help some employees avoid doing two jobs instead of one, and help end employees staying in the oice until late at night. Board members Ken Hoover and Mark Dely, however, questioned whether it was the right time to put money anywhere other than into the classroom. “We have been really fiscally prudent,” Dely said. “Let’s not lose that.” The budget amendments were broken into two chunks. One contained the technology initiative and start times, which passed unanimously. “These two things will have the greatest impact

on student achievement that we can do with this money,” Dely said. The board also voted on a nutrition budget that will outsource the cafeteria operations next year. Manuel said he is working on a contract with Aramark. The budget amendments for next year still account for about a $100,000 deicit in the cafeteria, but board members said that’s progress from the more than $300,000 the district had to cover from the general fund for declining cafeteria revenues. The vote to outsource was 4-0, with Dely abstaining, saying he didn’t have enough information on the contract, but that he supports a change.

ACHIEVEMENT

COLLIERVILLE

G’town senior earns language scholarship

Town explains need for new school

Special to The Weekly

Lea Makhloui, a Germantown High School student, has been awarded a U.S. Department of State National Security Language Initiative for Youth scholarship for 2015-16. Makhloui will study Arabic in Oman for the summer. Makhloui is one of only 620 competitively selected students from across the United States who will receive a scholarship to study Arabic, Chinese, Hindi, Korean, Persian, Russian or Turkish overseas this year with NSLI-Y. While in Oman, Makhloui will receive formal instruction and informal language practice in an

immersion environment. Makhloui is a senior at GHS, where she currently studies both Spanish and French and is in the International Baccalaureate (IB) program. Last summer, Makhloui was selected to attend the Tennessee Governor’s School for International Studies program at the University of Memphis where she participated in the Model U.N. and studied the Bengali language. Makhloui also serves as the student representative from GHS on the City of Germantown’s Strategic Planning Steering Committee. Her previous international experience includes a mission trip to a children’s

By Jennifer Pignolet pignolet@commercialappeal.com 901-529-2372

Lea Makhloufi, a senior at Germantown High, received the U.S. Department of State National Security Language Initiative for Youth scholarship.

home in Reynosa, Mexico, with her youth group from Emmanuel United Methodist Church. The NSLI-Y program seeks to increase the number of Americans who can engage with native speakers of critical languages. The goals of the NSLI-Y program include sparking a life-long interest in foreign languages and cultures, and developing a corps of young Americans with the skills necessary to advance international dialogue.

With one of their young children about to enter kindergarten in Collierville Schools this fall, David and Kristin Pritchard came to a town meeting Tuesday night to see what their kids’ future high school might look like. Supt. John Aitken said it would it 3,000 students but would be constructed in a way that would allow each student to ind his or her niche in the building. The couple said they also came to learn the justiication for the cost, estimated at $99 million. “That number seems daunting, but they laid it out and it makes sense,” Kristin Pritchard said. Aitken explained the

construction costs work out to about $145 per square foot. About 250 people attended the meeting at Collierville Methodist Church. The school board hosted the meeting ahead of a Board of Mayor and Aldermen vote at 6 p.m. Monday to set the tax rate for the next iscal year. The board has debated how much the rate should increase to generate enough money to address capital improvement needs for the school district. The current plan is to raise it 20 cents, from $1.53 to $1.73, but that number could go up or down before the inal vote Monday. Aitken gave a presentation on the growth projections for the district, the options for expansion and the reasoning behind the

district’s recommendation. The district has recommended a $99 million single high school on 160 acres at Shelby and Sycamore. Tommy Hart, a Collierville resident with grandchildren in the schools, said he supports the idea of a new single high school but not at that location. “The infrastructure costs are going to be substantial because it’s farm land,” Hart said after the meeting. He spoke up during the meeting as well, encouraging the district to consider other locations. The public was able to comment during the meeting, although most submitted questions on comment cards. A lot of the discussion centered on the location of the school on the south side of the town.

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Community ACHIEVEMENT

Collierville’s Hayden Smith earns Eagle Scout badge By Lynn Poore Special to The Weekly

Margaret Morley helps a St. George’s camper create a mask during the church’s annual vacation Bible school.

ST. GEORGE’S EPISCOPAL CHURCH

Kids take a ‘journey’ during VBS By Erin Brophy Special to The Weekly

More than 50 children, including a group from Emmanuel Center, took a “Journey Of the Map” at the St. George’s Episcopal Church vacation Bible school. The children sang and danced, played games and created art to learn about people, cultures and missions around the world. The Haitian people received special attention because the campers collected used shoes that can be exchanged for clean water in that country. Jenny Mathews and Kim Normant organized the program with help from volunteers of all ages. St. George’s Church holds its annual vacation Bible school the irst week of June each year.

One of the vacation Bible school activities was the “Twist and Shout” event.

Erin Brophy is the St. George’s Episcopal Church publications writer.

St. George’s vacation Bible school kids gather around to listen one of the many lessons they were taught.

Hayden Smith achieved what historically only 3 percent of Boy Scouts nationwide achieve — he earned the highest recognition in scouting, the rank of Eagle Scout. Hayden began his scouting journey as a Tiger Cub. When he learned about the highest rank in scouting, he set a goal for himself to become an Eagle Scout. Hayden advanced through the ranks of Tiger, Wolf, Bear, Webelos I and II. In 2010, he earned the Arrow of Light award and bridged to Boy Scouts. Hayden then joined Boy Scout Troop 48 in Germanton to continue his trail to Eagle. In Troop 48, sponsored by Faith Presbyterian Church in Germantown, Hayden has enjoyed going on campouts, earning merit badges, attending summer camp and holding numerous leadership positions. His favorite campouts are backpacking trips. Hayden cites the Climbing merit badge as his favorite but adds the Personal Management merit badge as the most beneicial. To this date, Hayden has earned 22 merit badges. Over the years, Hayden has served Troop 48 as patrol leader three times, assistant senior patrol leader twice and senior patrol leader once. Enjoying his role as a leader, Hayden chose to participate in National

Hayden Smith is recognized in front of his troop by Scoutmaster Brian Issing upon successfully passing his Eagle Board of Review. Assistant Scoutmaster Brent Snyder looks on.

Youth Leadership Training in 2012. Wanting to implement what he had learned, Hayden returned the following year as a team guide. Showing his leadership abilities, he was invited and accepted the position as an assistant senior patrol leader at NYLT last summer. This summer he plans to return to NYLT as the senior patrol leader. Hayden is currently Troop 48 junior assistant scoutmaster. In September 2013, Hayden was inducted into the honor society for Boy Scouts, the Order of the Arrow. Another recognition Hayden has received is Troop 48’s Charles H. Church Award for Outstanding Scouts, which he was given in May 2014. For his Eagle Scout project, Hayden chose to help Old West Special Trails, a non-proit orga-

nization with a mission of “bringing kids and horses together, one ride at a time.” Hayden and a team of Scout volunteers worked 198 hours cleaning the exterior of the Cowboy Cabin, sealing the eaves by installing soit and fascia, weatherprooing the windows by installing trim and making it look better with several coats of paint. At 16, Hayden’s scouting journey is not over, he intends to continue his active leadership in Troop 48. In addition to scouting, Hayden is a sophomore at Faith Heritage Christian Academy, is a member of the Eta Sigma Alpha Honor Society and has his own lawn business. Hayden is the son of Gary and Robin Smith of Collierville. Lynn Poore is with Boy Scout Troop 48.

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pool. Although there were only two of us (plus two adult golden retrievers), we had not been seriously considering downsizing. However, we had become disenchanted with the work and expense of home ownership (the American dream); so we decided it was a no-brainer to attend the Open House.” “One additional beneit of downsizing at Robinwood,” Brown continued, “is the simplicity it offers our residents without asking them to sacriice anything. One monthly payment to Robinwood, instead of paying bills to restaurants and grocery stores, to utility companies for water, electricity, cable and phone companies, to housekeepers, to home maintenance companies to landscapers, and to the government for property taxes and the like. “Robinwood’s Freedom Dining means meals are included in the price of the monthly rent, so residents don’t pay an additional charge each time they eat. In addition, ‘Freedom Dining’ at Robinwood means that each of our three chefprepared meals is served daily within a casual time window that enables residents to eat on their own schedules. “You choose when you sit down to eat,” Brown said. “Residents also have access to our Chef’s Pantry, where residents can enjoy a delicious sandwich, snacks, drinks, fruit and more, 24 hours a day – all at no additional charge. Room service and meals to-go are also available for no extra fee.” “The staff and management have been both friendly and accommodating in our re-settlement in the cottages”, residents Steve and Mary Ralph commented. “The loor plan of the cottage with clothes closets at entrance, a more than adequate kitchen with cabinets, the high ceilings in living room and kitchen give the appearance of a larger area with open environment. The two bedrooms and two bathrooms are an asset.” Mary said she likes the laundry room with full sized washer and dryer which is included and the added storage of the closet in the entryway. “In inal analysis we are very happy with our cottage and our decision to inish out our lives here at Robinwood.” Amenities at Robinwood include: Live-in managers, no buy-in fees, month-to-month rent, all utilities paid, resort-style dining (three meals included daily), professionally staffed (24/7), valet parking, complimentary shuttle service. All apartments feature full kitchens and washer/ dryer hook-ups.

Lisa Ballard, Marketing Director emphasizes the importance of seniors and families being proactive instead of reactive. She said, “Seniors who make the decision early to be in an environment meeting their needs for safety, diet, exercise, and social connections are allowing themselves to establish a healthy foundation and wonderful quality of life for years to come.” Come see for yourself during the lunch and learn Thursday, June 25 from 11 am to 1 pm. Please call to RSVP by June 20.To schedule a tour and receive more information, contact us at 2795 Kirby-Whitten Rd., Bartlett,TN 38134, call 901-612-2711, or visit us online at RobinwoodRetirement.com.


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Community ST. JUDE FUNDRAISER

PHOTOS BY CRAIG COLLIER/SPECIAL TO THE WEEKLY

Andy B’s general manager Traci Pangonas gives bowling tips to Adrian Baskin during a special fundraiser for St. Jude. The night’s special celebrity guest was former Baltimore Ravens great Ray Lewis.

Bowling for a cause NFL great Ray Lewis was guest of honor By Craig Collier Special to The Weekly

To football fans, Ray Lewis’ 17-year NFL career was full of accolades. A beast of a man, Lewis played middle linebacker like few others ever have. He is a 13 time Pro Bowler, an NFL champion, Super Bowl MVP and defensive player of the year. He anchored Baltimore Ravens’ defenses that intimidated their opponents. At 6-feet-1 inch and 240 pounds, Lewis played football with a mean streak. On June 12, Andy B’s Entertainment Center in Bartlett hosted a celebrity bowlathon to beneit St. Jude’s Children’s Hospital. Lewis was the guest celebrity. As he drifted through the crowd of appreciative fans, Lewis gave out high-ives, ist bumps, hand shakes, hugs, posed for endless photos and signed autographs — all with a big smile on his face. It was diicult to imagine this Lewis to be the same one that brought fear to opponents on the football ield for all those seasons. Talking to Ray Lewis about his life before, during and after football is an endless stream of stories from his past. “In 1992 my mother and her ive children moved from Florida to Memphis,” Lewis said. “We had hit a real hard spot in life and my mom thought we could get a fresh start. The problem is I had made a name for myself playing high school football in Florida and no one knew me here. After a lot of begging, I got $39 for a bus ticket and went back to Florida to live with my grandmother. The rest of my life is history. The one lesson I learned is no matter how tough things are keeping working. Just keep working no matter what life throws at you. That’s what you learn from my experience. “When I irst came for a visit to St. Jude I saw kids who were doing exactly that. Kids who were sick beyond all belief but they kept working no matter how hard it was because the payof was life. How could you leave there and not want to come back to do some good for them? That’s why I am here now.” Lewis partnered with Memphis native and longtime NFL great Reggie Howard and his organization, United Athletes Foundation, sponsor the event. UAF’s mission is committed to aiding and uniting professional athletes who want to leverage

Andy B’s Entertainment Center in Bartlett had a full house for Friday night’s fundraiser for St. Jude.

Ray Lewis met with fan Jaxon Hindman, 13, at the St. Jude bowling fundraiser. When Lewis was in town a year ago, Jaxon was at St. Jude undergoing treatment.

Two member of NFL royalty, Ray Lewis and Memphis’ hometown great Reggie Howard, teamed up for the fundraiser for St Jude Children’s Hospital.

their power and visibility to help the world. One of the highlights of Friday night’s event was when 13-year-old Jaxon Hindman spoke with Lewis. One year ago, when Lewis was visiting St. Jude, he and Jaxon took photos together. Jaxon had

no hair, it was diicult to smile and he was undergoing treatments that left him weak. One year later, with a full head of hair and a large smile on his face, the two of them were happy to be together for one more photo.

Dillon Brown was excited to get to bowl for a good cause and meet NFL great Ray Lewis.

Former Baltimore Ravens linebacker Ray Lewis attended a fundraiser at Andy B’s in Bartlett. The bowlathon helped raise money for St. Jude.


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Community SNAPSHOTS

The Germantown Area Chamber of Commerce held a ribbon cutting for new member Doc’s Wine, Spirits & More, located at 6685 Poplar, Suite 101 in Germantown. Doc’s Wine, Spirits & More is a new experience for wine and whiskey lovers alike. Both beer and wine growlers will be available along with multiple tasting stations. Mark Page, Sophia Page, Lisa May, Dr. Audrey Page, Keith May, Ryan Gill, Janie Day and Rocky Janda cut the ribbon.

The Germantown Area Chamber of Commerce held a ribbon cutting to celebrate the new location of Mellon Consulting Group, LLC, located at 7500 Capital Drive in Germantown. Mellon Consulting Group, LLC is dedicated to inding the right solution for the short and long term IT needs of its clients. They specialize in software development, of-site data backup, website development and Internet marketing. Helping cut the ribbon is Phillip Werner, James Kachel, owner Adam Underwood, Stephen Dukes, Jon Murdock and Andrea Acton.

A generous, anonymous donor recently donated a tree that was planted at Germantown Community Theatre in honor of Germantown Mayor Mike Palazzolo. This gift is in recognition of the mayor’s ongoing eforts to help GCT “deepen its roots and grow.” In attendance at the planting ceremony were GCT executive director, Dr. Michael D. Miles (left), Palazzolo and artistic director Leigh Eck.

St. Benedict graduate Kyle Van Frank (second from right) was named the Tennessee District Exchange Club Youth of the Year. Van Frank was selected, along with graduating senior Kirkland Schuler (second from left) as the Germantown Exchange Club Youths of the Month in May. He and Schuler were presented their awards by Exchange Club representative Steve Mitchener (right) and SBA college counselor Stephanie Scates. Van Frank was given a $500 scholarship and selected by the Germantown Club to advance to the district/state level. He won and then was selected to advance to the national level. He was awarded a $500 for advancing to the district level and $1,000 scholarship for advancing to the national level. The selection of the National Exchange Club Youth of the Year will be made in July in Ohio. Zachary W. Woods, son of David and Sheridan Woods of Collierville, graduated from the U.S. Military Academy on May 23. Woods graduated from St. George’s Independent School in 2011. While at West Point, he concentrated his studies in systems design and management. He was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the U.S. Army within the infantry branch and will report to Fort Benning, Ga. for his irst assignment.

Carol Burchett, Dorothy Sullivan, James Sullivan, Jenny Cornette, Brandon Barker, Wayne Burrell, June Davis-Fogle, Carolyn West, Monica Ford, Marilee Sher, Jim Seabrook, Bert Ritchie, Thelma Hembrof, Joe Perdzock, Haley Littleield and George Tucker, all with Germantown Plantation Senior Living, visited the new Bass Pro store downtown at the Pyramid. It was a fun outing and the residents were impressed with the new facility.

Actor Patrick Warburton attended the St. Jude Classic and Lydia and Camden Farmer had a chance to meet him at the tournament.


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Sports 2015 FEDEX ST. JUDE CLASSIC

‘DREAM COME TRUE’ Gomez plays like seasoned champion in capturing first PGA Tour title By Phil Stukenborg stukenborg@commercialappeal.com 901-529-2543

F

abian Gomez did not spend Sunday at TPC Southwind like a golfer seeking his irst PGA Tour victory. An unheralded 36-year-old from Argentina — winner of two PGA Tour Latinoamerica events and a development tour Web.com title ive years ago — Gomez performed as if he’d been in this position before. He was oblivious to the pressure surrounding his run to the FedEx St. Jude Classic title and blissfully unaware that among those making a run at him was World Golf Hall of Famer Phil Mickelson. Gomez never succumbed. Instead, he methodically put together a 4-under 66, a seasoned veteran’s closing round, for a 13-under 267 and a fourstroke win over Englishman Greg Owen. Gomez punctuated his signature win by rolling in a 30-foot birdie putt on the inal hole and celebrated his victory in a light rain shower that fell during the post-tournament ceremony on the 18th green. “It’s like a dream come true for me,” said Gomez, who was playing in the 70th PGA Tour event of his career. “Winning on the PGA Tour is something amazing.” Gomez will collect $1.08 million for the win, or nearly as much as he had earned ($1.4 million) in his 69 previous PGA Tour events. He also extends his exempt status on tour through the 2016-17 season. Owen, 43, also was seeking his irst tour victory, in the

JIM WEBER/THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL

Fabian Gomez of Argentina got his first PGA Tour victory in his 70th event, capturing the FedEx St Jude Classic at TPC Southwind on Sunday afternoon. Gomez closed with a 4-under-par 66 that completed a 13-under 267 for a four-stroke win over Englishman Greg Owen. “Winning on the PGA Tour is something amazing,” Gomez said.

214th PGA Tour start of his career, but he faltered midway through the round. Gomez and Owen entered the inal round tied at 9 under, but Owen encountered trouble of the tee at No. 9 and it led to a bogey. Additional bogeys followed at Nos. 12 and 14. Gomez, adorned in a black Adidas golf shirt, gradually created separation from Owen and others chasing him. Gomez’s 7-foot birdie putt on the par-3 11th gave him a one-stroke lead and he never lost it, building a three-shot

cushion after blasting out of a greenside bunker to 2 feet on 16 and making the birdie putt. The long birdie putt to end his round gave him his biggest lead of the day. “I think the (turning) point was when I made birdie on No. 16 and Greg made par,” Gomez said through a translator. “After that, I knew I had a threestroke (lead). I knew that the chance to win was close.” Owen inished with an evenpar 70 for 271, while Mickelson, who shot 65, led a quintet at 272 that included 18- and

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36-hole leader Brooks Koepka. Koepka trailed the leaders by one stroke entering the inal round but closed with a 70. Owen had built an early two-shot lead with birdies on Nos. 3 and 7 but found trouble of the tee at No. 9. Owen drove into the left rough near a small tree and hit out to the right rough. His approach was 39 feet shy of the hole and he two-putted for a bogey, allowing Gomez to move into a irstplace tie at 10 under. “I hit an awful (drive) on 9,” Owen said. “I don’t know

where that came from. I’ve (never) hit one that far left in my life.” Despite his fourth-round breakdown, Owen, whose best inish had been a tie for second at the 2006 Arnold Palmer Invitational, was encouraged by his play. “At the start of the week, I wouldn’t have believed you,” Owen said of being in contention on Sunday. “I’ve shown no form of doing that for a (long) time and to hold it together pretty much down the stretch ... I can still play the game and compete.” Mickelson’s 65, which included birdies on 10, 14, 16 and 18, allowed him to make a late run. His 25-footer on 18 caught the lip of the cup and circled before falling. Mickelson had a 20-foot eagle putt on the par-5 16th that he left inches short. “I felt if I’d made that eagle putt on 16 and had an eaglebirdie-birdie inish, that might do it,” Mickelson said. Such a inish would have left him at 10 under par. Still, Mickelson said he enjoyed his third straight Memphis appearance and his best result at TPC Southwind since a tie for second in 2013. “It was a really good day,” Mickelson said. “It was a day to get some momentum and a little bit of conidence. “(Sunday) validated what I’ve been working on is the right path and getting a little bit better. I still have some work to do. There were some areas where I let shots slide. I’ve got to get sharper these next three days (before the U.S. Open) and that’s what I’ll be working on.”

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Sports 2015 FEDEX ST. JUDE CLASSIC

JIM WEBER/THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL

Greg Owen chips out of the trap on hole eight during the inal round of the FedEx St Jude Classic at Southwind Sunday afternoon. Brooks Koepka (left) congratulates Scott Brown after he holed out on 17 for a birdie during the inal round of the FedEx St Jude Classic at Southwind Sunday afternoon.

Golfer Shaun Micheel of Memphis practices his swing at the 10th hole during the irst round at the FedEx St. Jude Classic in Germantown. YALONDA M. JAMES/THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL

JIM WEBER/THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL

STAN CARROLL/THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL

Pro golfer Billy Horschel congratulates playing partner Stephen Van Oss during pro-am play at the FESJC after sinking his putt on the 13th green.

Clay Myers II, who played golf at Germantown High, tees of during the irst round of the FedEx St. Jude Classic. NIKKI BOERTMAN/THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL

JIM WEBER/THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL

Fabian Gomez hugs his caddie after sinking a long putt on the 18th hole to win the inal round of the FedEx St Jude Classic at Southwind Sunday afternoon.

STAN CARROLL/THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL

Phil Mickelson (right) chats with fans and playing partners while on his way to the 10th tee during pro-am play at the FESJC last Wednesday afternoon. STAN CARROLL/THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL

Tyler West stands next to a FedEx plane named after the 9-year-old St. Jude patient. In 2014 Tyler was diagnosed with acute lymphoblastic leukemia and is the fourth recipient of the Purple Eagle dedication, an annual program that honors a St. Jude patient who is the child of a FedEx team member by naming an Express aircraft after them. Fans line up and watch their favorite players while they practice on the range during the second round of the St. Jude Classic golf tournament at TPC Southwind. BRAD VEST/THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL

STAN CARROLL/THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL

St. Jude President and CEO Richard Shadyac acknowledges golfer Billy Horschel (left) and St. Jude patient Tyler West (behind Horschel) after check presentation ceremony at the FESJC last Wednesday afternoon.


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Sports MIDDLE SCHOOL STATE RUGBY TOURNAMENT

Roughhousing

The Mustang Middle School Rugby team won its second consecutive Tennessee Middle School Rugby State Championship.

Mustangs capture second state rugby title Special to The Weekly

he Mustang middle school rugby team won its second consecutive Tennessee Middle School Rugby State Championship at Middle Tennessee State University. The Mustangs advanced to the championship game after dropping Stewarts Creek of Smyrna, Tenn. 35-5. In the championship game the Mustangs got their seventh shutout of the season, dominating Woodland Middle School 20-0. Eighthgrader Finlay Bolan of Houston Middle received the tournament MVP award for his outstanding tackling and ball carrying performance. The Mustangs have won five consecutive West Tennessee Rugby conference championships, two state 15s Rugby titles and one Olympic 7s Rugby state title, making it one of the most successful rugby programs in the state.

T

Mustang Middle Rugby finished the season with a perfect 11-0 record, which also included a win over Germantown High School’s freshman rugby squad. The Mustangs are coached by Kevin Roedel, Brooks Williams and Kevin Wright, all who played together at the University of Memphis and Memphis Blues Rugby clubs. The Mustangs have 10 players playing on the Tennessee Tristar Rugby squad, which is coached by Roedel and Williams. The Tristars will compete against all star middle school rugby teams from South Carolina, Georgia, Arkansas and other states this weekend at the South Regional All Star tournament in Charlotte, N.C. The tournament is one of six across the country that USA Rugby selects players to participate in the High School All American program and feed the U.S. Olympic Rugby development pool. Rugby 7’s season runs October through December and the 15s season begins in late January and ends in May. The Germantown Rugby Club and Mustang programs have seen tremendous participation growth and are working with city of Germantown and the parks department to secure a home field in the city. Rugby is the only youth sport in Germantown that does not have access to managed field space to host games. Currently squads have to travel to Midtown, Bartlett or Millington to play home matches. For information, e-mail kevin_roedel@yahoo.com or visit Germantown Rugby Club’s Facebook page. New players are welcome and no experience is necessary.

Mustang Middle Rugby member Nate Landwehr breaks free from a Woodland tackle in the state championship game.

Houston’s Kip Frankland runs against Stewarts Creek during the semifinal game of the state rugby tournament. The Mustangs defeated Stewarts Creek 35-5 on their way to winning the middle school state title.

Mustang Middle’s Finlay Bolan runs for the score. Recently, the Mustangs won their second consecutive state tournament and Bolan was named MVP.


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Home & Garden

BLOOM AND BLOOM AGAIN Some hydrangea varieties provide endless color For two consecutive years of colder-than-usual winters, hydrangea lovers got a clear message: If you want to consistently see blue and pink mopheads and lacecaps, plant new varieties that bloom more than once a season. Unlike their traditional relatives, remontant or reblooming hydrangeas produce buds on new and old wood, so if those set in late summer are nipped by late frosts, others will take their place. Endless Summer, the irst of the rebloomers, is almost an endless source of pink to blue-purple mopheads in my yard and in others I’ve visited. “My Endless Summer was looking so pitiful in February I hacked it back to about 12 inches and then gave it a dose of fertilizer,” said Linda Lanier, president of the Mid-South Hydrangea Society. “It bushed out and now has lot of big blooms.” Two other rebloomers, Penney Mac and Ladyin-Red, are covered with blooms in Lanier’s Midtown garden. “Lady-in-Red never missed a beat and is loaded with purple lacecaps,” she said. To keep reblooming hydrangeas lowering again and again, snip of fading lowers and sprinkle some fertilizer around the plants in July. Lanier suggests a slow-release product labeled with balanced amounts of nitrogen, phosphorus and potassium such as 14-14-14 or 15-30-15. Lanier and I both have blooms on our Dooleys. It’s not a rebloomer, but it

Little Lime, a smaller version of the popular Limelight, is a panicle hydrangea that likes sunny locations. This one is in bloom at the University of Tennessee West Tennessee Research and Education Center in Jackson.

CHRISTINE ARPE GANG GREEN THUMB

is one of the most cold-resistant of the mophead hydrangeas. Two of my three Dooleys planted in deeper shade than the other have no buds this summer. For the second year in a row, Lanier and I also are missing an appearance by the lightly fragrant, waxy cup-shaped sepals of Ayesha, a favorite for both of us. Our ingers are crossed for next year. While the macrophylla hydrangeas with blue, pink and purple lowers evoke the most romantic and nostalgic emotions for many of us, it would be foolish to forget about the varieties that produce loads of cone-shaped (panicle) lowers that may start out white but turn green and sometimes pink as they age. These include: ■ Native oakleaf, whose white panicle blooms begin showing in May and continue into June. In the fall, their leaves turn numerous shades of red, purple and yellow. ■ Annabelle, which is now showing its large white rounded lowers, is one of the most popular for its ability to thrive as far north as Alaska and as far south as New Orleans. Lanier had six in her garden and added seven more this year. Similar to Annabelle but less likely to lop

GINGER ROWSEY SPECIAL TO THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL

is the stronger-stemmed variety, Ryan Gainey, named for the renowned garden designer in Atlanta. Annabelles and similar types respond well to hard pruning in late February or early March. But they are still ine if you don’t get to it. ■ Blooming even later in midsummer are the popular Limelight and its smaller version, Little Lime, which begin with lime-green-tinted flowers in midsummer that turn pink as they continue blooming into fall. ■ An even smaller version, Bombshell, grows just 2 to 3 feet tall and wide and is a mound of lowers from midsummer to frost. Last week I admired a couple of huge hydrangeas with blue mopheads in the garden of Carol Watson, who graciously opened her gate to visitors taking part in the annual tour organized by Memphis Area

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Master Gardeners. All of the perennials and shrubs in Watson’s garden appear vibrant, healthy and larger than their average size, so I asked her what fertilizer she uses. “We believe in good soil,” she said, adding that her own blend of amendments has pro-mix, inely ground pine bark (sometimes labeled “soil conditioner”) and Black Cow, a commercial compost with manure. Watson, who had labeled many of her plants, did not know the identity of the hydrangeas with the gorgeous blooms because they were planted by the previous owner, who told her they were purchased at the supermarket. So don’t throw away those potted hydrangeas you may get for Easter or Mother’s Day. Plant them. They may thrive, they may not, but you have nothing to lose, and you may gain lots of pretty lowers for

ship.” ■ Don’t try to manage large plants installed in small spaces by pruning. “If a plant wants to be 6 feet tall and you want it to be 2 feet, you will have the ight of your life and you will lose.” ■ Red and pink Knock Out roses with double blooms look great when massed together into hedges or beds. “You don’t need traditional hedge plants,” he said. ■ He recommended several vines including Amethyst Falls, a wisteria that is much less aggressive than common varieties; the Tangerine Beauty crossvine that becomes a veil of orange trumpets when in full bloom; and Margarita, a Carolina jessamine that is winter-hardy and evergreen and has profuse fragrant yellow lowers in the spring.

years to come.

PRO TIPS It’s hard to believe it’s been a month since I heard gardening guru Phillip Watson and loral designer Julie Spear speak at another event sponsored by our busy master gardeners at the Memphis Botanic Garden. Here are a few tips and quotes from them: ■ Spear said her grandmother told her why she had to learn the Latin names for the plants she uses in lower arranging and in her garden. “They’re like people,” Spear said in quoting her grandmother. “If you know what their families are like, you will know why they act like they do.” ■ “My garden is my best friend,” said Watson, a Mississippi native who released his second book, “Garden Magic,” at the event. “We have a longterm committed relation-

Christine Arpe Gang, chrisagang@ hotmail.com

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Duckmaster Anthony Petrina leads the Peabody ducks on their Diva Duck March on the red carpet at the YMCA at Schilling Farms.

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Students honored at piano recital Special to The Weekly

Piano Instructor Benita Pepper of Lakeland presented 17 of her students in a recital June 6 at Lane Music Recital Hall in Germantown. Students were awarded certificates for their participation. Eleven students received medals for successfully performing 10 memorized pieces at the National Piano Guild Auditions in May. Casey Melton and Savannah Brister each presented piano-vocal numbers as part of their recital performances. Savannah Brister received a Bach statuette for seven years in Piano Guild Auditions. Raphael Guimera received a

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Calendar The

Weekly community events Arlington Play new and fun games with the Board Gaming Group, meeting the third Saturday of every month, noon to 5 p.m., at Three Guys Pizza Pies, 9045 Highway 64. The Arlington Senior Centers will host a Daytime Bingo on Wednesday at 11:30 a.m. with Kerri Bufaloe, publisher of the informative senior resource guide, Senior Directory. RSVP by Monday The Arlington Chapter of the Association for the Preservation of Tennessee Antiquities will host its annual membership breakfast on Saturday, from 9-11 a.m., at the Senior Citizen Center. The Rachel H. K. Burrow Museum will be open on Saturday, from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m., with two new exhibits. The museum will be open on the third Saturday in July-October, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Bartlett New Hope Christian Church, 3300 Kirby Whitten, hosts the Primavera Tour Sunday at 10 a.m. and 6 p.m. Enjoy a night of contemporary Christian music with The Ethan Parker Band. The goal is to make a diference by spreading hope in the lives of orphans and at-risk youth. Free to attend, donations accepted. E-mail renee@projectprimavera.org or call 727-4823172. The band also will play a free show for kids and teens 10 a.m. Monday at Youth Villages, 7410 Memphis-Arlington. Faith Cumberland Presbyterian Church, 3427 Appling Road, hosts “A Bang Up Good Time” July 2. Community parking available starting at 5:30 p.m. Fun for the whole family, including barbecue dinner at 6:30 p.m., talent show at 8 p.m. and a viewing of the Bartlett Fireworks display at 9:30 p.m. Guests are asked to give a free will donation which will help support Family Promise and Room in the Inn. For more information, call 901-377-0526. The Bartlett Library, 5884 Stage, invites kids to READ with Tootsie Saturday, from 10 a.m. to noon. Children ages 5-11 can read to Tootsie, a registered pet therapy dog, for 15 minutes. Registration is required and opens the irst of each month for that month’s session. Call 901-386-8968. The Bartlett Station Farmer’s Market will be open every Saturday, from 8 a.m. to noon, through Sept. 19 at W.J. Freeman Park, 2629 Bartlett Boulevard. New vendors added each week. Some 2015 vendors include: J Brooks Cofee Roasters, Las Delicias, Mammaw Melton’s Heirloom Gardens, Donna’s Kettle Corn, Vernon Farms and more. Crushin’ Cancer with Skyosis is today, from 7 p.m. to midnight, at RockHouse Live, 5709 Raleigh-Lagrange. Microphones are raised in awareness of cancer and its devastating efects. Beneiting the ight of a 9-yearold niece of the band who was diagnosed with brain cancer. Ages 21 and up. Tickets are $5. Call 870-6363354, e-mail Ceruleanash@aol.com or visit on.fb. me/1cAfDs5. The Bartlett Station Movies in the Park series closes its third season with “Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl” on Saturday inside W.J. Freeman Park, of Bartlett Boulevard. Food vendors arrive at 7 p.m. and movie starts around 8 p.m. Bring your blankets, lawn chairs and enjoy. E-mail bartlettmoviesinthepark@gmail.com or call 901-412-6852. The Bartlett World War II Club meets at 9 a.m. the second Tuesday of every month at Singleton Community Center, 7266 Third Road. Visitors are welcome. Call Henry Boyd Sr. at 901-388-3514.

Collierville Pre-school Story Time is every Friday, from 10:30-

11 a.m., at the Morton Museum, 196 N. Main. Stories, songs and play related to Collierville History. For ages 5 and under. Event is free to attend. E-mail museum@ci.collierville.tn.us or call 901-457-2650. The Collierville Farmers Market is open every Thursday, from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m., in the rear parking lot of Collierville United Methodist Church, 454 West Poplar Ave. The market provides a reliable source of fresh, locally-grown fruits and veggies and related agricultural produce. Visit colliervillefarmersmarket.org.” The Museum of Biblical History’s archeological dig will be June 23-26 at 140 E. Mulberry St. The dig is open to kids in grades 5-12. The camp will be 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. and the cost is $50. Call 901-954-9578 or visit biblical-museum.org for information. Join the ladies of “Stay Organized with Us” as they share more professional organization tips. The group meetings are: ■ June 22: Closets, 12-1:30 p.m. ■ June 29: Kitchens, 12-1:30 p.m. All sessions will be held in the Halle Room at Collierville Burch Library, 501 Poplar View Parkway. Registration required. Call 901-457-2600 or visit colliervillelibrary.org. The YMCA at Schilling Farms, 1185 Schilling Boulevard, will host Dance for Cancer, from 3-5:30 p.m. Come line dance and Zumba for a cause beneiting the LIVESTRONG at the YMCA cancer survivor program Donations are accepted at the door. Call 901-850-9622 for more information. The Carriage Crossing Farmer’s Market will be open 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. every Friday through Sept. 25. Farmers and vendors ofer locally grown produce. Located in Central Park roundabout. In case of inclement weather, visit facebook.com/shopcarriagecrossing for updates. The Collierville Sewing Guild meets on the irst Thursday of every month at 10 a.m. at the Collierville Hobby Lobby. At the July 2 meeting, the group will assemble Alzheimer’s busy blankets for Paige Robbins Adult Day Center. Everyone interested in the iber arts is welcome to attend. Guests should bring their sewing machine and neutral thread with basic sewing supplies For more information, e-mail qltr10ac@aol.com. The Sunset on the Square music concert series continues every Thursday in June and July. Free concerts begin at 7 p.m. The performers are: ■ Tonight: Aims Gang ■ June 25: Six Degrees ■ July 9: Blind Mississippi Morris ■ July 16: Hudson-Saleeby ■ July 23: Def Tonz

■ July 30: John Josh Threlkeld Take Of Pounds Sensibly, a non-proit weight loss support group, meets at Collierville First Baptist Church, 830 New Byhalia Road, Room 1278, every Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. First meeting is free. For more information, call Jeannine Blackwell at 901-581-8916 or e-mail jrpb@bellsouth.net. TOPS also meets weekly in Bartlett, Cordova, Covington, Oakland, Millington and Memphis. Bring the kids and come enjoy some of their favorites with Movie Night at Carriage Crossing, 4674 Merchants Park Circle. Movies begin at dusk in Central Park. ■ June 26: “Muppets Most Wanted” ■ July 10: “Annie” ■ July 24: “Sleeping Beauty” ■ Aug. 7: “101 Dalmatians” ■ Aug. 21: “Big Hero 6” ■ Sept. 11: “Wreck-It Ralph” ■ Sept. 25: “The Lego Movie” Join the Collierville Burch Library, 501 Poplar View Parkway, for a free Personal Financial Planning series, presented by Radian Partners. All sessions will be held in the Halle Room. Registration required. Visit colliervillelibrary.org or call 901-457-2600. ■ Today: College Planning for Parents, 1-2:30 p.m. Get tips and strategies on planning for your child’s education. ■ June 25: Estate Planning Basics, 4-5:30 p.m. Discover how to make informed decisions for estate planning with information on wills, living wills, advance care directives, general trusts and more. ■ July 9: Investing for Young Adults: A Primer, 4-5:30 p.m. Teens ages 16 and up and young adults are invited to an introductory overview of smart investing options. ■ July 30: Taxes for Teens and Twentysomethings, 4-5:30 p.m. Teens ages 16 and up and young adults are invited to this introduction to federal taxes and what they mean for your earnings, savings, and future retirement.

Cordova Father’s Day Storytime is 11 a.m. Saturday at Barnes

& Noble, 2774 N. Germantown. Special celebration for Father’s Day featuring “How to Surprise a Dad” and “How to Babysit a Grandpa” for ages 2-10. The Cordova Library, 8457 Trinity Road, presents Explore Bizarre Foods, today, from 3-4 p.m. Coming up: ■ Saturday: Dads to a T!, 11 a.m. to noon. Celebrate Father’s Day, share stories and snacks. Then stay to paint a T-shirt for your favorite dad. Program for all ages, no registration necessary. (Be sure to bring your own T-shirt). ■ Tuesday: Explore Magic, 3-3:45 p.m. Ronald McDonald Book & Magic Show. Watch the show and

The Aimes Gang will be the featured performers during Thursday’s Sunset on the Square. The free concerts are every Thursday, from 7-9 p.m. in June and July, on the Collierville Town Square.

see if you can discover the trick behind the magic. Program for ages 5-12, no registration necessary. ■ Wednesday: Explore Martial Arts, 3-4 p.m. Come meet Rob Thornton, a black belt in Judo. He and his fellow martial artists are ready to show you some moves. Join Immanuel Lutheran Church, 6325 Raleigh LaGrange Road, for its God Connects classes, Sundays at 9:50 a.m. in the School, Spanish Room 23. Come learn about the Christian Faith. Whether you have questions about Christ or want to deepen your faith in Him, this class will explore what the Bible says about our God. This is for those who are interested in learning or reviewing the foundations of the Christian faith. No obligations and everyone is invited. Child care provided. The Spartan Poetry Club will be at the Cordova Library for its Masters of Allusion: Creating Poetic Magic Saturday, from 2-4 p.m. Their is no cost to attend. Shelby Farms Park, 500 N. Pine Lake Drive, hosts Board Game Meetup from 2-4 p.m. the second Thursday of every month. This social event can be for both board game champs as well as anyone interested in learning a new hobby. Visit shelbyfarmspark.org. Chuckles Comedy Club, 1770 Dexter Springs Loop, will host its LOL Memphis Sketch & Improv Comedy Show the second and fourth Monday of every month, from 7-9 p.m. Featuring improv games and sketch parodies. Cast members perform small sets throughout the show to introduce what’s coming next. Tickets are $10. E-mail lolmemphis10@gmail.com or call 901-654-8594. ■ Also coming up: ■ This weekend: Faizon Love and Lil Rel for ive shows. Tickets are $25. Shows start at 8 p.m. Sunday and 7:30 and 10 p.m. Friday and Saturday. ■ June 26-28: Lavell Crawford for ive shows. Tickets are $37.50. Shows start at 7 p.m. Sunday and 7 and 9:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday. ■ July 3-5: WorldStar Hip Hop presents LafMob Comedy for ive shows. Tickets are $22.50. Shows start at 8 p.m. Sunday and 7:30 and 10 p.m. Friday and Saturday. The Taste Of Italy Cooking Class is June 26, from 6-9 p.m., at L’Ecole Culinaire, 1245 N. Germantown. Chef instructors ofer guidance on how to prepare classic dishes from various Italian regions that are easy to reproduce at home. Includes instruction, three course meal and wine. Cost is $95. Visit lecole.edu/ memphis/memphis-public-cooking-classes.asp or call 901-754-7115. Also coming up: ■ June 27: Grill Master Cooking Class, 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Experiment with inger foods and classic steakhouse recipes. From marinade to hash marks, get ired up learning how to grill like the masters. Cost is $55. The Memphis Flea Market returns to Agricenter International, 7777 Walnut Grove, Saturday and Sunday. Featuring indoor booths overlowing with options in home décor, jewelry vendors, collectibles and more. 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday and 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Sunday. Admission is $3 for adults and free for children 12 and under. Call 901-276-3532 or visit memphisleamarket. com. Memphis Sweet Adelines hosts open auditions for female a cappella singers June 29, from 4-9 p.m., at

Grace Celebration Lutheran Church, 8601 Trinity. If you liked the movie “Pitch Perfect” you’ll love this. Register at memphiscitysoundchorus.com.

Germantown Honor your personal Super Hero at the Germantown Community Library, 1925 Exeter, through the Superhero Selies program. Take a picture posing with your hero, holding a picture of your hero or with something that represents your hero. Send the photo with a two- to three-sentence paragraph describing why that person is your superhero to ebaker@germantown-tn.gov or drop of a copy at the Information Desk through July 15. Submissions will be displayed inside the library. For more information, visit germantown-library.org or call 901-757-7323. Also coming up: ■ Monday: Mountain Marrionette’s Jazzy Strings, 4:30 and 7 p.m. For ages 5-12. A wonderful mixture of puppetry and the music of the early twentieth century. Each piece of Big Band, Dixieland and Ragtime music seems to have been written just for the puppet that performs it. ■ Wednesday: Build-It Bonanza, 1 and 4:30 p.m. For ages 6-12. Participants will be excited to share time with a special hero from our city police department. ■ June 27: Superhero Tea Party, 2 p.m. For ages 5-11. Adventurous superheroes from around the city are cordially invited to an afternoon tea party. Intrepid guests enjoy a delightful afternoon of stories, games and refreshments. Space is limited. Pre-registration required and begins June 20. IBERIABANK sponsors the “Reel” Family Time Outdoor Movie Series this summer at Municipal Park, 1900 S. Germantown. Grab your family, friends and neighbors and spread out on the lawn with a chair, comfy blanket and pillow and enjoy a movie under the stars. Concessions available. No pets allowed. Free to attend. Movies start at 8:15 p.m. In the event of inclement weather, call 901-751-5669 for details on event status. ■ Today: “Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day”

Enjoy non-instructional stamping and art time with other artists and rubber stampers on Mondays, from 9 a.m. to noon, at the Pickering Center, 7771 Poplar Pike. A $10 punch card includes ive classes. Bring lunch. Germantown United Methodist Church, 2331 S. Germantown, hosts the “AARP Smart Driver™ Course,” June 22-23, from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m, in Room 339 of the Ministry Center. Successful completion entitles participants to a discount on auto insurance premiums for three years. No driving test or written exam. Class size limited to 28. Cost is $15 for AARP members, $20 non-members. Call Ray Malone at 901-309-5966 to make reservations. Art in the Park will be June 29 through July 3, from 9-11 a.m., at Cameron Brown Park Pavilion, 8628 Farmington Blvd. Memphis College of Art instructors help kids ages 4-6 discover drawing, painting and other engaging art media in this delightful outdoor art adventure. Supplies provided. Bring a snack. Space is limited. Cost is $130. Register by June 15 online at Germantown-TN.gov/registration or at the Germantown Parks and Recreation oice, 2276 West St. For more information, contact Michelle McDonnell at 901-757-7382 or mmcdonnell@Germantown-TN.gov. The Germantown 50+ Group ofers opportunities to meet people, socialize with friends, eat, dance or take a trip. Events include: ■ ACBL sanctioned duplicate bridge Wednesdays at 10 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. at the Pickering Center, 7771 Poplar Pike. Cost is $5. Bring a lunch and a partner. ■ Improve coordination, memory skill and energy level while learning a variety of country and western, soul and Latino line dances. Beginner dances are taught during the irst hour, and intermediate dances will be taught the last half-hour. The class is 1:30-3 p.m. Mondays at the Pickering Center. The $10 punch card includes ive classes. ■ Potluck and Bingo is the irst Thursday of each month at noon. The cost is $1, a gift worth $1 and a main dish or dessert. Additional prizes will be awarded.

Lakeland The Lakeland Women’s Tennis Group plays Tuesdays and Thursdays from 9-11 a.m. (weather permitting), at Windward Slopes Park, 9822 Beverle Rivera Drive. Come exercise and improve your game. Contact Peggy Young at peggyyoung7@comcast.net or 901-606-8269. Play new and fun games with the Board Gaming Group from noon to 5 p.m. the third Saturday of every month at Three Guys Pizza Pies, 9045 Highway 64. Call 901-590-2343. The Delta Blues Winery, 6585 Stewart Road, presents its Summer Concert Series, from 7-10 p.m. Families are invited to bring lounge chairs and/or a blanket and enjoy the entertainment. No dogs allowed. A picnic is welcome but no outside alcohol allowed. Free entry. Wine, cold drinks, water, cheese and crackers available for purchase. For more information, visit on.fb.me/1KPJmJy or call 901-829-4685. ■ Friday: Memphis Snake Doctors Band ■ June 26: Tuscon Simpson ■ July 3: Steve Schad ■ July 10: Lance Strode

Memphis Juneteenth 150th Anniversary is Friday, from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. at the National Civil Rights Museum, 450 Mulberry. In celebration of the 150th anniversary, the Museum will ofer $2 of admission for visitors who mention “Juneteenth” at the admissions desk. No coupon required. Visit civilrightsmuseum.org. The International Paper Money Show is this weekend at Memphis Cook Convention Center, 255 N. Main. Featuring nearly 200 dealers of U.S. & world paper money, stock certiicates and checks, exhibits and auctions. Admission is $7 or $20 for three-day pass. Times are 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday and Saturday and 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Sunday. E-mail doug@memphisipms.com or call 817-723-7231. The Time Warp Drive-In is back. Experience classic ilms on the big screen each month at Malco Summer 4 Drive-In, 5310 Summer Ave. Admission is $10 per person, children under 10 free. Shows start at dusk. Come on down Saturday for Saturday Night Burn, featuring “Cheech & Chong’s Up In Smoke,” “Dazed & Confused,” “Friday!” and “Reefer Madness.” The Big Wig Ball 2015 is 7 p.m. Friday at Annesdale Historic Mansion, 1325 Lamar. Featuring silent auction, food, cocktails and live music provided by DJ Justin Jaggers Tori Tollison, and Silky O’Sullivan’s famous Dueling Pianos. Beneits Le Bonheur”s Childrens Hospital. Cost is $75-125. Visit leboonheur.org. E-mail information about upcoming community events to Matt Woo at woo@commercialappeal.com.


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Invite 30 Dog hanging haulage Lived you the answers Stones 0di�erent Dog hanging haulage Lived Stoneshithit proach. style good sense with your finances; make sure standstand that their daughthat their daugh- Talk to your mother ing from someone you need to answer to. all of them Stewart over for dinner with pride 88 88Ejects Ejects That man’s 51 Israel 96 96 Pt. of NCAA outout with pride 99 That man’s 51AAtribe tribeofof Israel Pt. of NCAA BySudoku Sudoku Frank Talk to your mo By Frank Stewart that you don’t make any errors. ters do not share the The more you understand this person,10 theAudit members? 91——Alto, Alto, 10 Audit gp. 54 Subj. for U.S. 97 97 Siding (with) or bring dinner to them. ters do not share the and tell her that you are members? 91 gp. 54 Subj. for U.S. Siding (with) Tribune Media Services d Tribune Media Services and tell her that yo you will feel. California 39 Gawk rudely California 11 Racecar fuel aliens 99 Yasmine of If you can keep your side same bond. They think 9,better Gawk rudely 11 Racecar fuel aliens Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) 99 Yasmine of same bond. They thinkhappy that she andshe theand Restrained with 92 Fund for the additive 56 Burlap bags “Baywatch” Sudoku is a numberpositive and friendly, they s0 40 happy that Restrained with23-Oct. 92 Fund additive★★★ You 56 Burlap bags “Baywatch” Cover today’s WestWest and and setting us upus onup “play often don’t see the correlation Libra (Sept. 22)for the Cover today’s setting on “play other mom have become shackles future 12 Chiang Chiang — -shek 57 Camera inits. 101101 Pine relative are more likely to respond placing puzzle based on a be shackles future 12 — -shek 57 Camera inits. Pine relative between your actions and your words; you South cards and defend as East. other mom have dates” of sorts will work ★★★★★ Reach forDog’s morefelt-tip information. South cards and defend as East. 41 Bit in trail mix out 94 13 Glorifies 58 Scottish 102 Nebraska city kind. dates” of sorts will work so close. 1You’ll Bit in need trail mix Dog’s felt-tip you see rather analyze Glorifiesjust accept58what Scottish 102than Nebraska city in West’s jump to three diamonds to step94 back from someone13 who 9x9 grid with several given so close. to rekindle our friend42 British money pen? 14 “The Godfather” refusals 103 Ciphers, say West’s jump to three diamonds to rekindle our friend- Then point out that it. Focus on day-to-day matters. 2t”has British money pen? on you. Once 14 “The Godfather” refusals 103 Ciphers, say was preemptive. He leads the Ka great deal of influence depicting a 98 — Vicente character Carlo 59 Gator’s tail? 104 Kefauver of old numbers.Then The object to t Dear Anni e: Every He year, pointis out ship. We grew apart was preemptive. leads the Kdepicting a 98 — Vicente character Carlo 59 Gator’s tail? 104 Kefauver of old A of diamonds, and South plays you understand the dynamic between you, ship. We grew apart the same is not true for dog? 99 Drum machine 15 TV maker 61 Mork’s girl politics 6-14-15 my four closest friends A of diamonds, and South plays because of a di�erence in place the numbers 1 to 9 in the same is not tru dog? 99 Drum machine 15 TV maker 61 Mork’s girl politics you will beofable to make a decision. the five and queen. Next comes 45 Capital 100 Property claims 16 Capital of 62 First bit of 105 Terra- — Jacqueline Bigar is atlittle www.jacquelinebigar.com. you because of a di�erence in and her daughter, and I host birthday parties 5 “Bye 27 Howclaims the careful 16 47 Eldest Anatomical 95Hatch Key presenters the five and queen. 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I am always lies, we decided led a trump to dummy’s ace, took Tribune Content Agency briefly chain 50 Arab city with no English repair e 51 cordial to the daughter Sack fiber Charlotte dir. partwhose name Argentina) 11599Printer fluid mushroom joint (capital for short or friends, so neith 9 Smother, as 108 Detroit-to35 Seine tributary 19 Carpentry lyrics of Brink would be fun toto create an with led a trump dummy’s ace, took you is trying to cultivate the A-K of clubs and exited to the Catering hall 109Charlotte Golfer McIlroy Harder 68 77 Comedy 116115 Butyl ender 1 52 Sack fiber dir. part Argentina) Printer whencordial I see her, but Idaughter find sound 36 Sgts. and cpls. a 24 is anto grab VW bit 102 Life lines?fluid “The man was born with silver individual wish listend-played. prior w a trump. 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However, when it a heart 14 One in the Foreign Film safely Scald, e.g. Ollie’s partner 121108 Creepy 60 Plant pore element #50 33 59 Memo words 77 85 Noble goal Beatty of look “1941” a winning heart coziness? 32 60 SeeWords 64-Across DDE Scrape hearts. 124 Resembling Send questions to pipeline? Oscar on a dummy and take the rest with comes to gifts forfinesse. others, on old children’s 120 109 Old Fords(out) friendship? end of my middle school As West was dealing the next 0 Plant element #50at the other 15 pore In succession 33 Memo words 39 South Pageant 121 Beatty of “1941” she disregards docent’s badge 77 Noble TV goal 110 Checkup “Harlow was table,” askharriette@harriettecole.com our lists a winning heart finesse. — No Old Friends, Send questions to friendship? 16 Carried out, accessory 62 Reached 87 Simple wind sounds hand, heIfound hisdonating voice. Louie said, “and he boomed into game, entirely. end up or c/o Universal Uclick, 1130 WalAs West was dealing the next biblically 40 It’s often at 63 Kirk’s instruments 113 “The Memphis, Tennessee askharriette@harriettec “You know,” he told East getrusting to luck. Sure enough, West led a — No Old Friends,

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Skater Babilonia Comics “Oh no!” Bidding Bad “Wheel of Fortune” buy for SUSPICIOUS ACTIVITY

Confessions of ____ Turner” (1967 Pulitzerwinning novel) 115 Long, on Lanai

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“Did Harlow admit he was lucky?” “No,” Louie said. “He said the contract was a laydown.”

U L V D N U C V I V V Q J G L N QQuestions D and comments: Email Stewart at

KEND ZLE WPYI, TIONS

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solution to rd puzzle in y’s editions.

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Solution: 1.Na4! does it.There is no escape.

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frs1016@centurylink.net

6-14-15

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Today’s birthday

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MISS MANNERS

Luck nothing to do with surviving accident

Today’s Cryptoquip

NBNZJ UPAN ULVDN UCV IVVQJ GLNQD

a car crash. Some people reduce the stress and ex- present. have all the luck. pense on the hostess, I told Miss Manners is just Miss Manners agrees her I would bring bread, glad that you seem to have Today’s Cryptoquip that this all-too-common fruit, wine and dessert. learned the lesson that you response A N N Uto, theVtroubles Y N P YThe B E hostess Z P E MdidO not J I cannot Z N Nrepay U Dhospitality U L Nby of others is peculiarly an- “hear” my ofer. usurping it. You meant well, Nnoying. B N ZNotice J Uthat P Athese N U LSince V Dmy N friend U Cwas V a I VbutVbringing Q J Gpart L NofQthe D people are not expressing true hostess, I am now in a meal without authorization their own relief and grati- position of having ofered from the hostess is neither tude that you were not her nothing in return for helpful nor lattering.

a loved one could change

20) ★★★★ You hav

★★★ Follow through on a dramatically. Your ability of pacing yourself responsibility. You might Jacqueline at everyth canisdo to encourage a loved one to youBigar start to feel slightly over- www.jacquelinebigar.com. want. You need to s

do the same will emerge. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) Sudoku ★★★ Follow through on a responsibility. You might start to feel slightly over-

6-14-15

hectic pace.

Jacqueline Bigar is at www.jacquelinebigar.c

Sudoku

Horoscopes

Anatomical 95 Key presenters mass 96 Syrian ruling Bagel shop amt. family C.I.O. partner 97 Apothecary or loved one seems to need to from the situation. you will see By Jacqueline Bigar Thick-walled pot items king hold back. Don’t interfere with matters diferently as a result. 1971 topfeatures 20 hit Syndicate 98 Bit of dental 6-14-15 with no English repair this process. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22lyrics 99 Brink 67 95 lines? Key presenters LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) ARIES (March 21-April Dec. 21) HHHH See a situaVW Anatomical 102 Life mass 96wake Syrian forerunners? 103 At hand 19) HH you might upruling on HH know when to rein in your tion diferently. your ability to 68 Bagel shop amt.105 Somefamily Rushes old PCs wrong side106 of Mattel the your magnetic personality. Try to be get past a problem allows you 71 C.I.O. 97 bed. Apothecary Hethe died at partner mood is likely putitems several a walllower. you might be in- to go with the low. Don’t get 74 Thick-walled pot tosubsidiary Xanadu Record number? that got its 76 1971 topof 20until hit you 98are Bitable of dental people to terested in a new activity that too upset, and don’t lose focus. N.F.L.with coach start in model no English repair you had not noticed up till now. your ability to move through a get centered. later in the Carroll trains lyrics 99 Brink day, Ollie’s partner could 108 be Creepy look Tap into your creativity to ind problem will be enhanced. a VW partner somewhat 77 102 Life lines? onstandoish. old children’s 109 Old forerunners? 103Fords At hand helpful solutions. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. TV 110 Checkup 78 Rushes 105 Some old PCs VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 19) HHHH others seem cold (April 20-May Simple wind sounds 79 HeTAURUS died at 106 Mattel instruments 113 “The 20) HHHH you’ll gainsubsidiary unusual 22) HHHH Zero in on priori- right now. Someone might say Xanadu Skater Babilonia Confessions 81 Record number? that got its ties; some are more important. something to upset you. be lexinsight through your dreams, Comics “Oh no!” of ____ 82 N.F.L. coach start in model Don’t let someone rain on your Bidding Turner” (1967 but you might not even realize ible; you can’t change what is Carroll trains Bad “Wheel oflook at what Pulitzerparade. your perspective will it. if you is occurhappening. you have an unusual 85 Ollie’s partner 108 Creepy look Difficulty level ★★★★★ Fortune” buy winning on old children’s 109 Old Fords around a friendship, you’ll change once you start asking sense of humor, but it probably forring SUSPICIOUS novel) TV more awareness. 110 Checkup ACTIVITY 115 Long, onaLanai gain part- questions. have an intellectual Answer won’t to work on a friend who is yesterday's puzzle 87 Simple wind sounds

ner could be diicult touchy. conversation. singing the blues. Sudoku is a numberinstruments 113or “The LIBRA (Sept. distance. Confessions 90 maintain Skater Babilonia AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. placing puzzle23-Oct. based 22) 91 Comics “Oh no!” of ____ on aSomeone 9x9 grid with you sevneed to 18) HHHH Do what is needed GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHH 93 Bidding Turner” (1967 eral given numbers. Theyou. to might shock be aware costs of respond to make you happier and feel 94 HHH Bad “Wheel of of thePulitzerobject iskeep to place the go, but this situation proceeding been. let it more in touch with your needs Difficulty level ★★★★★ Fortune” buy as you have winning numbers 1 to 9 in the for SUSPICIOUS novel) acin your memory, asso you might and desires. Sometimes you give you need to hold yourself empty squares that ACTIVITY 115 Long, on Lanai Answer to yesterday's p

Chess Quiz

countable. remain in touch with a friend who tends to shake up the status quo. you like the excitement that enters your life Chess Quiz when he or she is around. CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHHH an older relative, friend or boss could alter your plans quite a bit. This person WHITE TOyou PLAY also might force to take a Hint: Win the queen. hard look at a situation. a child

want to revisit it at acolumn later date. too much of yourself. a superior each row, each your intuition will you down could demand a lot from you. and each 3x3lead box conSudoku is a numbersame numberwith placing based Tonight: Till the wee hours. thetains rightthe path. be puzzle careful only commitments. once. on a The 9x9 difficulty grid with sev- PISCES (Feb. 19-March money leveleral of the Conceptis given numbers. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)The20) HHHH a inancial matter Sudokuobject increases from is to place the could upset you and force your HHHH you might seem someMonday to Sunday. numbers 1 to 9 in the what stufy to others, but you hand. how you deal with someempty squares so that know that you are making dif- one will change radically if you each row, each acolumn ference where it counts. and each 3x3are boxyou con- tap into your creativity. as a reCONTACT US pushing too hard to havenumber your sult, you’ll ind others to be more tains the same way? letonly go foronce. now, and Thedetach difficultylexible. Trust your judgment.


26 » Thursday, June 18, 2015 »

««

T H E W E E K LY

MG

Pets

A Small Sampling of Our Menu

PETS OF THE WEEK | GERMANTOWN ANIMAL SHELTER

Chicken Stir Fry

Large plate of steamed rice smothered with chicken breast strips, mushrooms, broccoli, carrots and gravy. Includes soup bar

$ Name: Boston Age: 2 years Breed: White/brindle pit bull terrier mix Description: Loves to play with other dogs.

8.25

Deluxe Chicken Sandwich

Name: Fairfax Age: 11 weeks Breed: Black domestic medium hair Description: Fairfax enjoys cuddling.

Our chicken breast sandwich with a slice of pepper jack cheese and bacon slices.

Germantown Animal Shelter is open 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Monday-Friday, 9:30 a.m.-2 p.m. Saturday.

6.95

$

Upcoming pets events

In observance of Allergy Awareness Month ,

Dr. Tina Brown with Memphis Veterinary Specialists will conduct a free pet allergy seminar 7 p.m. July 15 at Hollywood Feed, 3615 Houston Levee Road. Learn key ways to tell if your pet has allergies and common treatments. To register, visit bit.ly/1Kpfgzb. Come to Shelby Farms on Sundays, from 3-4 p.m., for the K9 Academy — Agility for Fun. Ron Lewis with K9 Kraze Agility + Rescue introduces a course open to all levels of obedience, ofering a variety of jumps, obstacles, weave poles and stations. Course is for people and dog-friendly dogs. Visit shelbyfarms.org/dogs or

contact Coral O’Connor at coconnor@shelbyfarms. org. Every Tuesday night, members of Memphis Pets Alive! meet from 5:30-7 p.m. at Memphis Animal Services, 2350 Appling City Cove, to take pictures of current animals in hopes of getting more exposure for adoptable pets before they run out of time. Pet Cadets Summer Camp offers activities,

hands-on time with the animals and education from special Humane Society guests for kids ages 7-9 on June 22-26 and July 13-17. Kids make enrichment toys and games for the animals and get a behind-the-scenes look at life at the Humane Soci-

ety, 935 Farm Road. Cost is $200 per camper. Sessions for ages 10-12: June 22-26 and July 27-31. PET ADOPTIONS

■ Stop by and see some of the Street Dog Foundation’s adoptable dogs Saturday, at the Memphis Farmers Market, Central Stations, S. Front Street at GE Patterson, from 9 a.m. to noon. The group also will be at the Hollywood Feed Erin Way, 4864 Poplar, from noon to 3 p.m. ■ The Paw Prints Pet Adoption Center at Carriage Crossing will be open Saturday and Sunday, from 1-4 p.m., every other weekend. Featuring adoptable pets from Collierville Animal Services.

Broccoli Cheese Soup in a Bread Bowl

Delicious bread bowl illed with seasoned, diced potatoes, fresh broccoli, cheddar cheese soup & fresh bacon bits

$

5.95

Open for Lunch

Monday - Friday 11 am to 2:30 pm

Open for Dinner

Monday - Thursday 5 pm to 7:30 pm • Friday until 8:30 pm

Open Saturday 11 am to 7 pm

SEND US YOUR PET PHOTOS Share pictures of your furry friend, scaly sidekick, winged wingman and more in the pages of The Weekly. E-mail JPEG images 1-2 MB in size to Matt Woo at woo@commercialappeal.com. Please include your name, your pet’s name, the city in which you live, and any special factoids about your pet.

Still serving since 1993

Retail - Ofice Land - Industrial

E AL RS O GF

R FOE GA S N TI E LISOR L W NESALE

W

NE

1266 Sycamore View

W NO

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Sam Mitchell TIN LIS

1703 Lockett Place

!!!

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254 Court Ave. Sam Mitchell, Managing Director KW Commercial (901) 261.7926 Direct (901) 569.2307 Mobile sammitchell@kw.com site: samsmitchell.com

www.cafegrilleonthesquare.com 120 W Mulberry Street Collierville, TN 38017 901-853-7511


MG

ÂŤÂŤ

T H E W E E K LY

ÂŤ Thursday, June 18, 2015 ÂŤ 27

Science & Tech RESEARCH

DISCOVERY

Blood test can tell you every virus you’ve had

NASA orbiter spots glass on Mars, a first

many years earlier ... Thus, this is a powerful new research tool.� WASHINGTON — Curious Scientists on Thursday how many viruses have reported intriguing indinvaded your body over the ings from their initial tests course of your life? Now of 569 people they screened you can know. using VirScan in the UnitResearchers have devel- ed States, South Africa, oped a DNA-based blood Thailand and Peru. They test that can determine found that the average pera person’s viral history, a son has been exposed to 10 development they hope of the 206 diferent species could lead to early detec- of known viruses — though tion of conditions, such as some people showed expohepatitis C, and eventually sure to more than double help explain what triggers that number. certain autoimmune dis“Many of those [people] eases and cancers. have probably been inThe new test, known as fected with many diferent VirScan, works by screen- strains of the same virus,� ing the blood for antibod- said Stephen Elledge, a ies against any of the 206 professor of genetics and species of viruses known medicine at Brigham and to infect humans, accord- Women’s Hospital and ing to a study published in Harvard Medical School, the journal Science. The who led the development of immune system, which VirScan. “You could be inchurns out speciic anti- fected with many strains of bodies when it encounters rhinovirus over the course a virus, can continue to of your life, for instance, www.commercialappeal.com produce those antibodies and it would show up as decades after an infection one hit.� Block subsides. VirScan detects In addition, he said, certhose antibodies and uses tain viruses were far more them as a window in time common in adults than in to create a blueprint of children, who presumably nearly every virus an in- have yet to encounter much dividual has encountered. of the world’s viral landIt’s a dramatic alterna- scape. People infected with tive to existing diagnostic HIV tended to have antitools, which test only for a bodies against many more single suspected virus. viruses than people with“The approach is clever out the disease. Researchand a technological tour de ers also saw striking geoforce,� said Ian Lipkin, a graphic diferences in the professor of epidemiology way viruses afected diferand director of the Center ent populations. People in for Infection and Immu- South Africa, Thailand and nity at Columbia Univer- Peru generally displayed sity, who was not involved antibodies against many in the creation of VirScan. more viruses than people “It has the potential to re- living in the United States. veal viruses people have Elledge said the VirScan encountered recently or analysis currently can be

By Rachel Feltman The Washington Post

A spacecraft orbiting Mars has spotted glass in the red planet’s impact craters. And it’s possible that this glass, formed in the searing heat of ancient impacts, could contain signs of longago life. The latest f indings from NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO), published in the journal Geology, suggest that glass may actually be a common feature on Mars. On Earth, scientists have found that impact glass can contain ancient organic molecules that were present during the collision. If the same is true on Mars, it could mean treasure troves have stayed locked away since the days when Mars hosted some form of life. If there were ever microbes thriving on the alien world, they may still be buried in some of this impact glass. This is the first time such glass has been detected on Mars. The way to find it is to look for its signature reflectiveness when measuring the light that bounces off the plan-

By Brady Dennis The Washington Post

performed for about $25 bia, who was not involved per blood sample, though in developing VirScan. “I labs could charge much think this is really going to more than that if the test be helpful. It’s very cool.â€? becomes commercially Racaniello said he enviavailable. He also said it sions a day when patients currently takes two or will get the VirScan test as three days to process and part of a regular checkup. sequence about 100 sam“This is going to be rouples, though that speed tine, I think,â€? he said. “It’ll could increase as technol- be good to know what viogy improves. ruses have been in you.â€? Ultimately, Elledge said he hopes the test could beCOLLIERVILLE APPEAL used to more quickly detect conditions, such as HIV and hepatitis C, which patients can carry for years before displaying any outward symptoms. Experts believe VirScan also could lead to insights about the role long-ago viral infecGeneral Logistics/ Help Wanted Transportation tions play in the later development of certain cancers ´´´´´ and autoimmune diseases such as Type 1 diabetes and NOW HIRING multiple sclerosis.“There Home Delivery Drivers are a lot of chronic diseasCLAMP OPERATORS WE OFFER: 1001-1999 es where we think a virus • $1500 Sign on Bonus NEEDED • Health, Dental, Vision might be involved, but we Landscaping/ and Life Insurance $12.00/Hr. • Company Matched 401(k) can’t quite pinpoint it ... Lawn Services 1ST SHIFT ONLY • Paid Vacation APPLY AT: • Paid Sick/Personal Time Right now we can’t quite • And Other Benefits SUPERIOR LAWN CARE www.applyplx.com PROLOGISTIX make the connection,â€? Residential & Commercial QUALIFICATIONS: ´ ´ ´ ´ ´ • Must Lawn cutting, edging, pass DOT Physical said Vincent Racaniello, a flower beds, clean up, leaf • Experience driving a 26’’ removal, mulch & landbox truck or CDL ‘’A or B’’ professor of microbiology scape designs. 901-572-0473 • High School Diploma/ and immunology at ColumGED. Must be at least 21

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161

Building/ Construction

Study: third of global groundwater basins now are overstressed

IRVINE, Calif. — Satellite data show people are overdrawing water from some of the world’s largest groundwater basins. Researchers from the University of California, Irvine say it’s unclear how much water is left in the most overburdened aquifers. The problem is

139

Commercial Painters

expected to worsen with climate change and population growth. Using measurements taken by NASA’s twin Grace satellites, scientists found the most overstressed groundwater basins were located in the driest regions. Arabian Aquifer System in the Middle East, which serves more than 60 million

people, was considered the most stressed in the world followed by the Indus Basin aquifer of northwestern India and Pakistan. The farm-rich Central Valley in California was considered highly stressed. The two studies were published online in Water Resources Research, a journal of the American Geophysical Union.

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Sales

190

NOW HIRING

MOTORCYCLE SALES PROFESSIONALS • Earning potential: $80K-$100K annually • The South’s fastest growing Harley dealership • Fun and lively work environment where you can express your individuality • The only requirement is a great personality ---------------------------------------Looking for motivated, customer service focused individuals who are interested in finding a career, not just another job. ---------------------------------------Apply online at: SouthernThunderHD.com 4870 Venture Drive Southaven, MS 38671 (662) 349-1099

years of age • A valid driving license and a good driving record • Willingness to work Security weekends and overnight deliveries • Good organization, time-management and WE OFFER: communication skills Hiring armed State licensed Health, Dental, Vision • Ability to lift heavy and Life Insurance furniture in excess of 500 Officers/Unarmed Officers 3 Shifts Avail. Apply at: Forklift starting rate pounds with assistance 1661 International Pl. 4flr. of pay $12.00 • Great customer service M-F 9-5 Copeland Services Company Matched 401(k) attitude # for details: 901 818-3187 Great discounts, up to email: copelandservicesllc 40% on our products APPLY IN PERSON: @gmail.com Paid Vacation 8005 Polk Lane Paid Sick/Personal Time Olive Branch, MS 38654 And Other Benefits OR SUBMIT RESUME TO:

194

Williams-Sonoma, Inc. is now accepting applications for:

At least 2 yrs. experience. Must have own transport. Must pass a drug test. Apply in person M-F from • the hours of 9:00am-3:00pm at 5410 Crestview Drive • Memphis, TN 38134 • Concrete Finishers, Form •

Carpenters, Rod Busters, Skilled Laborers & Foremen

166

IMMEDIATE OPENINGS Forklift Operator

SECURITY

• • • Hamilton-Elles, Inc., a midsouthrecruiting@ commercial concrete QUALIFICATIONS: wsgc.com contractor located in High School Diploma/ Memphis, TN, is now hiring. • GED. Must be at least 18 Verifiable exp. & drug years of age screen req’d. We offer Manufacturing highly competitive wages • Ability to lift up to 75lbs throughout the shift and benefits. Email resume: info@hamilton-elles.com • Must be certified or willing to get certified on or fax to: 901-213-9322 Reach Truck, Order Picker, 537, and the Cat Engineering/ with the ability to operate Erosion Technologies Inc. Technical at heights up to 35 feet. an ISO 9001:2008 cer• Ability to read and verify (ETi), Help Wanted mfr., has an exciting locations & sku numbers tified F/T, day shift opening for Civil Engineer an exp’d CNC Machinist. APPLY IN PERSON: Neel-Schaffer, an ENR Top Duties include: Program, 8005 Polk Lane 500 firm, is seeking reset-up, operate & produce Olive Branch, MS 38654 sponses from qualified high precision components persons for the position of OR SUBMIT RESUME TO: using CNC milling Civil Engineer in our midsouthrecruiting@ machines & CNC lathes. Southaven MS Office. wsgc.com Person must be highly We are looking for someone motivated self-starter, Shop Driver to provide project design comfortable working within and management of water, Must have a good driving an ‘’art to part’’ environwastewater and street prorecord with valid TN ment. Exp. w/wire EDM jects. It is preferable that driver’s license. Able to lift machines & SolidWorks & experience background 50 lb.Must pass drug test. ESPRIT software a plus. include municipal work Must know the Memphis Competitive salary/ and familiarity with review area.Knowledge of paint wage based on exp. agencies requirements for sprayer& equipment a plus. Send Resumes to: these type projects. Apply in person from the waylan@goeti.net Responsible for final draw- hours of 9:00am-3:00 pm Fax: 870-802-4337 ings and technical at 5410 Crestview Drive, ETi, PO BOX 19063 specifications for bidding Memphis, Tn 38134 Jonesboro, AR 72404 and construction Attn: Waylan Deen administration. Minimum requirements: Logistics/ Bachelor’s Degree in Civil Medical/ Engineering and minimum Transportation Healthcare 6 years acceptable design experience. PE preferred. Driver Tractor Trailer Please send your resumes to humanresources@ neel-schaffer.com EOE At COMFORT KEEPERS, we have always been No matter what stage committed to making a Food/ in your career, positive difference for our Hospitality it’s time to call Central senior clients whom we are Refrigeration Home. privileged to serve. With Great Miles ~ Top Pay! Front Desk Clerks our Caregivers, it’s more CDL Training Available than a job. It’s a way of Now Hiring/Part Time giving back and helping Flexible Schedule. older adults and their families deal with aging Apply in person only: issues and their challenges. Best Western Galleria Our Caregivers enjoy 8635 Hwy 65, Bartlett, TN wonderfully rewarding (855) 738-6575 work, competitive wages www.centraltruck IHOP NOW HIRING IN including health insurace! drivingjobs.com THE MEMPHIS AREA! If you’re a caregiver who seeks purpose and joy in your work, then Comfort OLIVE BRANCH, MS Keepers is where you need to be. Call Us today! You’ll Apply at your local IHOP or be glad you did. 901-541-5118 www.myihopjob.com 877-694-4675 Receptionist / Billing Clerk • Affordable Benefits Medical practice seeks MEMPHIS COUNTRY after 60 days. to fill FT receptionist / CLUB SEEKING • Paid Vacation after 1 yr. billing clerk position. HOSPITALITY • Safety & Longevity Great benefits, smoke PROFESSIONALS Bonus free environment, preImmediate full time Class A CDL w/2 years employment drug screen. openings for: of OTR experience Send resume to: •Line Cook Call Dancor Transit P.O. Box 771320 •F/B Service 866-677-4333 Memphis, TN 38177 •Housekeeping www.dancortransit.com or email: •Security lauragloster@ •Facility Maintenance comcast.net •Entry Level Admin/ Receptionist •Landscaper Fantastic attitude and pleasant personality REQUIRED.

177

155

159

180

$1,500 Sign On Bonus

Community Sale?

Well above industry standard salaries with exceptional health benefits in a great working environment.Must pass a criminal background check and drug screening. Applications available at our guardhouse, 600 Goodwyn St APPLY IN PERSON Monday through Friday 7a-3p

Community Sale? Advertise Today Call 901-529-2700

Call 529-2700 to place your classified ad

Advertise Today Call 901-529-2700

To Place Your Ad Call 901-529-2700 Call 529-2700 to place your classified ad

Trucks, SUV’s and Vans

955

CADILLAC ‘13 Escalade Luxury, white, 38K miles. #26121. Barbara Wright, 901-761-1900

BUD DAVIS CADILLAC

CADILLAC ‘14 Escalade, white, Luxury pkg., $58,964 incl $499 doc, excl ttl. #26134. Alex, 901-288-7600

BUD DAVIS CADILLAC

CHEVROLET ‘12 Tahoe, shiny black, 76K miles (looks like 20K miles), must see. Ask for Keith Dial for best deal! 901-218-9105

BUD DAVIS CADILLAC

Dodge ‘12 Ram 1500 4dr, low mi, white, loaded, fancy, must see, lots of xtras. Ask for Keith Dial 901-218-9105

BUD DAVIS CADILLAC

Automobiles For Sale

960

BUICK ‘14 Encore, small SUV, black beauty, 11K miles. A deal! Call Dial, 901-218-9105, Keith Dial

BUD DAVIS CADILLAC

Buick ‘14 Verano, silver, gas saver, 13K mi. See Dial for a deal, 901-218-9105, Keith Dial

BUD DAVIS CADILLAC

Cadillac ‘13 ATS, American car of the year! crimson pearl, 36K, she’s a beauty! Ask for Keith Dial, 218-9105

BUD DAVIS CADILLAC

BUD DAVIS CADILLAC

302-399

353

Garage Sales

CADILLAC ‘14 CTS Luxury, silver, 20K miles. #26205. Tyrone, 901-761-1900

BUD DAVIS CADILLAC

CADILLAC ‘12 CTS Coupe, Prem. pkg., black on black. #26208. Oscar, 901-761-1900

BUD DAVIS CADILLAC

CADILLAC ‘14 ATS, black, Luxury pkg, 29K mi. #26194. Tony Heeg, 901-761-1900

EADS MULTI-FAMILY GARAGE SALE SATURDAY, June 20th CADILLAC ‘12 CTS Touring 1345 Pine Acres, 38028 Limited Edition, 20K miles. 7:00am to Noon #26172A. Keino, 901-761-1900 Furniture, appliances, dishes, bedding, linens, clothes, shoes, toys, gaming CHEVROLET ‘13 units, holiday decorations, MALIBU & CRUZE! items for kids going off to Several to choose from. college. Jesse, 901-761-1900

BUD DAVIS CADILLAC BUD DAVIS CADILLAC

BUD DAVIS CADILLAC

CHEVROLET ‘14 Corvette, black, black leather, Nav, heads up, #26959. Stephen, 901-288-4946

No Experience? Some Caregivers, Live-Ins & Experience? LOTS of CNAs for VA Visits Experience? - Let’s Talk!

Managers, Cooks, *Hiring for Local Drivers* Servers, Bussers & Hosts ´New Pay Package´

CL1

CADILLAC ‘12 SRX, white, Premium pkg. #26191. Ken Walden, 901-340-1492

Experienced CNC Machinist

166

ÂżĂŒĂŒĂƒ Ă’ÂżĂŠĂŠĂƒĂ— Ă„ĂŠĂƒĂ‹Ă‡ĂŒĂ… Ăˆ ÂŻÂŽÂŞ °Ž¯³ Ă‹ Ă&#x; ĂŽĂ&#x; Ă„ Ă&#x; Æ Œ¡Ž¯§¾´¾œ¡¹Ž

Thursday, June 18, 2015

CLASSIFIED

ENVIRONMENT

Associated Press

et. But impact glass has a fairly low light signal, and it’s usually drowned out by the rocks sitting around it. To tease out the glass itself, researchers had to figure out what its spectral signal would be in a lab experiment, then create an algorithm to go looking for that signal amid all the data noise produced by the rocky planet. “ T he resea rchers’ analysis suggests glass deposits are relatively common impact features on Mars,� said Jim Green, director of NASA’s planetary science division, said in a statement. “These areas could be targets for future exploration as our robotic scientific explorers pave the way on the journey to Mars with humans in the 2030s.� In fact, one of the craters thought to contain glass is near one of the a proposed landing site s for the Mars 2020 mission, in which a new NASA rover will collect samples in the hopes of one day returning them to Earth. So it’s possible we’ll get a closer look at this tantalizing glass one day.

BUD DAVIS CADILLAC

FORD ‘14 Mustang, got it have it green! Prem pkg, auto, $25,988 inc $499 doc+ttl #26181. James Lee, 761-1900

405-425 Hunting and Fishing Needs

411

BUD DAVIS CADILLAC

JAGUAR 2003 XKR Coupe, black w/blk lthr., 39K mi., GPS, garage kept, extra clean, like new. Classic Beauty! $16500, (901)854-2323

´MERCEDES-BENZ´

ATTENTION DUCK Hunters! Duck Pits for Lease, also Booking Day Hunts. Low price High qlty since 85 For more information : ´2 Indoor Showrooms´ hickoryridgeduckclub.com 50+ Mercedes in stock(501)940-8927 miles as low as 998 Most in factory warranty, w/100Kextended warranty available 15,000 + Happy Clients! All trades welcome, Excellent finance rates w/approved credit. Sales • Service • Bodyshop Please View

SMITHIMPORTS.COM

2965 S. 3RD

903-960 Airplane and Related Services

903

PRIVATE HANGAR for rent at Charles Baker Airport. Electricity, concrete floor, bird stops, personnel door. Rent now get a free month. Call Mike at 901-596-8506 or 501-915-8506 Call 529-2700 to place your classified ad

901-332-2130

Community Sale? Advertise Today Call 901-529-2700

Community Sale? Advertise Today Call 901-529-2700

To Place Your Classified Ads Call 901-529-2700


28 » Thursday, June 18, 2015 »

««

T H E W E E K LY

MG

EVERY PRE-OWNED VEHICLE COMES WITH 3 MO./3000 MI. WARRANTY AT NO CHARGE! www.colliervillechryslerdodgejeepram.com USED CARS UNDER $10,000 Stk# J821019A

Stk# J665021D

2008 DODGE

2004 CHEVROLET

Red, 4-Speed Auto., 17” Wheel Covers, Power Mirrors, Power Windows, Remote Keyless Entry, 109,339 miles

Summit White w/Tan Leather, 4-Speed Auto., Cast Alum. Wheels, CD, Dual Zone AC, Heated Door Mirrors, Power Windows, Remote Keyless Entry, 151,902 miles

Stk #R611120A

DODGE CALIBER SXT Inferno Red, 17” Aluminum 2007

TAHOE

CHARGER

$8,497

Wheels, CD, Power Windows, Remote Keyless Entry, Spoiler, 127,000 miles

$8,498

$5,995

FEATURED USED CARS Stk# 1243

Stk# 1258

2013 TOYOTA

2013 DODGE RAM 1500 LARAMIE

47,362 miles

Hemi, 36K miles

$29,950

GRAND CHEROKEE LIMITED 38,273 miles

$31,499

Stk #1276

2014 JEEP WRANGLER

SAHARA UNLIMITED 27,092 miles

$38,182

Stk #J626442A

2009 DODGE

RAM 1500 BIG HORN 123,362 miles

$17,944

Stk# J673395A

2014 FORD

LONG HORN CREW CAB 4X4

FOUR RUNNER LIMITED 154,521 miles

$14,169

Stk #1261

Stk #J631311A

WRANGLER SPORT

$31,148

$15,995

$25,976

$28,963

24,093 miles

Stk #R702372A

77,482 miles

Stk #1265

13,925 miles

Stk# 1287

CRUZE

CHARGER SE

CHEROKEE LIMITED

$13,995

$19,454

$32,981

$24,210

Stk #D723707A

Stk #J631308A

CHARGER RT

Stk# J629556A

2010 FORD

16,149 miles

FUSION HYBRID

84,189 miles

$12,251

2014 DODGE

2008 DODGE

Harley Davidson Edition, 61K miles

$22,900

2015 RAM 1500 1/2 TON CREW CAB HEMI

$9,000

OFF MSRP

393 S Byhalia Rd. Collierville, TN 38017

901-854-JEEP

2014 JEEP GRAND 17,734 miles

2012 BMW

2015 JEEP

FORD MUSTANG 3,945 miles

$26,497

Stk# J857027A

2012 JEEP GRAND

335i

Q5 2.0T PREMIUM QUATRO

CHEROKEE OVERLAND

$29,490

$28,988

$27,995

64K miles

48,167 miles

Stk #1275

2013 JEEP

2015

44,793 miles

Stk #J840669A

$19,108

Stk# J644706A

2011

2012 AUDI

86,019 miles

1,078 miles

Stk# J644706B

GMC ACADIA SLT

23K miles

Stk# J626176B

$17,579

CHALLENGER SXT

Nav., Leather, 31K miles

2006 TOYOTA

$10,860

2015 DODGE

TOYOTA TACOMA

2014

57,468 miles

TSX

2013 CHEVROLET

$39,323

ESCAPE SEL

2010 ACURA

2013 FORD

F-150 FX4

AVENGER SE

1500 OUTDOORSMAN

$30,995

Stk #J635706A

Stk #1247A

Stk# J658036A

Stk #1257

2013 FORD

66,419 miles

$23,221

Stk #R591499A

$28,420

2012 DODGE

61,785 miles

2014 RAM

SPORT

Stk #C653565A

DODGE RAM BIG HORN QUAD CAB

2012

$37,289

MUSTANG GT PREMIUM 19,403 miles

Stk# R565432A

Stk #J602644A

2013 FORD

$20,663

Stk# 1286

Black Charcoal w/Black Leather, 22” Polished Alum. Wheels, CD/MP3/ Navigation, Heated Front Seats, Memory Seat, Power Liftgate, Power Windows, Remote Keyless Entry, 41,919 miles

$14,997

F-150 XLT

2014 JEEP

Deep Cherry Red, 17” Alum. Wheels, Front Fog Lights, Keyless Entry, Power Windows, Rear Window Defroster, Uconnect Voice Command w/Bluetooth, 16,679 miles

$14,996

F-150 XL REG. CAB 5K miles

2013 FORD EDGE

COMPASS SPORT

Stk #R555118A

2014 FORD

2014 JEEP

CAMRY L

Black w/Light Gray Cloth, 6-Speed Auto., 16” Steel Wheels, Power Windows, CD, Rear Window Defroster, 69,989 miles

Stk #J666258A

Stk# JB27243A

60,414 miles

WRANGLER SAHARA 26,154 miles

$35,727

Stk# J626178A

CHEVROLET MALIBU LT

2014

10,324 miles

$18,953

Stk #R676450A

2012 FORD

EDGE LIMITED

75,547 miles

$19,899

2015 JEEP RUBICON UNLIMITED

$4,000

OFF MSRP

Stk# J635496. MSRP $44,070

Hours: Mon-Sat 8am-8pm Closed Sunday www.colliervillechryslerdodgejeepram.com


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