Tuesday, August 25, 2015
MG HH
FREE
THE RENAISSANCE RETURNETH Fasten the chain mail and don your suit of armor for period fun at Shelby Farms. Page 13
Collierville Weekly COMMUNITY
TEDx talks come to town With a little help from MUS students By Marci Woodmansee Special to The Weekly
YALONDA M. JAMES/THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL
Ben McCurry (center), 14, a freshman from Houston High School, takes pictures of AutoZone Park as he stands on the field with classmates during a tour. Ben and 21 other freshman students will pilot Houston High School’s Leadership Academy this school year.
GERMANTOWN
Learning to lead Houston High puts promising freshmen in leadership group
By Jane Roberts robertsj@commercialappeal.com 901-529-2512
Ben McCurry stepped on the turf at AutoZone Park, a reminder that membership has its privileges, and clicked of a few frames. He and 21 other hand-picked freshmen at Houston High are members of its irst Leadership Academy. They got the insiders’ tour of the baseball stadium last week, in hopes they’d realize every ield has leaders. “I play baseball. I could tell the ields are really nice and well-kept,” said Ben, 14. “I actually met the general manager of the Redbirds.” The academy is the school’s efort to develop leaders from the middle of the pack — not the kids destined to be class president or homecoming royalty — but the two dozen or so in any class who could be great if someone helped them hone their edge.
By developing 20-25 rising leaders a year, by the time Ben is a senior, Houston High will have close to 100 students on the track, enough to make an impact on how the student body views leadership and where more of them go after high school. “We would like to try to identify students with some leadership characteristics and traits, and see if we could build upon those to help them through school,” said Chauncey Bland, director of student services in Germantown Municipal Schools. “We want to take kids we think we can have an impact on.” While there are honors students in the group, there is no GPA requirement. Instead, the suburban district chose participants based on some ol’ fashioned signs: the irmness of their handshake, demeanor and how clearly they expressed their ideas about leaders, including the ones they most admire, in a formal interview.
On Saturday, Memphis will experience its inaugural TEDx conference, featuring 18 speakers who have turned ideas into action. The roster includes Dr. Scott Morris, CEO of the nonproit Church Health Center in Memphis; Kimbal Musk, co-founder of The Kitchen restaurants (opening at Shelby Farms and Crosstown Concourse) and Learning Gardens (opening at 100 Memphis schools); and Clif Goldmacher, songwriter, producer and musician. Co-organizer Patton Orr, a senior at Memphis University School, began turning his idea for a conference into action two years ago, and he is excited to see TEDxMemphis inally coming to life. “More important, I’m excited for Memphis,” Orr says. “The goal and mission from the very beginning was to create an event that highlights all the great ideas coming out of Memphis — for the people of Memphis.” Orr first learned about TED conferences when his sister, Caroline Orr, worked on the organizing committee for TEDxUNC (University of North Carolina) in 2013. He became fascinated by TED Talks, short (18 minutes or less) recorded presentations by experts and thinkers from around the world that can be seen via ted.com. He began a campaign to drum up interest at MUS and in the community. An acronym for technology, entertainment and design,
See LEADERS, 2 See TEDX, 2
Inside the Edition
COMMUNITY
CHANCE OF TEARS
Sign up for Forrest Spence 5K today
Longtime Channel 5 weatherman Dave Brown to retire on Aug. 31. NEWS, 22
Event includes fun run, 100-yard dash By Emily Adams Keplinger 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, 14 © Copyright 2015
Look inside for your Lowe’s insert *SELECT ZIP CODES
The Commercial Appeal
POPLAR NSION COMPLETE! PIKE EXPA WINE & LIQUOR “The Friendliest Store in Town”
EASIEST IN & OUT!!! 9330 Poplar Pike
901-309-0202
Behind Walgreens - Next to Fresh Market
Cupcake
All Varietals
750 ML
$7.99
The eighth annual Forrest Spence 5K will take place Saturday. The race will begin at 8 a.m. in Overton Park, near the pavilion on East Parkway. The event includes a 5K race, a 1-mile fun run and a 100-yard dash for kids. There also will be a kids’ activity area with face painting, games and more. Strollers are welcome. The race raises money for the Forrest Spence
Apothic Red 750ML
$8.99
Fund, which assists with the non-medical needs of critically or chronically ill children and their families throughout the Mid-South. According to Bridgette Flack, who is serving as co-chairman of media relations for this year’s event along with her husband, Tim, the dream of the Forrest Spence Fund was started in November 2007, the weekend that Forrest died. That dream became a reality in 2008 and was designated as an oicial 501c3 nonproit organization in 2009. “Robert Forrest Spence was born on Sept. 10, 2007, to Brittany and David
Redwood Creek 1.5L
$8.99
The eighth annual Forrest Spence 5K starts 8 a.m. Saturday at Overton Park.
Spence,” said Bridgette Flack. “Shortly after his birth, Forrest was rushed to Le Bonheur Children’s Hospital where he eventually passed away after a 55-day battle with an infection. The outpouring of love the Spences received during Forrest’s life forever changed them, and upon his death they founded the Forrest
Ecco Domani 750ML
$8.99
Jim Beam 1.75L
Spence Fund to give back to their community and the hospital that fought so valiantly for their son.” “The Forrest Spence Fund provides individual grants to families in need, provides counseling through a third party at no cost to the family, as well as inancial assisSee RUN, 2
Jack Daniels 1.75L
$23.99 $38.99
See Inside For Large Selection Of Sale Items!
TUESDAY IS LADIES DAY! ENJOY 10%-15% OFF!
(Excludes Sale Wines)
CHECK OUT OUR EXTENSIVE BEER & GROWLER SELECTION!
2 » Tuesday, August 25, 2015 »
T h e W e e k ly
««
MG
In the News MUSICAL MOVE
Blues Foundation hires new president, CEO Barbara Newman starts job on Oct. 1 By Bob Mehr mehr@commercialappeal.com 901-529-2517
The Memphis-based Blues Foundation has a new president and CEO. On Aug. 19, Barbara B. Newman was named as the new head of the organization, replacing the retiring Jay Sieleman. Newman will take over responsi-
bilities starting Oct. 1, the start of the Blues Foundation’s iscal year. The foundation’s 25-member board and smaller search committee began a several-month process in May, getting resumes from more than 30 candidates. They made the formal ofer to hire Newman on Saturday. A fourth-generation Memphian, Newman earned her B.A. in political science from Brown University and has a background in accounting and corporate inance from her tenure with New
York-based National Westminster Bank. Upon returning to her native Memphis in 1989, Newman began nonproit work with the Bornblum Solomon Schechter School board of directors, serving as treasurer, vice president of both administration and fundraising, and president. Since 2007, Newman has been executive director of Beth Sholom Synagogue, handling inancial administration, communications, human resources and facility management.
Newman is also a member of the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences and Folk Alliance International. Her husband is local music attorney Bruce Newman, of the irm Newman, DeCoster. “I’m very excited about the opportunity,” said Newman. “I wanted a new challenge that would allow me to use the skill set I’ve developed in administration and inancial management and strategic planning — but also doing something that I love,
which is music. And also, helping our city; I believe the Blues Foundation is really important to Memphis.” In a statement announcing the decision, Blues Foundation board Chairman Paul Benjamin said that Newman “will be a great leader who will help us move forward, taking The Blues Foundation to new heights. We all look forward to working together.” Longtime Blues Foundation COO Joe Whitmer conirmed that he will remain in his post.
LEADERS
In brief
ACHIEVEMENT
from 1
CO L L I E RV I L L E
“The interview was a little nerve-wracking,” said Betsy McCurry,” Ben’s mother. “He didn’t say anything, but we could tell. “It was a great learning opportunity. Very seldom are you interviewed for anything at this age.” The group will meet ive or six times during the school year for seminars and sessions with city leaders and others. Each student also will have a mentor, initially a staffer from Houston High. Over the year, school leaders hope to add city employees to the mentor ranks, building a deeper pool of people interested in students’ lives. The mentor will keep an eye on the academic work so future choices, including where the students want to attend college, aren’t limited by what they didn’t know. The idea arose last winter, about the time private school registration opened, said Kevin Weaver, sports coordinator for the city of Germantown and head of Movers, the city-run leadership program for eighthgraders. “It’s a way not to lose Germantown kids to private schools,” he said. For his part, Weaver, one of the program coordinators, would like to see Houston students more involved in the community. “That is something I am passionate about,” he said. They will get their chance. The students will split into groups of four or ive for a service project each team will design and carry out. “We want to keep our hands of and see how they lead it,” Bland said. “They may choose a project that lasts all day or runs an hour after school for a month. They have to set it up, present it to us and tell us how they are going to execute.” Because freshmen at Houston come from several middle schools, the irst step was getting everyone acquainted, on neutral ground at AutoZone Park. “I only knew one other person; it was cool to get to know some of the other guys,” Ben said. The group is nearly an equal mix of males and females. “By the end of the night, they had mixed and mingled and interacted with each other. It broke down some of the hesitation and barriers,” Weaver said. “That is still a work in progress.”
TEDX from 1 TED is a nonproit organization started in 1984, dedicated to spreading ideas, usually in the form of its talks, recorded in more than 100 languages. The organization sponsors major TED conferences and parallel TEDActive conferences, as well as smaller, independently organized TEDx conferences around the world. Orr started a TED club at MUS, where students watch the talks and discuss the subject matter. He also launched a similar club for teens in the community that meets up once a month at Benjamin L. Hooks Public Library. And he set his sights on organizing a conference. “For some reason, TEDx had never caught on in Memphis as it had in other cities,” Orr says. “I
Next Lunch n’ Learn will be Thursday
Reginald Howard will be the guest speaker at Thursday’s Lunch n’ Learn session at the Morton Museum. Howard will speak about his days in baseball’s Negro Leagues, playing for the Indianapolis Clowns in the 1950s. Howard will be visiting the museum at 11 a.m. The Lunch n’ Learn program is free, and attendees are welcome to bring a sack lunch. A drink and dessert will be provided. This program is in support of the Museum’s exhibit, “Baseball! Celebrating a Community Pastime,” on display until Sept. 12. The exhibit features the Collierville Tigers, a Negro League team in Collierville in the 1950s-60s. MARK WEBER/THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL
Tom Nash, 91, has competed in the Tennessee Senior Olympics for more than 30 years and taken home the Outstanding Athlete award more than 20 times. Nash will compete in more than 20 events this year. “I just manage it,” said Nash. “I do what I can.”
Age no obstacle By Omer Yusuf omer.yusuf@commercialappeal.com 901-529-2303
G
rowing up, Tom Nash wasn’t much of an athlete. But in November 1942, his interest in sports was awakened after he graduated from high school and enlisted in the Air Force during World War II.
Nash played basketball, tennis and swam during his time in the service. He left the Air Force in April 1946, but his newfound love for sports stuck. Thirty-six years later, he participated in his irst Tennessee Senior Olympics and has competed in every one since. Nash is 91. When the competition begins next month, Nash won’t be an anomaly. Instead, he will be one of several 90 year olds taking part in the games. The Tennessee Senior Olympics began in 1981 and are held every year in 10 districts throughout the state, with more than 800 athletes competing in the Memphis district. In addition, state inals are held every summer and the National Senior Olympics are held
recognized a huge opportunity for our city to host an event.” He discussed the idea with MUS Lower School principal Clay Smythe, who encouraged him to seek a “loaned executive,” who could help with the process. (The term comes from the United Way program of enlisting executives from employers to help with campaigns.) The name that came to Orr’s mind was Luke Jensen, a 2007 graduate of MUS whom he knew from church. Jensen, an associate with Cushman & Wakeield/Commercial Advisors agreed to join the campaign. “The whole idea of TEDxMemphis started with Patton. He has been instrumental not only in applying for and obtaining a TEDx license but also in the planning and execution of the event,” Jensen says. “I was lucky enough
Senior Olympians are still giving it their all every two years. The athletes, who must be 50 or older, can sign up for sports such as basketball, racquetball, bowling and track and ield. The Memphis district games are set for Sept. 11-25 at various locations. Nash, who competes in the male 90-94 age division, has asthma, COPD and double vision, among other aliments. However, it hasn’t slowed him. When he irst started playing in the games, he only swam, but for the past 12 years, he has competed in 26 events per year. “I just manage it,” said Nash, who won 10 events in his age group last year, including ield javelin and racquetball. “I do what I can.” Nash’s best memories at the Senior Olympics include playing racquetball for the irst time and running the 5K at McWherter Senior Center. “I compete for the camaraderie of meeting people,” Nash said. “I don’t even practice, I just show up.” Despite his aliments and age, Nash said he’ll compete in the Senior Olympics as long as he can.
to be asked early on to be a part of it.” Together Orr and Jensen attended a TEDActive conference in Whistler, British Columbia, in 2014. Afterward, they gave a presentation at MUS on their experience. Now, with the help of a team of local organizers, the conference is set for the University of Memphis Michael D. Rose Theatre Saturday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Orr, who expects close to 1,000 people at the event. “What has absolutely blown me away is all of the enthusiasm generated over social media,” Orr says. “There were so many steps that our team took to get to this point. I’m already looking forward to hearing the buzz around Rose Theatre...” Marci Woodmansee is the associate director of communications at MUS.
“I feel pretty good,” Nash said. “I’m just having to be more careful about the things I do.” Nineteen years ago, Dorothy Hargett, 92, was only a casual bowler, but when she was out bowling with a friend, she heard about the Tennessee Senior Olympics. She has bowled at the games ever since. Her daughter, Sheri Ratzlaf, took her to all of the senior bowling tournaments, in addition to the Olympics, and became eager to turn 50 so she could bowl with her mother in the doubles competition at the Senior Olympics. Three years ago, she did. Hargett’s favorite memory at the senior games came soon after at the 2013 National Senior Olympics in Cleveland. She said spending quality time with her daughter and sightseeing made the trip memorable. “We even put our feet in Lake Erie, so we could say we were in the water, ” said Hargett, who along with her daughter earned the bronze medal in female doubles in bowling at the 2013 Nationals. “It was just a lot of fun.” Ratzlaf, 53, said it’s been a honor to bowl alongside her mother and said she’ll continue to bowl at the Senior Olympics long after her mother passes. “I love being able to do something with her that she loves at this stage of her life,” Ratzlaf said.
RUN from 1 tance for gas cards, meal vouchers, and household bills,” Bridgette Flack said. “The fund’s staf and volunteers provide emotional support for families who are recipients of aid from the Forrest Spence Fund, including care bags containing comfort ideas for their hospital stay,” Bridgette Flack added. “The organization also provides complimentary monthly family dinners at Le Bonheur Children’s Hospital and the FedExFamilyHouse. Additionally, it provides supplies for hospital units, including nursing pumps, cooler bags, notepads, bags, wagons, and toys for the children. And the Forrest Sibling Playroom at Le Bonheur Children’s Hospital provides a safe,
The fund’s staf and volunteers provide emotional support for families who are recipients of aid from the Forrest Spence Fund.” Bridgette Flack, co-chairman of media relations
supervised environment for the siblings of patients while parents spend time with their ill child.” Reg ister for t he race online at forrestspencefund.com. For more information about the Forrest Spence Fund visit forrestspencefund.org or check out the Forrest Spence Fund page on Facebook.
G E R M A N T OW N
44th Germantown Fest is Sept. 12-13
The 44th annual Germantown Festival will be Sept. 12-13 at the Germantown Civic Club Complex, 7745 Poplar Pike. This year, more than 400 local and national arts and crafts vendors will have their goods on display. There also will be food booths, games, kiddie rides, community attractions, live stage entertainment and new car exhibits on display. Each year, more than 50,000 people attend this annual family event. One of the most popular attractions of the festival, The Running of the Weenies Dachshund Race and Costume Contest, will be held Sept. 12 at 11:30 a.m. The festival hours are 9:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Sept. 12 and noon to 6 p.m. on Sept. 13. There is no cost to attend and a free shuttle bus service will be available. The free bus shuttle locations will be at Union University, 2745 Hacks Cross Road, and Baptist Rehabilitation Center 2120 Exeter Road. For additional information, visit germantownfest.com.
THE
WEEKLY The Commercial Appeal Volume 3, No. 25 The Weekly, a publication of The Commercial Appeal, is delivered free on Tuesdays 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
George Cogswell 901-529-2205 • GCogswell@ commercialappeal.com VICE PRESIDENT OF ADVERTISING
Stephanie Boggins 901-529-2640 • sboggins@ commercialappeal.com ADVERTISING SERVICES, RETAIL, CLASSIFIED, BILLING
901-529-2700
MG
GUARANTEED LOWEST PRICE!
««
T H E W E E K LY
« Tuesday, August 25, 2015 « 3
ALL 50 DIFFERENT ORECK PRODUCTS ON SALE!
BLOW OUT SALE!
GIANT 4 FOR 1 1/2 PRICE! SHAMPOO YOUR CARPET CLEANUP SALE! ORECK XL SHIELD
Coupon Expires 8-31-2015
®
®
POWER SCRUBBER
Powerful Carpet and Hard Floor Cleaner!
With just the touch of a button, the Oreck XL Shield Power Scrubber deep-cleans, washes, lifts, and grooms your carpets. It also extracts stains, sticky residue, spills, pet accidents, and grime that even the best vacuum cleaners cannot remove.
SAVE
250 REG 399
6 DAYS ONLY!
1
$ SALE 14999 certiied factory reconditioned Coupon Expires 8-31-2015
Power 8lb Rebuilt Orecks 102 Mph Air Flow Originally $399.99
Reg $17999 R
Oreck, The Master of Cleaning!
SALE
• LIGHTWEIGHT-EASY TO PUSH! • POWERFUL 102 MPH AIR FLOW! • TWO SPEEDS-ONE FOR TILE AND WOOD, ANOTHER TO DEEP CLEAN CARPET! • GREAT FOR REMOVING PET HAIR!
WITH 3 FREE BONUSES! A $600 bonus value!
2
SALE $ 99
DELUXE CANISTER WITH TOOLS.
• POWERFUL ENOUGH TO PICK UP A BOWLING BALL! • CLEAN STAIRS, FURNITURE, CARS, CEILINGS.
A $149.99 VALUE!
• Lightweight & Easy to Use • Powerful & Dependable • Oreck Vacuums Used in Luxury Hotels Worldwide • Deep Cleans Carpets & Bare Floors • Ideals For All Surfaces Automatically Adjusts For the Right Cleaning Height
Hurry! Limited Supplies!
If You Never Thought You Could Afford An Oreck, This Sale Is For You!
Model and color will vary per location.
TILE & GROUT CLEANER RENTAL
REG $49.99 SAVE $30
Clean your tile like a professional! • Amazing! Scrubs grout lines clean! • No more getting on your knees with a tooth brush • Fast and easy! Polishes tile with inger tip control. • Also cleans wood, laminate, linoleum & carpet.
RENTAL
19.99
$
SAVE $50! SWEEO-N-GO
SALE
99
99
ORECK
NEW BELT INSTALLED
5
$
00 Reg 14.99 $
Increase your Oreck’s Power!!
5 YEAR SERVICE AGREEMENT!
• KEEP YOUR VACUUM RUNNING AT PEAK PERFORMANCE!
A $250.00 VALUE!
ALL 4: NEVER BEFORE AT THIS PRICE!
SALE!
1/2 PRICE VAC REPAIR COUPON! ANY MAKE INCLUDING: DYSON, HOOVER, EUREKA, KIRBY
All tradenames, trademarks and registered trademarks are the property of their respective holders.
Certified Factory Reconditioned
2499
$
PLUS PARTS
Coupon Expires 8-31-2015
SAVE $50!
REG
$
199
SALE
$
149.99
Powerful Compact Canister with tools for cleaning Stairs, Hardwood, Furniture, and Autos
Coupon Expires 8-31-2015
SAVE $ 200 AIR PURIFIER
It’s Time to Clear the Air. And now there’s a powerful, portable, proactive way to help do it. • The Truman Cell® captures allergens from the air that passes through the ilter. • Lays lat horizontally or on its side vertically; in tight spaces. • Three speed setting, including ‘low,’ for quite operation. • 3-year limited warranty. *Some limitation apply
Model and color may vary per location
THIS WEEK GET A FREE CANISTER VAC!!
Reg. $39999
SALE $199
Coupon Expires 8-31-2015
5 OFF!
$
HURRY LIMITED SUPPLY!
8 PACK ORECK
UPRIGHTBAGS
Coupon Expires 8-31-2015
10 OFF
$
DRY CLEAN CARPET KIT MAINTAIN YOUR CARPET The Professional way
• FREE DELUXE CANISTER! A $149.99 Value! • 4 Free Carpet Cleaning Rentals! A $200 Value! • 5 Free Annual Service Tune-ups! A $250 Value!
REG $3999 SALE $2999
Coupon Expires 8-31-2015
NEW ORECK® QUESTTM PRO
• No more back ache! Pushes easily through Shag, Frieze, & Soft Carpets! • Powerful! 100 MPH Air Flow! • Picks up pet hair in one pass! $ 99
SAVE $200!!
Reg 499
SALE $399
NEW
with Free Canister!
Coupon Expires 8-31-2015
• Replace Bag • Clean Agitator • Check Agitator Parts • Clean Filtration System • Polish Motor Armature • Oil and Lubricate Motor • Check Electrical System
249!
$
Simply Amazing!
Coupon Expires 8-31-2015
• Clean virtually any surface • Melts dirt away • Goes almost anywhere even upside down! • SAFE, FAST, DRY STEAM HEAT*
A $200.00 VALUE!
Only 7.7 Pounds! Over half the weight of many vacuums!
• RECHARGEABLE CORDLESS SWEEPER WITH HIGH SPEED BRUSH ROLL • FOR FAST EAST PICKUPS!
$
STEAM-ITTM
• DRY CLEAN YOUR CARPET THE PROFESSIONAL WAY
4
9999
$
IT works w upside down upsi without with spilling! spil
On the worlds lightest and easiest to Push vacuum!
Coupon Expires 8-31-2015
REG $14995
4 FREE CARPET CLEANING RENTALS!
3
Coupon Expires 8-31-2015
SAVE $80!
DELUXE UPRIGHT!
99
Coupon Expires 8-31-2015
OUR BEST DEAL OF THE SEASON!
$
$
Lays Flat to get under bed
ORECK FACTORY DIRECT OUTLETS LOWEST PRICE GUARANTEED! WE REPAIR ALL BRANDS! Southaven, MS Germantown Laurelwood Bartlett
662-349-1887 901-624-0774 901-820-0014 901-384-9004
South Lake Center Stonecreek Centre Perkins & Poplar 7780 HWY 64
POWER, POWER, & MORE POWER! Hours: Mon-Sat 10-6 (All Stores) Sun 1-5 at Germantown, Wolfchase & Southaven
Goodman Rd. / Airways Poplar Ave. / Forest Hill Irene Across from Kroger Across from Carmax
The NEW Oreck QuestTM Pro Canister with power head
• Impeccable clean for all loor surface AND EVEN ABOVE THE FLOOR! Reg $39999 • Variable speed control $ 99 • HEPA ilter • Multiple attachments
SALE 199
4 » Tuesday, August 25, 2015 »
T H E W E E K LY
««
MG
Business DEVELOPMENT
PHOTOS BY YALONDA M. JAMES/THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL
Whole Foods employee Matt Riddle unloads one of many chairs at the new store, 7825 Poplar, in Germantown. The store opened Aug. 18.
FOOD FIGHT Germantown grocery competitors lure customers to new shops
By Jane Roberts robertsj@commercialappeal.com 901-529-2512
W
hole Foods opened its second store in the Memphis metro area Aug. 18 with its traditional “breaking of bread” — challah,
in this case — in its parking lot at 7825 Poplar, only blocks from what is for now the largest Kroger in the Mid-South. The 100,000-square-foot Kroger reopened Aug. 12 at 7735 Farmington Blvd. after a $16 million renovation of the site, which was a Kroger brief-
SPECTACULAR SERVICE! A TOP PRODUCER FOR THE MONTH OF JULY CLOSED IN EXCESS OF 1.9 MILLION DOLLARS
ANNIE TAYLOR
ly after Schnucks closed. The renovated Kroger replaces the Kroger around the corner on Exeter that closed Aug. 15, and the new store will be Kroger’s largest in the metro area until a new store opens in Hernando that will be slightly larger.
DYNAMIC PERFORMANCE CONGRATULATIONS TO
BILLYE BRYAN
FOR CLOSING IN EXCESS OF
$1.6 MILLION GERMANTOWN
O: 901.754.0800 D: 901.517.0101
Congratulations!
IN JULY 2015
335-1436 • 754-0800
Congratulations!
MG
««
T H E W E E K LY
« Tuesday, August 25, 2015 « 5
Competition in the market honestly makes us better retailers and ends up being better for the customer. We shop our competitors; we have to stay in line on pricing.” — Darrah Gist, Whole Foods spokeswoman
The proximity of Kroger and Whole Foods, plus the newly opened Sprouts at 3150 Village Shops Drive, sets up a grocery triangle in Germantown that shoppers like Carolyn Herndon, from Collierville, expect will beneit the consumer in variety and price. She plans to shop all three. So does Becky Utley, who could easily tick of the things she liked about Whole Foods. “I like the fact that there is great selection and health foods. I also like the fact that you can eat there,” she said. “But you can also do that here,” she said in the parking lot of Kroger, where she was loading up the car. “People who want fast food, while it’s not a big selection, can get Chinese, barbecue from Corky’s and pizza they will make while you shop. It’s a great convenience.” Whole Foods created its pre-buzz Aug. 14 and Aug. 15 with self-guided tours of the store, then still very much a work in progress. For a donation of $5 that went to charity, the curious got a headset — their ticket to sample fresh hunks of Parmesan cheese crumbled of a chunk as big as a boulder, creamy ice cream from Jersey cows (higher cream content) and slices of gluten-free pizza. They also got to try their luck at social media promotions, including posting pictures of the items they liked best. Winners get a gift card. “I have been waiting for this place to open every single day since I heard they were going to open in Germantown,” said Dr. Jim Ensor. “Every day, I
drive by and look at the progress and wonder, ‘How come it’s taking so long?’” “We shop the Memphis store weekly; now, we’ll probably come daily,” he said with chuckle. Whole Foods’ market research shows there are enough Ensors in Memphis to make a second store a go without cannibalizing the irst one, six miles away. “Competition in the market honestly makes us better retailers and ends up being better for the customer,” said Darrah Gist, Whole Foods spokeswoman. “We shop our competitors; we have to stay in line on pricing.” Kroger and Sprouts are stepping up their games. Kroger, for instance, announced it would reopen the Farmington store with 4,000 organic and natural foods. “We actually have 5,500, the largest selection in the Kroger Delta Division,” said spokeswoman Teresa Dickerson. “That does not include produce. Seasonally, we have up to 150 organic produce items.” To show of the local farmers raising crops for Kroger, it invited them in to schmooze with shoppers at its grand opening. “Shoppers loved it,” Dickerson said, noting that Kroger also has Chef Jenn, Memphian Jennifer McCullough’s line of dips and seafood entrées. “Local for us is our division: Tennessee, Mississippi and Arkansas,” Dickerson said. Local at Whole Foods means within 150 miles, and its Southeast area is packed with names people in Memphis will recog-
Whole Foods employees Kimberly Heidelmeier (left), Evan Crowder and Linda Clark, front line supervisor, make a burrito for a customer during a tour of the facility, at 7825 U.S. 72, in Germantown Aug. 14.
Crepes were available for a food tasting during the pre-opening tour of the new Whole Foods in Germantown.
Whole Foods employee Paul Clements gives a tour of the new Germantown store to customers ahead of the store’s opening.
nize, including Relevant Roasters and Old Apple Hill Brine artisan pickles. More than 200 people had signed up for the 40-minute tours, Whole Foods’ way of getting in their ear (literally) to talk up its charitable causes and preservative-free philosophy. It is the largest natural and organic specialty grocer in the nation.
T he G er m a ntow n store has Kei Jei, a madeto-order line of KoreanJapanese food, new to the chain. It’s also ofering a creperie, with sweet and savory ingredients, served all day with cofee and beignets. It has a community room it will ofer for free and an assortment of prosciutto and Italian sau-
“It helps create buzz,” said Joe Edelstein, Stephens’ analyst in Chicago. “They are clearly going after the aluent customer. They would like to take shopping trips away from Kroger,” he said. “Generally, they are looking to be competitive by ofering diferentiated assortment and a unique store format.”
sages so large that it took four people a day to hang them all, Gist said. At its sandwich bar on Friday, team leader Linda Clark was touting the value of Whole Foods’ Italian sandwiches, “which we call ‘Slatin,’” she said. “We serve them hot or cold, and we are more than glad to ix them any way you want.”
BEAT THE HEAT! New Complete Systems!
3-Ton
No Interest for 25 Months** System Installed Starting at $
2,980
00*
*Restrictions:
What’s Included:
• 60k BTU Gas Furnace • Evaporator Coil • Condenser • Permit
FREE
In-Home Consult
• Residential Only • Code upgrades are additional • Uplow system only • Call to see detail & other restrictions ** With approved credit ** 14 seer & up Equipment
10 Year Labor & Parts Warranty** Expires 9-30-15
A/C Cleaning Residential Only.
49
$
00 per unit
Expires 9-30-15
* What’s Included: • Identify Potential Future • Technician Will Examine Operating Failures Complete HVAC System • Chemical Cleaning Of Condenser • Give Estimate On Any Repairs That Need To Be Done To • Test Start & Run Capacitors Get Your System Running At • After Cleaning Check Maximum Eficiency Freon Levels
FREE Service Call With Any Same Day Repair Call Today! Be Cool Today!
• Freon $45 per lb. (2-lb. minimum)
Other Services:
• Digital and WiFi Thermostats • Yearly Maintenance Program
Air Duct Cleaning – Gas Piping – Air Duct Repairs & Replacement
901-365-2848 LICENSED, BONDED, INSURED
MEMPHISAIRCARE.COM
TN LIC #66530 | MS #563
FAMILY OWNED AND OPERATED
CAP
6 » Tuesday, August 25, 2015 »
T H E W E E K LY
««
MG
Community PEOPLE
Collierville mom pens books for children By Julie Danielson Special to The Weekly
“Random.” That’s how author and “Little House in the Suburbs” blogger Deanna Caswell describes her professional life. As a child, Caswell wanted to be a scientist and a ballerina. In college, she shifted her major multiple times — from marine biology to chemistry, with several others in between. Her disdain for lab work ended her pursuit of a doctorate one semester into graduate school, but she ultimately earned a master’s degree in marriage and family therapy. Now she writes children’s books: Her latest, “Beach House,” was released in May. Caswell, who lives in Collierville, is also the home-schooling mother of four children and a 21st century homesteader: In other words, she and her family make most of the things
they need. Finding time to write books and a blog is hard enough when you have four children (the youngest a year old) and homeschool them all, never mind making your own deodorant, skipping all canned food and tending backyard chickens and mini-goats, but Caswell isn’t one to shy from a challenge. And life as a homesteader family, she told Chapter 16 via e-mail, is a group effort. “Each day, we start school at 10 and finish around 2:30. The cooking and cleaning and baby care and animal care are a juggling act,” she wrote. “But, thankfully, the biggest three kids are really helpful. I couldn’t do it without them. They each have chores they do before the screens come on in the morning and afternoon, and each takes a turn babysitting during the homeschool day. It’s a group effort.” As for her own work?
Deanna Caswell, known as the “Goat Lady” of Collierville, is the author of “Beach House.”
“Writing only happens on weekends and school breaks,” she explained. “Little House in the Suburbs,” which Caswell cofounded with Daisy Siskins, has been featured on msn. com and thriftyfun.com. It includes posts about farming and homesteading geared for those who want to learn more about self-suiciency. “My best in-town pal
and I started it in 2008,” Caswell explains. “We both always had an interest in cooking from scratch and gardening, but nothing too far outside of normal. “Then one day, I was in the Walmart parking lot, buckling in the kids with the cellphone on my shoulder, when I confessed to her, ‘You have no idea the depths of my weirdness. I want to make soap and
grow mushrooms.’ She said, ‘Me too.” Our kids were little, and we never really saw each other, so we decided to blog it out. We started doing all kinds of homestead-type projects together online: gardening, soaping, sewing, needlework, cheese, homepreserving, etc. Our slogan was ‘Simplicity, Creativity, SelfSuiciency ... Minivans.’ Funny thing, my mushrooms never worked out, but just this year, she got a bumper crop.” From how to knit your own washcloths, make roll-up fruit snacks and Tabasco sauce to how not to make comfrey fertilizer, DIY is the name of the game at “Little House in the Suburbs.” There are recipes for condiments, breads, herbal teas and snow ice cream. There are also tips on how to simplify your parenting, your scheduling and your home. In 2012, Caswell and Siskins co-authored their own book, one that
shares the same name as the popular blog. Published by Betterway Home, it features tips on suburban selfsuiciency, creating a life illed with food and products grown in your own backyard. “Plenty of books out there,” they write in the book’s introduction, “will tell you how to survive in the boonies. … This book is about those simple-living behaviors that it easily into a typical suburban neighborhood.” “Beach House,” Caswell’s latest children’s book, celebrates family and the best of summer fun — a trip to the beach. In spare, rhyming verse, she captures the joys of a vacation at the shore and the warmth of family members who enjoy one another’s company. Caswell’s early interest in the sciences was inspired by her childhood in Oak Ridge, a town with its fair share of physicists. She still makes time to visit East Tennessee several times a year.
ACHIEVEMENT
New ‘Chicken Soup’ features short by member of UMC By Lisa Junkins Special to The Weekly
“Chicken Soup for the Soul — Volunteering and Giving Back,” was released nationally on Aug 18, and featured a short story from Collierville United Methodist Church member Mike Ware entitled “Feeding the Spirit.” The church sells copies of the book and all proceeds from the book will
beneit three missions near and dear to Ware’s heart — Rio Bravo Children’s Home in Reynosa, Mexico, La Limye Ministries in Arcahaie, Haiti and Children’s Home of the Mountains in Saltillo, Mexico. La Limye and Children’s Home of the Mountains ministries was started by missionaries from CUMC. Ware had done some technical writing in the Air Force, but didn’t start
writing regularly until the Sunday school class elected him president. He felt it was appropriate to respond by sending them weekly “Mike’s Musings” with other class information. Slowly the musings shifted from a humorous story to more of a devotional. The feedback he received from his Sunday school class encouraged him to continue writing. Joining the Collierville
Christian Writers, he was encouraged to continue writing and set goals. CCWriters meets the first Thursday of the month at Collierville UMC, from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. and has met for more than ive years. He especially noticed the encouragement from Susan Reichert, CCWriters president. The group assists those who want to be published. Writers are always en-
couraged to write about what they know. Ware said he spent ive years rejecting mission trip opportunities. Seeing how much the trips meant to his wife, Suzanne, and daughter, Sally Acker, he inally agreed to go to Rio Bravo Children’s Home. Ware went from being an “I’ll pray about it” kind of Christian to an active-in-missions Christian. Ware said he couldn’t have completed the book
without the help and support of his family. They encouraged and helped him with the editorial tasks of prooing for spelling errors, proper words use, and clarity. The publishers at Chicken Soup for the Soul had detailed guidelines and word limits that Ware had to comply with for his story to be accepted. Lisa Junkins is a volunteer with Collierville United Methodist Church.
Germantown Hardware & Paint “A Real Hardware Store”
Your Grillin’ Headquarters
Corner of Germantown Rd. at Poplar | 2083 S. Germantown Rd. 901-756-9522 | www.germantownhardware.com
CAR WASH EXPRESS SERVICES Rim Detail Carpet Shampoo Interior Cleaning Hand Wax And More
PreventiveCareNow Means Fewer Sick Visits Later. Schedule Your Child’s
Comprehensive Sports Physicals Monday-Friday 8AM-5PM Saturday 8AM-12PM • Sunday 10AM-2PM
(Sick Visits Only)
GERMANTOWN CAR WASH 7601 Poplar Avenue • Germantown Corner of Germantown and Poplar
901-753-9274
www.germantownhardware.com
memphischildrensclinic.org Bartlett • Germantown • Kirby/Hickory Hill Southaven • Olive Branch • Whitehaven
MG
Community
««
T H E W E E K LY
« Tuesday, August 25, 2015 « 7
GRAND OPENING CELEBRATION!
AUG. 27 - SEP. 5 Premier Consignment Boutique
LouisVuitton, Coach, Prada, Longchamp, Kate Spade,Tiffany, Robert Graham, Jos A Banks, Ralph Lauren and many more!
At the irst Collierville Reads event Andre Craford (left), Collierville Schools K-5 instructional supervisor, and Lynn Rushdi, Sycamore Elementary librarian, took a photo with Olympic medalist Rochelle Stevens.
EVENTS
Collierville Reads kicks of with Olympic gold medalist Special to The Weekly
Collierville Reads 2015 is of to a running start after its opening event featuring special guest, Rochelle Stevens, an Olympic track and ield medalist. Stevens shared her inspiring story, displayed her gold medal and mingled with guests. The Collierville Reads 2015 program is sponsored by Collierville Literacy Council, a nonproit organization that helps adults achieve their basic literacy, GED or Englishas-a-Learned-Language goals. Shelia Bentley, a CLC board of directors member, introduced the book chosen for the third annual community-wide reading program, “Spare Parts,” by Joshua Davis.
“Spare Parts” is the true story of “four undocumented teenagers, one ugly robot and the battle for the American dream.” It celebrates grit, ingenuity, teamwork and inspired teaching. Davis, a writer for Wired magazine, balances the realities of the personal lives of four underprivileged Phoenix teens with the technical details of their quest for a national underwater robotics championship. Theirs is a classic underdog story. The community-wide reading program aims to encourage reading for pleasure across age lines and to inspire a sense of community. Collierville Schools students and teachers also will participate by reading and
50%-65% OFF RETAIL
PRICING
NEW INVENTORY ARRIVING DAILY Women and Men’s Apparel, Accessories & much more!
by showcasing the STEM program. The junior reading selection is “The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind” by William Kamkwamba and Bryan Mealer. Students and their families are encouraged to read both of these inspiring and true stories. Upcoming events and contests in September and November will highlight STEM, robotics, art and recycling. At the Sept. 14 meeting of the Collierville Board of Mayor and Aldermen, Mayor Stan Joyner will proclaim the month of September as “Collierville Reads Month.” For more information about the Collierville Reads 2015 events, visit colliervilleliteracy.org or call 901-854-0288.
Text hisher to 22828 to join our e-mail list for special offers and discounts!
Turn your closet into a revolving door of fabulousness
875 W. Poplar Ave. - Shops of Collierville Behind Starbucks and MedPost Urgent Care
(901) 861-0056
hisandherconsignment.com Tues-Fri 10a-6p | Sat 10a-4p | Closed Sunday & Monday
POPLAR PIKE WINE & LIQUOR “THE FRIENDLIEST STORE
IN
TOWN”
GROWLER SELECTION: 14 Beers, Cider, Root Beer & 2 Wines COME CHECK OUT OUR EXTENSIVE BEER SELECTION! Our Ad Prices are Our Store Prices! We match all locally advertised prices! TUESDAY IS LADIES DAY! ENJOY 10%-15% OFF! (Excludes Sale Wines)
NEW AMSTERDAM VODKA 1.75 L
NEW AMSTERDAM GIN 1.75 L
REDWOOD CREEK 1.5 L
1799 $1899
$
8
$ 99
JACK DANIELS 1.75 L
JIM BEAM 1.75 L
KRIS PINOT GRIGIO 750 ML
3899 $2399
$
9
$ 99
TITOS VODKA 1.75 L
2599
$
GROWLERS: LOWEST PRICES IN TOWN!
BOMBAY SAPPHIRE GIN 1.75 L
APOTHIC RED 750 ML
8
35
$ 99
$
99
BOGLE ALL VARIETALS (EXCEPT PHANTOM) 750 ML
7
$ 99
RUFFINO PINOT GRIGIO 1.5 L
10
$
99
BOTA BOX 3L 2 for $
KETEL ONE 1.75 L
35
$
99
15
or $
WOODBRIDGE 1.5 L
30
8
$ 99
99 each
WE NOT ONLY SHOW YOU WHERE THE WINE IS....WE TELL YOU ABOUT IT!
THREE OLIVES VODKA 1.75 L
1799
$
CUPCAKE ALL VARIETALS 750 ML
7
$ 99
LATE NIGHT BUYS Open til 10:00 pm M-TH & 11:00 pm FRI & SAT
MIRASSOU PINOT NOIR 750 ML
8
$ 49
ECCO DOMANI PINOT GRIGIO 750 ML
8
$ 99
10% OFF 1 Wine Case OR 15% OFF 2 Wine Cases
ABSOLUT VODKA
1.75 L
2699
$
LA VIEILLE FERME CHICKEN WINE 1.5 L
1199
$
9330 Poplar Pike • 901-309-0202 Behind Walgreens - Next to Fresh Market
(On non-sale wines only)
HOURS: M-TH/9am - 10pm • FRI & SAT/9am - 11pm
Check out our Specials at www.poplarpikewines.com
Prices Good Thru 8/31/2015
8 » Tuesday, August 25, 2015 »
T H E W E E K LY
««
MG
Community GERMANTOWN
COLLIERVILLE
Planning oicials unhappy with oice project
Lieutenant retires after 26 years with CPD
By Jane Roberts robertsj@commercialappeal.com 901-529-2512
Developers who planned to bring a ive-story oice building to Germantown, plus retail and a dual-branded hotel, quickly pulled their plans Tuesday when it became clear the city’s planning commission was not pleased with the quality of the design, to say nothing of the number of code departures. Developers Ray Gill and Desai Hotel Group asked for a month to address the issues with TraVure, a 10-acre development on the southeast quadrant of Kirby and Poplar that is expected to include a Hilton Garden Inn and Home 2 Suites. If they had not pulled the project, they faced almost certain rejection and would have had to wait six months to resubmit plans. But the city’s planning commission enthusiastically ap-
Architect’s rendering of TraVure project at Kirby and Poplar, which was quickly pulled. Special to The Weekly
proved site plans at Germantown Collection Shopping Center, 2130 Exeter, the site of a possible Trader Joe’s, saying it was a pleasure to work with a developer whose plans so closely mirrored the town’s aesthetic. Glenn Brody, who owns Centennial American PropertiesGermantown, intends to redevelop the empty Kroger in the shopping area, making it a threebay retail development with a separate out-parcel across the parking lot that would hug Exeter and back up to Baptist Hospital’s rehabilitation center. Preliminary sketches to the city planning department included the font Trader Joe’s uses in its logo and signage. But in the inal draft, the font had been changed. Centennial American Properties (CAP), based in Greenville, South Carolina, has developed some Trader Joe’s in other markets. People across the city saw it as more than a coincidence that Trader Joe’s was coming to metro Memphis. After his presentation, Glenn
walked quickly to his car and would not comment. The man driving the car he was in said they were rushing to the airport. The 19,000-square-foot freestanding building is the textbook example of the smart growth Germantown is promoting and has written separate code to accommodate. It breaks up hightraic areas with pedestrianfriendly amenities, including structures that are close to the street with landscaping to shield walkers from traic and its noise and exhaust. CAP’s next hurdle is to get a development agreement with the city’s Board of Mayor and Aldermen. The earliest that could happen is Sept. 14. Although Gill and Desai asked for a month to address issues in their plan, the planning commission will not meet again until Oct. 6. To get approval, the developers will have to reduce the number of “warrants” or departures from city code. The current development, a four-phase project, has 12
warrants, which planning commission chairman Mike Harless said was unheard of in Germantown. “We expect developers to meet the guidelines,” he said, noting that one of the issues creating problems was that the plan included two developers building out common elements, including a wall to shield the property from residential areas, in phases. But another problem was the number of times the project did not meet setback standards, giving it the feel of being shoehorned into the lot. “It’s too tight; too much development in too small a space,” said Forrest Owens, alderman liaison to the planning commission. “It’s an overused term, but it lacks a sense of place. “It appears what we are getting is a developer-driven commercial subdivision. I would like to see more green space,” he said, adding that while some of the warrants might be justiied, “I don’t understand why you can’t come in and abide by what we asked.”
CRIME
Second suspect charged with murder in Cordova slaying By Jennifer Pignolet pignolet@commercialappeal.com 901-529-2372
A second person was charged Aug. 17 in the death of Germantown resident Susan McDonald, who was killed during a theft attempt in Cordova.
Andre Bowen, 36, was charged with irst-degree murder in perpetration of a theft, according to an aidavit. A bond has not been set. Bowen and Anthony Olivo, 36, are accused of killing McDonald in a driveway on Aug. 1. Olivo was arrested Aug. 15 and
charged with irst-degree murder in connection with the slaying. Police said Aug. 16 they had a second person of interest in custody who had been arrested on other charges. He was charged Aug. 17 with irst-degree murder in McDonald’s death. According to the affidavit,
DYNAMIC PERFORMANCE CONGRATULATIONS TO
KENT & TAMMY
ANDERSON
Bowen gave a statement to police Aug. 15 saying he and another person had planned to commit a theft and were in the process of committing that theft when McDonald was shot. Olivo’s aidavit says much the same thing. Police did not say who is accused of iring a weapon.
Lt. Norm Dixon began his career with the Collierville Police Department in 1989. Just a few weeks ago, the department celebrated his 26 years of service at a retirement dinner as Dixon stepped down from public service. Norman “Norm” Dixon moved to Memphis with his parents and four siblings in 1965. He attended Overton High School, and then continued his education by graduating “Magna Cum Laude” from then Memphis State University. He married Cindy Mason in 1983 Norm and they have one Dixon daughter, Lindsey. As a commissioned oicer, Dixon attended the Memphis Police Department’s First Regional Academy during his irst year. He was assigned to the Uniform Patrol Division for the irst 11 years of his service and gained a reputation for expertise in ield training and DUI enforcement. Dixon was promoted to the rank of lieutenant in February 2000. As a lieutenant, he worked in the Special Operations Division for nine years. In January 2009, Dixon was reassigned to the Uniform Patrol Division, where he has served as a ield commander. Collierville Police Chief Larry Goodwin said , “The department will certainly miss his input, ideas and energy. We sincerely thank him for his hard work and dedication to the department, the Town, and to the citizens of Collierville.”
SPECTACULAR SERVICE! A TOP PRODUCER FOR THE MONTH OF JULY CLOSED IN EXCESS OF 1.6 MILLION DOLLARS
MARY JEFFREY FOR CLOSING IN EXCESS OF
$1.7 MILLION IN JULY 2015
901.757-2700
901.359-2533 OR 359-2532
Congratulations!
GERMANTOWN
O: 901.754.0800 D: 901.870.4253
Congratulations!
MG
««
T H E W E E K LY
« Tuesday, August 25, 2015 « 9
Schools GIVING BACK
High school students donate to Lifeblood By Jennifer Gladstone Special to The Weekly
In the Greater Memphis area, 16 to 25 year-old Lifeblood donors provide 25 percent of the blood for local patients. Through Lifeblood’s partnership with local schools, students have an opportunity to explore and learn about one of the most valuable gifts any individual can give — blood for patients in need. Individuals who donate in school frequently become blood donors for life, having learned early on the lesson of altruism in its highest form. Last school year, Collierville and Houston High School students do-
Nearly 100 Collierville High School students donated blood at the school’s first blood drive of the 2014-15 school year.
nated to Lifeblood. “We are grateful that many of our local schools host blood drives through-
out the year and recognize the critical importance of a safe and stable local blood supply,” said Jenni-
fer Balink, vice president of donor relations for Lifeblood. “As a community, Memphis has more patients who need blood than local donors providing it on a regular basis, so these young donors are critically important to helping us treat trauma victims, premature babies, cancer patients and many others.” During the 2014-15 school year, more than 7,800 donations were made by donors between the ages of 16 to 25. Each blood donation can impact the life of up to three local patients. Jennifer Gladstone is the director, marketing and public relations for Lifeblood.
Students with Houston High’s Honors Academy collected items that were donated to the Ronald McDonald House.
CHARITY
Houston High Honors Academy students donate to Ronald McDonald House By Joy Fulmer
ARTS
In My Own Words
Memphis Oral School for Deaf artwork on display By Beth Wilson Special to The Weekly
Paragon Bank is currently displaying artwork from Memphis Oral School for the Deaf students in the lobby of its Saddle Creek Banking Center. The art will be showcased through the end of the month. The exhibit is free and open to the public. “We are excited to kick of another school year and to partner, once again, with the team at Memphis Oral School for the Deaf,” said Robert Shaw, chief executive oicer at Paragon Bank. “Having the opportunity to view such inspirational artwork every day brings joy to both our employees and customers.” Paragon worked with Ginger Ragan, development associate at Mem-
Lizzie Gray (front row, left), Martin Wade, Haley Newman, Joseph Wright (back row, left), Jordan Johnson, Keith Nelson and Collins Kellum, all students at Memphis Oral School for the Deaf, have their art on display at Paragon Bank.
phis Oral School for the Deaf, to coordinate the display. The artwork that features paintings of butterlies was inspired by
the school’s tradition of releasing the colorful insects during the graduation ceremony. The butterlies symbol-
$15
Journey for men
Semi-Annual Event off each pair
Roamer
MoveOn for men
Crissy
Bout Time for men
Tour
Joy Fulmer is a volunteer with the Ronald McDonald House.
• Need a low cost stone for unimproved roadways or driveways?? • Need to fill a low-lying area??
Limited time offer. Entire Stock Is Included
Joy
Beth Wilson is the PR manager for inferno.
Low Cost Aggregate
Sale! Simplify
ize each student’s progress throughout their time at the school. The artwork was created by Lizzie Gray, Jordan Johnson, Collins Kellum, Keith Nelson, Haley Newman, Martin Wade and Joseph Wright. Memphis Oral School for the Deaf has been located in Germantown for more than 50 years. The school works to empower deaf children all over the Mid-South to listen, learn and talk. Instead of sign language, the school uses speech and language therapies and audiological services in conjunction with preschool classes to help profoundly deaf and hardof-hearing children.
Who knew that a post on Facebook would actually be answered? In July, I posted a request on the Germantown Bulletin Board Facebook page for much needed food and supplies for the Ronald McDonald House Charities of Memphis. Only one reply was received. Abigail Simone, who is a part of the Honors Academy at the Houston High School decided to kick of the new school year by collecting donations for a local charity. On Aug. 11, I got back in touch to see what I could do to help. Amazingly, Simone informed me that they had already completed the collection during the irst week of August, which was just before the new school year started. When my husband and I pulled up at the high school to pick up the donations, we weren’t prepared for the magnitude of items they collected.
There were 10 students from the Honors Academy to help load our car and truck. To our surprise, we actually ran out of room. Luckily one of the students and her father assisted us in delivering everything to the Ronald McDonald House. The Honors Academy consists of more than 400 students who helped make this possible. Their dedication and kindness in stepping up to help our community has been greatly appreciated. The Ronald McDonald House Charities of Memphis provides a “home away from home” at no charge to the St. Jude’s families and their children receiving treatment for cancer and other catastrophic illnesses. This enables the families to concentrate on the health of their children instead of the worries of paying hotel bills, food or cleaning.
Walk Easy
JV for men
OH ! MY $40-$75 off! Select Discontinued Styles & Colors
HURRY! LIMITED TIME
SAS MAKES THESE SIZES WOMEN 6-12 6-12 4-12 5-12 5-12 WIDTH SLIM NARROW MEDIUM WIDE WIDE-WIDE MEN 8-15 7-15 6-15 6-15 6-15
It's normal for your shoe size to CHANGE over time. Let us MEASURE your feet for the most comfort.
SHOES
5045 Park Ave, Memphis, TN 38117 (Across from Eastgate)
681-0074
Open Early Daily: Mon - Sat 9 till 5:30 • Sun 1-5
• Have a parking area or farm lot in need of a durable longwearing material?? Slag Aggregate offers a durable material that will hold up under heavy truck traffic and provide long service life; and at a very reasonable cost! Material Size Duraberm
Price FOB Nucor Mill $6.00 per Ton
(1 1/2” x 0 Slag) “Prices are for materials loaded on a truck at our facility.”
To purchase contact Memphis Mill Service Co. located inside the Nucor Steel Mill, 3601 Paul R. Lowry Rd., Memphis, MS 381 09. Please call the Plant Office to verify product availability and price! Plant Office - Cheree Williams 901-789-6578 Sales Manager - John Murphy 574-876-0466
10 » Tuesday, August 25, 2015 »
««
T H E W E E K LY
MG
Community COLLIERVILLE
Volunteer patrol program helps keep residents safe Special to The Weekly
When Collierville resident Bill Arnold tells you about one of the homebound citizens he regularly checks on, he will give you the person’s name and address all in one sentence. Arnold’s memory is impressive in a time when most people store such information on their phones instead of in their brains. But it makes sense that Arnold knows these facts — he uses the information daily as a member of Collierville’s Special Citizen Volunteer Patrol. The Special Citizen Volunteer Patrol program is for those who truly want to give back to their community. Both residents and police oicers beneit from the volunteers’ assistance to the Collierville Police Department in doing tasks that take officers away from actively protecting Collierville. The tasks SCVP volunteers do include processing reports, making vacation checks, and looking in on homebound citizens. “The Special Citizen Volunteers have been watching our shut-ins very carefully during this heat wave,” said Collierville police chief Larry Goodwin. An example of helping the community was when Arnold check up on Bessie Jones on a recent Saturday evening. Jones’ air conditioning went out on what was an extremely hot day. Arnold received word about her situation while he was out having dinner with his wife, and he immediately began looking for a fan to take to her house. When Ar-
THE RED CARPET EXPERIENCE Five Star Moving Service
Bill Arnold is a member of Collierville’s Special Citizen Volunteer Patrol program.
nold couldn’t access some stored fans, he made a trip to Walmart and purchased one and took it to Jones. She was able to be comfortable until a repairman could come the next day. Arnold said he enjoys building relationships with the people on his homebound route. He and his wife have taken all of their children and grandchildren that live in this area over to meet and visit with Jones, and his wife sometimes takes her to the doctor. As for his regular stops to her house, Arnold said he and Jones have a routine. “When Bessie comes to the door, the irst thing she does is ask me how my wife is, then how my daughter is, then how my son and grandchildren are,” Arnold said. “Finally, she asks ‘how is the cat?’ My wife and I disagree about how to manage the cat and Mrs. Bessie enjoys kidding me about it.”
The visit continues at the breakfast room table where Arnold and Jones discuss current events. Then Arnold reads a passage from the Bible and they discuss what he read. The visits can last from 15 minutes to an hour. The SCVP hears about homebound people from several sources, including the police, churches and the food pantry. Homebound people already on the SCVP list regularly refer the names of those they feel need help. Those on the list receive regular visits, food from the food pantry and emergency visits such as the one Arnold made to Jones. Arnold indicated that he enjoyed working with this particular group of people because they are removed from daily activities and are often forgotten. “Everyone who is a part of the SCVP has their own passion, and this is mine,” he said.
OFF
when you mention this ad
Call us or visit our website
901-316-6196 blacktiemoving.com
Specializing in Pre-Owned Mercedes Benz and other ine Imports Low Prices, High Quality Since 1985 • Phone: (901) 332-2130 Memphis, TN Sales * Service * Bodyshop * 2 Indoor Showrooms Excellent Finance Rates * Trade-Ins Welcome Large inventory – Most in Factory Warranty * We Service For Less C CLASS 10 in Stock 2014 C250 Sport, Lunar Blue, 6K mi, Sirius, Alloy Wheels....................................$24,630 2013 C250 Sport, Palladium Silver, 19K mi, Multimedia Pkg, Heated Seats, Harmon Kardon ...........$25,495 2013 C250 Sport, Polar White, 30K mi, Multimedia Pkg, Sirius............................$23,750 2013 C300 Luxury, Iridium Silver, 21K mi, Multimedia, Keyless Go, Heated Seats....................... $27,950 2013 C300 Sport, Palladium Silver, 22K mi, Heated Seats, Sirius........................$22,950 2012 C300 Luxury, Palladium Silver, 30K mi, Heated Seats, Bluetooth, Sirius ............................$22,950
DELIVERY NOW HAS NO LIMITS TRY US TODAY
E CLASS 9 in Stock 2014 E350 Luxury, Diamond White, 22K mi, Parktronic, Keyless Go, Nav, Backup ..................$38,575 2014 E350 Sport, Black, 9K mi, Lane Tracking Pkg, AMG Wheel Pkg, Nav, Backup ..............$42,875 2014 E350 Sport, Black, 7K mi, Lane Tracking Pkg, Nav, Backup, Keyless Go ................$41,500 2014 E350 Sport, Lunar Blue, 4K mi, Nav, Backup, Keyless Go, Heated Seats................$44,950 2013 E350 Luxury, Black, 37K mi, Lane Tracking Pkg, Sirius, Harman Kardon.................$29,750 2013 E350 Sport, Polar White, 14K mi, Nav., Back Up, Heated.............................$33,500
SPECIAL! PRICED TO SELL
$44,950
2014 MERCEDES-BENZ E350 SPORT Lunar Blue, 4K Mi, Nav, Backup, Keyless Go, Heated Seats!
S CLASS 3 in Stock 2015 S600, Black, 10K mi, MSRP $172,025, Super Loaded.................................$121,950 2012 S550, Palladium Silver, 47K mi, Parking Pkg, Keyless Go, Nav, Backup..................$43,675 2001 S430, Black, 160K mi, Nav, Heated Seats........................................................$5,995 SUV’s 15 in Stock 2015 GLA250, Cocoa Brown, 6K mi, Heated Seats, Blind Spot Assist, Sirius .................$29,950 2015 GLK350, Polar White, 11K mi, Multimedia Pkg, Keyless Go, Heated Seats ..................$38,950 2015 GLK350, Polar White, 11K mi, Multimedia Pkg, Pano Roof, Heated Seats.................$38,950 2014 GL350 BlueTEC 4Matic, Black, 203 mi, MSRP $75,865, Great MPG’s .....................$65,750 2014 GL450 4Matic, Steel Grey, 19K mi, Nav, Heated Seats ................................$55,680 2014 GL450, Iridium Silver, 12K mi, MSRP $79,665...............................................$64,750 Coupes 3 in Stock 2013 C250, Steel Grey, 18K mi, Multimedia Pkg, Nav, Backup, Pano ..................$25,950 2012 C250, Iridium Silver, 26K mi, Multimedia Pkg, Keyless Go, Harmon Kardon .............$23,780 2012 E350, Lunar Blue, 29K mi, Nav, Heated Seats, Pano ....................................$31,850
FOOD DELIVERED, FAST. DOZENS OF RESTAURANTS ONLY $4.95
FREE DELIVERYY with the code “CAppeal”
for a limited time only.
*$15 MINIMUM PURCHASE.
Delivery zip codes: es: 38018, 38016, 38017, 38117, 38119, 38120, 38125, 38138 and 38139
Monday-Saturday: 11 AM - 10 PM | Sunday: 11 AM - 9:30 PM
chefshuttle.com | 901-860-8722
Convertibles 3 in Stock 2013 SL550, Diamond White, 20K mi, Driver Assist Pkg, AMG Wheel Pkg, Keyless Go .................$69,850 2012 E350 Cabriolet, Arctic White, 42K mi, Nav, Backup, Heated Seats.....................$34,500 2008 CLK550, Capri Blue, 102K mi, Nav, Heated Seats, Sirius .............................$13,975 Additional Inventory 2014 Ford Fusion SE, Oxford White, 18K mi ..........................................................$19,450 2013 Jeep Wrangler Unlimited Sahara 4WD, Black, 29K mi.................................$32,850 2013 Lexus RX350 AWD, Black, 23K mi, Nav, Back Up, Rear Parking Aid............$36,850 2012 Honda CR-V EX, Basque Red Pearl, 65K mi ..................................................$16,950 2012 VW CC 2.0 T Luxury, Black, 24K mi ................................................................$19,475 2011 BMW 328i Convertible, Mineral White, 38K mi .............................................$30,850 2010 Dodge Ram 2500 Laramie, Austin Tan Pearl, 50K mi ....................................$36,950
Partial Listing Only. View our complete inventory at:
W W W. S M I T H I M P O RT S. C O M
Pricing cannot be combined with any other offer. Smith Imports is not responsible for typographical errors.
MG
««
T H E W E E K LY
« Tuesday, August 25, 2015 « 11
Schools SNAPSHOTS
The lawn at Our Lady of Perpetual Help was packed with students, their parents and school staf for the annual Back to School Bash.
Dogwood Elementary hosted its annual “Kindergarten Meet & Greet” recently. The event gives the littlest Dolphins the opportunity to meet and play with their new classmates before their irst full day of school. Houston High Honors Academy student volunteers also were on hand to help greet the new Dogwood kindergartners.
Noah Guin, Brent Elrod and Jack Martindale with the Collierville High mountain biking team prepare for their irst optional race of the cycling season.
Mattie Warne, Elizabeth Wilson, Sarah Hooten and Allie Papachristou enjoyed roving the grounds during the Back to School Bash at Our Lady of Perpetual Help in Germantown.
Collierville High’s Emma McVay, Bryant Funston, training coach, Jef Martindale, Michael Mannon, Adam Sansone and Noah Dawson gather for last minute coaching prior to the race.
Moya Dent, Monsignor J. Edwin Creary and Gary Lamb attended Our Lady of Perpetual Help’s second annual Back to School Bash, which was also attended by students and their parents.
Staf at Farmington Elementary celebrates as they received word that they were named a Reward School by the state. Farmington Elementary earned the distinction for overall student achievement levels. Reward Schools are the top 5 percent of schools in the state for performance.
To show their appreciation of their bus drivers, staf at Bailey Station Elementary hosted its annual “Bus Driver Appreciation Breakfast.”
The Collierville High mountain biking team competed in its irst optional race at Stanky Creek cycling event in Bartlett. Emma McVay took the podium for winning irst place in the Womens Junior Timed Trial race.
12 » Tuesday, August 25, 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
Stk# R604013
2015 DODGE RAM 1500
Selling Price
38,770
$
Lease $ Price
$11,000 OFF
489
MSRP $49,770
per Month for 84 Months*
*$4,000 Down Payment, 1.9% Interest Rate, $38,419 amount financed.
Stk# J840670
2015 JEEP GRAND CHEROKEE $3,800 OFF
Selling Price
42,000
$
MSRP $45,855
Stk# C653560
2015 CHRYSLER 200
Selling Price
25,500
$
Lease $ Price
$4,600 OFF
296
per Month for 36 Months*
*$4,000 Down Payment, .49% Interest Rate, $19,939 Amount Financed
Stk# D741942
2015 DODGE CHARGER
Selling Price
25,500
$
Lease $ Price
$5,000 OFF
307
MSRP $30,500
per Month for 84 Months*
*$4,000 Down Payment, 1.9% Interest Rate, $24,132 Amount Financed
Stk# J793469
2015 JEEP CHEROKEE
Lease Price
$1,900 OFF
$
286
per Month for 36 Months*
*$4,000 Down Payment, .14% Interest Rate, $28,851 Amount Financed.
Stk# J725999
2015 JEEP WRANGLER
Selling Price
UP TO $4,500 OFF
34,800
$
Lease $ Price
397
per Month for 36 Months*
*$4,000 Down Payment, .19% Interest Rate, $33,009 Amount Financed
Stk# D550380B
Stk# 1304
Stk# 1303
F-150
WRANGLER SPORT
2014 JEEP GRAND CHEROKEE
2014 HONDA
$6,995
$26,995
$31,995
2007 FORD 143,416 miles
Stk# 1294
2015 JEEP WRANGLER
2015 JEEP 21,956 miles
39,355 miles
Stk# 1273
2015 DODGE
Stk# J847555B
Stk# 1306
PILOT EX-L
2015 DODGE RAM 1500
2010 CHEVROLET
2015 CHEVROLET
$29,114
$45,920
20,746 miles
$25,900
288 miles
27,302 miles
503 miles
TACOMA
CHARGER SE
CHALLENGER RT
$18,573
$18,223
$23,689
CHALLENGER SXT
& COUNTRY TOURING L
$57,665
$24,602
$21,456
$45,920
Stk# 1298
16,022 miles
Stk# J710922A
TSX
ALTIMA 2.5 SL
$14,234
$25,200
$12,844
25,819 miles
77,482 miles
$19,899
Stk# R660459A
47 miles
2014 JEEP WRANGLER SPORT
2010 ACURA
MUSTANG
59,243 miles
Stk# 1247A
2013 FORD
Stk# 1293
$44,382
2014 TOYOTA
UNLIMITED
Stk# D719403A
38,993 miles
8,619 miles
2014 DODGE 37,569 miles
Stk# 1276A
2010 DODGE 51,840 miles
Stk# 1292
Stk# J778639A
Stk# C741941A
SONATA SE
2013 INFINITI G37 SEDAN
2008 MERCURY SABLE
$17,165
$22,000
$5,691
2012 NISSAN
2015 HYUNDAI
94,605 miles
22,537 miles
Stk# J741381A
Stk# 1280
SILVERADO
Stk# 1305
2015 DODGE RAM 1500
1,184 miles
CAMARO SS
Stk# 1285
Stk# C611146A
2013 CHRYSLER TOWN
Stk# J658036A
Stk# 1301
Stk# J748423B
47,221 miles
Stk# R724915A
160,949 miles
Stk# 1279
2013 TOYOTA TUNDRA PLATINUM CREWMAX
2012 VOLKSWAGEN PASSAT
2014 NISSAN SENTRA SR
2012 NISSAN ROGUE SV
2013 DODGE RAM 1500 LARAMIE LONGHORN
2014 DODGE CHARGER SE
$40,028
$17,165
$16,066
$15,698
$35,290
$18,205
35,349 miles
62,143 miles
15,647 miles
40,223 miles
62,647 miles
39,769 miles
Hours: Mon-Sat 8am-8pm • Closed Sunday 393 S Byhalia Rd. Collierville, TN 38017 www.colliervillechryslerdodgejeepram.com
Collierville Chrysler-Dodge-Jeep-Ram
Byhalia
901-854-JEEP
Winchester
385
MG
««
T H E W E E K LY
« Tuesday, August 25, 2015 « 13
A&E MID-SOUTH RENAISSANCE FAIRE
Knights on horseback shatter a lance tip during a jousting demonstration at the Mid-South Renaissance Faire on Saturday at Shelby Farms. The display was courtesy of from Paragon Jousting. PHOTOS BY JASON R. TERRELL/THE WEEKLY
A young patron pats the head of Shadow, one of the jousting horses brought by Paragon Jousting to the Mid-South Renaissance Faire at Shelby Farms.
Knights on horseback go at each other with wooden swords while trying to knock the crests of of each other’s helm at the Mid-South Renaissance Faire at Shelby Farms.
MID-SOUTH RENAISSANCE FAIRE
Alianna Queen of the Faerie and her brother, Karen, pose during a stroll through Sea Beggar’s Bay at the Mid-South Renaissance Faire.
9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday and Sunday.. Shelby Farms at Mullins Station Road and Pine Lake Drive West. Admission: $13, children 6-12 $8, 5 and under free. Visit midsouthrenfaire.com for tickets, schedule and more information.
Kids enjoy listening to the Dragon Storyteller at the Mid-South Renaissance Faire on Saturday morning. The Faire continues this weekend at Shelby Farms.
14 » Tuesday, August 25, 2015 »
T H E W E E K LY
««
MG
Calendar The
Weekly community events
Center, 3663 Appling Road. America’s romantic piano sensation, weaves a musical tapestry that captures the timeless beauty of classical standards with the lively energy of contemporary pop music. Visit bpacc.org or call 901-385-6440. 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.
Collierville
Arlington Every Monday at the Arlington Senior Citizen Center, 6265 Chester, there will be Gentlemen’s Cofee at 8:30 a.m. Men 50 and older are invited. E-mail eequi@ townofarlington.org or call 901-867-7698. Upcoming events: ■ Today: Music and Dancing with Glenn and Doug, noon. ■ Wednesday: Be an Informed Medicare Consumer and Get Ready for Medicare Part D Enrollment, 11:30 a.m. Vicki Thompson from the Aging Commission of the Mid-South will be here to provide information about Medicare and how to make sure you pick the plan that will work best for you. Snacks will be provided.
Bartlett The Bartlett Area Chamber of Commerce, 2969 Elmore Park Road, is Northeast Shelby County’s largest business membership organization. It is comprised of more than 600 members who represent a diverse array of industries and professions. For more information, visit bacc.org or call 901-372-9457. The BACC has several events coming up: ■ Wednesday: Chamber 101 — Mastering your Electronic Beneits, 9-10 a.m. at the chamber oice. Call 901-372-9457 for more information. Also at the chamber oice: Leadership Bartlett Steering Committee Meeting, 3 p.m. ■ Sept. 2: Staying Ahead of the Curve at Holiday Inn and Suites, 2751 New Brunswick Road, from 8:30-9:30 a.m. The speaker will be Tim Carroll, president and owner of Sterling Ledger Reliable Payroll and Personal Services. Topic: Proposed Department of Labor Rule May Make Millions More Eligible for Overtime Pay. Free for BACC members, $25 nonmembers. ■ Sept. 8: BACC Monthly Lunch, 11:30 a.m. Bridge@ Bartlett Ballroom, 6001 Bartlett Center Drive. The speaker will be Sen. Mark Norris. Topic: State of the State. Cost is $20 per person, RSVP required. E-mail jdupree@bartlettchamber.org or call 901-372-9457. The Bartlett Small Fry Tri will be 9 a.m. Saturday at Bartlett Recreation Center, 7700 Flaherty Place. An introductory triathlon where kids run, bike and swim (OK, just run through the sprinklers), to the inish line, and where everyone receives an award. Cost is $15. Register at racesonline.com/events/brcsmall-fry-tri. An Evening with Jim Brickman will be Saturday, from 8-10 p.m., at Bartlett Performing Arts and Conference
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 YMCA at Schilling Farms will host a Doggie Pool Pawty beneiting the Collierville Animal Shelter Sept. 12, from 2-4 p.m. Call Tish Lewis, 901-850-9622 for more information. CrossRoads United Methodist Church, 9315 E. Shelby Drive, has several ongoing activities and would like to invite the community to participate. E-mail crossoice@bellsouth.net for more information: ■ Mondays: Hispanic Church, 7 p.m. ■ Tuesdays: Line Dance Lessons, 5:30 p.m., $5 per person ■ Wednesdays: Pickleball, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. ■ Thursdays: Crocheting, group lessons, 9:30 a.m.; Sit and Be Fit Exercise Class, 11 a.m., $5 per person; Youth Activities, 6 p.m. ■ RAP Group (Retired People at Play), various activities and ield trips, irst Monday of the month.
Cordova Tom’s Classic Car Cruise is Tuesdays, from 5:30-8:30 p.m., through Sept. 29 at Countrywood Crossing Shopping Center, 2257-2393 Germantown Pkwy. Bring your classic car and enjoy the family atmosphere with “Oldies” music and more. No entry fee. Sponsored by Gail’s Line Promotions. Call 901-818-9774 or visit gailsline. com. The Memphis College Consortium presents the 2015 Career Expo Friday, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., at Bellevue Baptist Church, 2000 Appling Road. Featuring interview and resume writing classes. Free to attend. For more information, contact Michael Carroll at 901921-8210. HP’s ifth annual 3-on-3 Basketball Tournament will be 10 a.m. Saturday at Bellevue Baptist Church, 2000 Appling Road, in the Grace Family Life Center. The tournament is open to guys and girls; age groups, 14 and under; 15-17; 18 and up. A minimum of three players per team, maximum of four players. It will be
DYNAMIC PERFORMANCE CONGRATULATIONS TO
DANNY BURKE
FOR CLOSING IN EXCESS OF
double elimination brackets. Cost is $20 per player. Beneits Life Choices Memphis. Visit hp3on3tournament.com. L’Ecole Culinaire, 1245 N. Germantown, presents Playing With Fire Class Friday, from 6-9 p.m. By rapidly burning volatile alcohol, lambéing infuses a dish with additional lavor and moderates the harshness of raw spirits. Includes instruction, three course meal, and wine. Cost is $95. Visit lecole.edu or call 901-754-7115. Also coming up: ■ Saturday: Petit Fours Class, 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Petit fours can be a savory bite-sized appetizer served at cocktail hour. Learn to create an assortment of delectable pastries with plenty to take home and share. Cost is $55. Chuckles Comedy Club, 1770 Dexter Springs Loop, will host 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, visit chucklescomedyhouse.com or call 901-654-8594. The Mid-South Renaissance Faire at Shelby Farms Park, 500 N. Pine Lake, will run through Monday. Family-friendly gathering emulating the Renaissance period. Featuring jousting, roaming Queen & court, entertainment, vendors, games, demonstrations and more. Admission is $12.50. Times are Saturday and Sunday, from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Visit midsouthrenfaire. com, e-mail aundrea_lowery@hotmail.com or call 901-692-2372
Germantown The Farm Park Farmers’ Market is every Thursday, from 4-7:30 p.m. at Farm Park, 2660 Cross Country Drive. Features fresh locally grown fruits and vegetables. Enjoy live music, art by local artists, delicious and healthy foods from our food truck vendors, children’s activities, and cooking demonstrations in a beautiful and relaxing farm setting. Germantown Performing Arts Center, 1801 Exeter, presents Belinda Carlisle, at 7:30 p.m. Sept. 3. Known worldwide as the lead vocalist of the Go-Go’s-one of the most successful all female bands of all timeBelinda Carlisle transitioned from front person to pop star. She is one of the 80’s ultimate performers whose top selling singles are deinitive examples of the decade. Tickets are $29.50-49.50. Visit gpacweb. com or call 901-751-7500.
Lakeland The Delta Blues Winery, 6585 Stewart Road, continues its Re-Wine Concert Series Fridays, from 7-10 p.m., through October. 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, deltablueswinery.com or call 901-829-4685. E-mail information about upcoming community events to Matt Woo at woo@commercialappeal.com.
SPECTACULAR SERVICE! A TOP PRODUCER FOR THE MONTH OF JULY CLOSED IN EXCESS OF 2.4 MILLION DOLLARS
LISA HARRIS
$2.1 MILLION IN JULY 2015
277-2828 • 756-8900
Congratulations!
GERMANTOWN
O: 901.754.0800 D: 901.870.6362
Congratulations!
MG
Get on the Path to Healthy Eating... All Fresh Ingredients... No MSG
Asian Eatery Dine In Carry out
««
T H E W E E K LY
« Tuesday, August 25, 2015 « 15
MEMORIAL
PARK
Pre-Arranged Funerals.
COMPLETE PRE-ARRANGED FUNERALS
From Just $6495.00 INCLUDES: Chapel Visitation, Casket, Memorial Package, Hearse, Flower Van, Graveside Service.
STOP BY AND PICK UP A
FREE PLANNING GUIDE
2072 West Street Germantown, TN 38138 Phone 901-737-3988 Fax 901-737-3985 Mon-Thurs 11:00am-9:00pm; Friday 11:00am-10:00pm; Saturday 4:00pm-10:00pm; Sunday 11:00am-9:00pm OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK *Free Wireless Internet Access To Customers* www.Asianeatery.net
“Behind
the Stone Wall”
5668 Poplar Avenue,
Memphis, Tennessee 38119 www.MemorialParkOnline.com
CALL NOW (901) 410-2088 Planning ahead for the ones you love.
Tuesday - Thursday 9am - 2pm. Vault sold separately.
16 » Tuesday, August 25, 2015 »
T H E W E E K LY
««
MG
Prep Sports PReP football week 1 (5) CbHs 28, (6) wHite station 20
CbHs run game keeps spartans of the ield Brothers’ Lee leads with 4 TDs By John Varlas varlas@commercialappeal.com 901-529-2350
The Christian Brothers football team had the perfect game plan for slowing down Dillon Mitchell on Friday night. Just keep him of the ield. Austin Lee scored four touchdowns as the Brothers used their ground game to efectively chew time of the clock and keep Mitchell and the Spartans’ other playmakers largely quiet in a season-opening 28-20 victory at Tom Nix Stadium. It was the irst victory for new coach
Thomas McDaniel, who is in his irst season at CBHS after a successful run at Murfreesboro Oakland. “It was a great experience,” said McDaniel. “We made a lot of mistakes, but we did a lot of good things. We had some drives that I’m disappointed we didn’t inish.” The Spartans also had tackling troubles when it came to Lee. The senior opened the scoring on the irst drive of the game, capping an 80-yard march with a 5-yard run. White Station responded with a 1-yard touchdown run from John Lyons to tie it before Lee went to work. He brought back the ensuing kickof 52 yards to the Spartans’ 36, then went the distance on the
next play. He added scoring runs of 10 and 4 yards in the second quarter. “I was kind of mad that we didn’t score in the second half,” Lee said. “I like that they illed the box, but we stuck with our running game. I’m going to sleep well tonight.” With Lee and quarterback Keegan Voss doing much of the damage, the Brothers, ranked ifth in The Commercial Appeal’s Dandy Dozen, limited opportunities for White Station’s Mitchell, who has committed to Oregon. Still, the 6-2, 195-pounder nearly pulled his team through, catching a 20yard scoring pass from Burk Williams in the second quarter and adding
a 3-yard touchdown run in the fourth that made it 28-20. In between he had a 52-yard scoring run and a 51-yard reception called back due to penalties. “That was our game plan,” McDaniel said of his team’s keep-the-clock moving approach. “You’re not going to stop Dillon Mitchell. He’s a special player. And I thought our tackling could have been better and not just on him. But that’s going to happen when you have some young guys.” White Station travels Friday to play fourthranked DeSoto Central, which opened the year with a 38-7 victory over Jensen Beach (Florida). CBHS is of until Sept. 4 when it hosts Fairley High.
BY NIKKI BOERTMAN / THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL
CBHS running back Austin Lee is congratulated after scoring the first of his four touchdowns on Friday against White Station. The Purple Wave, ranked No. 5 in the Dandy Dozen, defeated No. 6 White Station 28-20 to give new head coach Tom McDaniel his first victory at CBHS.
(7) Ridgeway 25, Houston 0
Ridgeway’s Walker too much for Mustangs’ defense By Omer Yusuf Special to The Commercial Appeal
Ridgeway senior running back Lilotis Walker and the rest of the Roadrunners rolled to a 25-0 win against the Houston Mustangs at Houston High on Friday night in their opening game. “Our guys have been preparing all summer long against each other — it gets kind of boring sometimes,” said Ridgeway coach Duron Sutton. “It’s good to be able to come out and perform against another team and perform well.” The Roadrunners, ranked seventh in the
Dandy Dozen, had the second-best ofense in Shelby County last season but lost several key players from last year. However, Walker, who’s rushed for more than 1,000 yards each of the last two seasons in a backup role, rushed for two touchdowns, including a 48-yarder in the third quarter. “We have a big ofensive line and very capable backs,” Sutton said. “When they run the ball like that and do the things that they do, good things, like what happened tonight, will happen for us.” Houston’s new-look offense — which lost eight starters from last year,
Ridgeway running back Lilotis Walker rushed for two touchdowns Friday night in a 25-0 win over Houston, including a 48-yarder in the third quarter. BRAD VEST THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL
including star quarterback Jared Schmidt — unsurprisingly struggled to
move the ball. The Roadrunners’ defense limited the Mustangs to just 17
snaps in the irst half to Ridgeway’s 56. “You can’t ask your de-
fense to have that many snaps,” said Houston coach Will Hudgens. “We know it’s going to be a struggle on ofense losing eight guys last year. Even if we don’t score, we have to be able to hold the ball for at least a minute or two to give our guys a chance to rest. They’re (the defense) gonna be burned out by the third quarter, and it kind of showed tonight.” Ridgeway took advantage of the extra snaps as the Roadrunners raced to a 19-0 halftime lead. Senior quarterback Tyrique Sandusky’s 3-yard sneak with three seconds to go in the half put the game out of reach.
SPECTACULAR SERVICE! A TOP PRODUCER FOR THE MONTH OF JULY CLOSED IN EXCESS OF 4.9 MILLION
DOLLARS
JOYCE McKENZIE
Gastropub, Sports Bar, American Restaurant
Happy Hour Mon-Thurs
COLLIERVILLE
O: 901.854.5050 D: 901.335.8460
Congratulations!
$2.50 Michelob Ultra and Coors Light Drafts $1 off all Starters from 2pm-6pm 2140 West Poplar Ave Suite 101-102, Collierville, Tennessee
(901) 854-0509 www.theskyboxgrilltn.com
11 am - 11 pm Sunday - Thursday | 11am - 12pm Friday - Saturday
MG
««
T H E W E E K LY
« Tuesday, August 25, 2015 « 17
Prep Sports VOLLEYBALL
Harding takes second at Collierville Memorial By Pete Wickham Special to The Weekly
Over the weekend, the Harding Academy’s volleyball team got an idea of just how far it might be able to go. The Lady Lions also learned what they have to do once they get there. Riding a core of ive solid seniors, and two extremely talented underclassmen, Harding made it to the inals of the Collierville Memorial Classic Saturday with an emotional three-game comeback win over Briarcrest in the semiinals. Then the “Outta Gas” light hit and the Lions (9-2), dropped
a 25-18, 25-21 decision to Ravenwood, which has won this event two of the past three years. “We learned we’ve got good chemistry and kids who want to play for each other,” said Harding coach Alyssa Hall. “But now we need to learn how to close tournaments out, how to ind that extra energy when you get to that big moment. Lack of energy leads to mistakes and that showed.” The Lions showed not only chemistry but the star power of sophomore Lauren Deaton, who can set, dig or kill with equal ability, and junior Antoinette Lewis, a disruptive
force near a basketball or volleyball net. The pair came up big at the end of the semiinal with Briarcrest (9-1), reversing a pool-play loss. “We got really up to win that match” Deaton said. “You do that against teams you know, but we’ve got to learn how to keep going.” But it left the Lions vulnerable against perennial power Ravenwood. This Raptors squad, of to a 10-1 start, was without its one big, Western Kentucky commit Sophia Cerino. First-year coach Wendy Munzel has been preaching defense and energy. Led by tournament MVP
Emily Stadnick, the Raptors used that formula to get the upper hand on Harding, and quell a minirally late in the second game. Lewis had nine kills and ive blocks in the inals for the Lions, while Deaton managed just six kills after a big match against the Saints. “We learned we can play small, play defense and win,” Munzel said. The Saints, despite the 21-25, 25-18, 14-16 loss to Harding in the semiinals, showed that they are full of returning All-Metro talent, led by BOP Player of the Year nominee Callie Anderton and libero
Hannah Cox. “We made a couple of mistakes at the end there, but all in all it was a solid start for this group,” said Saints coach Carla Anderton, whose team inished third in last year’s Division 2-AA state tournament. Perhaps the biggest surprise of the group was Hutchison, a 16-19 squad a year ago which is of to a 9-1 start behind a solid core of returning All-Metro talent, including Katie Grace Cunningham. They reached the semifinals and had a 17-14 lead in the second game with Ravenwood before falling by a 25-21, 25-20 count. “We’re still young and
learning,” Sting coach Michael Ralph said, “but we thinking we can take a big step this year.” In the quarterfinal round, Ravenwood eliminated St. Benedict, 2520, 25-18, Harding swept Houston, 25-23, 25-21, Briarcrest routed Father Ryan 25-11, 25-18 and Hutchison handled Covenant Christian of Huntsville 27-25, 25-19. Collierville coach Kenny Gass said the tournament raised $5,000 which will be divided between scholarship funds in memory of CHS teacher Anelda Carter, football player Trey Erwin and the American Cancer Society.
VOLLEYBALL OUTLOOK
Growing number of talented players and teams in Mid-South Houston reached the AAA tournament in 2014, finishing fourth, and coach Becky Pendleton’s Mustangs look like the area’s best title hopeful from the public schools again this year. Four Mustangs have committed to play in college, middle blocker Krysta Medearis (Alabama State), libero Kylie Hayes (Tennessee State), middle blocker Rhonda White (Henderson State) and outside hitter McKenna Wharton (West Georgia). Add in talented veteran Kat Gries and you have potentially one of the best teams in Pendleton’s 14year Houston career. Bartlett also reached the AAA tournament last year, but longtime coach Sherrie Walker has the enviable task of trying to replace last year’s Pepsi Best of the
Kelsey Crunk is one of the key returning players for coach Tommy Danner’s Evangelical Christian School team. The Eagles were second in the state last season.
JANIE PEELER SPECIAL TO THE WEEKLY
Preps Player of the Year, Kenzie Fields. Junior Ariel Goforth and talented 6-0 freshman Karagan Cog-
gin will be keys. At Collierville, Kenny Gass also has a lot of new faces; Ansley Matthews and Ariana
Graves are the two returning starters, and they’ll get help from returnee Kate Sammons and newcomer Gabby Harris. Arlington coach Rebekah Sanders likes her team’s athleticism and potential; outside hitter Caragan Harville and middle blocker Hayley Smith lead the returnees. White Station’s hopes will ride on one of the area’s top players, outside hitter Abigail Duncan. The Spartans could get a push from DeKyra Dennis and Central, which has started well under irst-year coach Porsha Parks. Carla Anderton’s Briarcrest went 36-13 and inished third in the state in Division 2-AA last year and will be a strong contender again with just about everyone returning. Junior Callie Anderton has
committed to Murray State and was the only non-senior among the ive BOP inalists in 2014. Classmate Kendal Strand has committed to Samford and is the team’s go-to player. Alyiah Wells and Carsyn Starr combined for 216 blocks; Hannah Cox recorded 602 digs. The remaining teams in D2-AA West should also be strong. MTSU commitment Taylor Hasley, Constance Connelly and Emma Sorrells lead a veteran St. Agnes team, while Kate Grace Cunningham and Chayce Foster will be keys for Hutchison. St. Benedict lost a lot to graduation but has two excellent rebuilding blocks in Anna Graziosi and Bailey Cochran. St. George’s lost BOP finalist Roxanna Wood to graduation but returns pretty much everyone else
and should make a push for the D2-A championship. Among the talented returnees for coach Emmy McClain are Sope Adeleye, Sophia Quesada and Sarah Thompson, and there’s a very promising newcomer in Annika Thompson. Tommy Danner’s ECS team inished state runner-up in 2014 and will be tough once more thanks to the return of Olivia Allen and Kelsey Crunk. Harding has impressed early this year under Alyssa Hall; the Lions have a pair of big hitters on the outside in Lauren Deaton and Katie Short. St. Mary’s could surprise thanks in large part to the addition of talented out-of-state transfer Carmen Freeman to go along with returnee Allison James. John Varlas
18 » Tuesday, August 25, 2015 »
T H E W E E K LY
««
MG
Prep Sports COLLIERVILLE FOOTBALL SNAPSHOTS
SBA quarterback Jack Samsel avoids the Collierville rusher during Friday’s game at Collierville High. The Eagles won 17-10 and coach Scott Samsel won his 200th game.
SBA’s Cam Jones attempts to make a catch during Friday’s game at Collierville.
Justin Fowlkes leads the Dragons onto the field during last Friday’s game against St. Benedict. Collierville’s Matt Connors tucks the ball and runs downfield against St. Benedict.
PHOTOS BY RICHARD COTTON/SPECIAL TO THE WEEKLY
Collierville running back Ed Pomphrett looks for a hole during Friday’s game against St. Benedict. The Dragons host Center Hill this Friday at 7 p.m.
SEND US YOUR SPORTS SNAPSHOTS Coaches and parents, we want pictures of your star athletes. Share their achievements, game photos and more in The Weekly. Whether it’s bowling, youth soccer, varsity sports or a weekend triathlon, we’d love to pack these pages with hometown faces. 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, stellar stats and more.
tinnitus
tin·ni·tus (n.)
A sound in one ear or both ears, such as buzzing, ringing, or whistling, occurring without an external stimulus.
You don’t have to learn to live with it. We can help.
Call To Schedule Your Appointment Today
Casie Keaton, AuD, CCC-A Doctor of Audiology
165 N Main ST #102C Collierville, TN 38017 901.651.3649
««
MG
« Tuesday, August 25, 2015 « 19
w o n K .D.? E
MEETINGS & CONFERENCES. The planning is on us.
T H E W E E K LY
r Ask about ou UTIONARY L O V E R , W E N t! Priapus sho
Book Local & Experience Authentic Memphis. GREAT INCENTIVES
COME TO MEMPHIS MEN’S CLINIC, TODAY. PERFORM LIKE YOU ARE 20, TOMORROW!
START WITH US
Erectile Dysfunction
Love Memphis? Become a Memvocate! Tell us about your Memphis.
· ED treatment by licensed Memphis Physicians · Our prescription medications work when the pills & herbals fail · Works for just about every medical condition including diabetes, prostate problems, heart surgery, etc.
Premature Ejaculation
· You choose how long you last — 30 min, 1 hour or up to 90 min · Stay in control and satisfy your partner with confidence
SM
Our Physicians offer Personalized solutions to fit your needs · No surgery, pills or herbals · Private and discreet. Only $199
5050 Popular Avenue Suite 718
TRADE GOTHIC
Men’sClinic
901-443-0480
MEMPHIS
www.memphistravel.com/memvocate -meetings
www.memphismensclinic.com Private & Discreet Treatments for Men’s Sexual Health
VOTED
ChineseRestaurantby 2011, 2014 & 2015
JUMP START YOUR
MALE TESTOSTERONE REPLACEMENT THERAPY!
(901) 207-6702 We offer onsite testing so you don't have to wait to get started. Our qualiied staff will customize the right plan for you to maximize your results.
$10.00 OFF
Fish w/Sprout in Spicy Sauce
Orange Chicken
Peking Duck
Imitated by others but there’s only one
ROYAL PANDA for the best Chinese food in town!
Your custom plan Timber Creek Medical
Royal Panda Shrimp
TESTOSTERONE REPLACEMENT THERAPY!
SYMPTOMS OF LOW TESTOSTERONE • Decreased Libido (sex drive)
• Depression/Irritability
• Weight Gain & Lack of Energy/Fatigue
• Inability to Concentrate
• Reduced Muscle Mass & Strength
• Poor Sleep Habits
Low testosterone levels are common among men as they increase in age causing many physical and emotional symptoms. We can help you restore balance with hormone replacement therapy.
CALL US TODAY
NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY!
FREE CONSULTATION. 150 Timber Creek Dr., Suite #2 Cordova,TN 38018
Across from the Agricenter/Butcher Shop
www.timbercreekmedical.com
(901) 207-6702
Royal Panda Basket
Steamed Sea Bass
ROYAL PANDA RESTAURANT is the only Chinese restaurant in Shelby County to have received the Top 100 Chinese Restaurant award in the USA for 8 consecutive years (2007-2014).
ROYAL PANDA
3 1 2 0 V I LLAG E S H O P S D R In corner between Ta r g e t a n d S p r ou t s
GERMANTOWN
D I N E - I N O R C A R RY- O U T
901.756.9697
DELIVERY AFTER
4:30 PM
W W W. ROYA L PA N DA R ESTAU RA N T.CO M
DOWN 17 Gaping things genre informally 69 ____with Mac-grandkids, no harder at the table than on blessed ★★★★★ tothe a loved seem to ableroom to1 help oth«« 20 Relative of Ones holding 46one Mysterious 73 Pad thai 9 millan, 1950sso now ourbe living is paper. M G Dynamic at a distance. Contour Plus sighting ingredient hands? 9 ’60s British ers relax enjoy their nal gated o� fromand Lassie. She what we’re doing, we cannot hide from 21 Poe poem 48 *Challenge for 74 Coal locale 2 French act P.M. ★★★★ Send your queries to “My Answer,” c/o Billy Capricorn clared day. You forgot about one seems to like it, so when God. We think we can, of course; how 24 Like “Annabel a right-handed 77 Actress Diana 1 72 Plants above the 3 Comment Graham, Billy Graham Evangelistic Association, ra mes Sunday Crossword | As It Were she istimberline not playing (Dec. person, thoughoutside, — you forLee” among all 22-Jan. golfer nicknamed 1 often have you done something you knew before “Be that Positive 1 Billy Graham Parkway, Charlotte, N.C., 28201; he I75 putSkin her in the crate so she ★★★Poe poems Newsman David the “Blonde way!” 19) ★★49You wasn’t right, but you thought you could got about you. call 1-(877) 2-GRAHAM, or visit billygraham.org. 27 See 89-Down 50 Brings up Bombshell” 1 4 Stamping need Average et.” conditioners doesn’t roam the entire have a sense n Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) SUNDAY house. BREAK ★★ of ne e d★★★ could be Well,You my husband is one of So-so ing space or the major players the day, having a fit. He says Iof am Today’s Cryptoquip Premier Crossword | Ten-character Mix Bridge ★ solitude. You cruel to “cage anare animal.” I whether you at a baseWhat the stars Premier Cross word |Mean Ten-character Mix21) Cryptoquip Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. TODAY’S BIRTHDAY now sleep alone in my bedwill be more Difficult ball game or simply hanging ★★★★ You could be at theisend a problem Premier | Ten-character Mix Bridge This year average you willCrossword experience The solutionmore time for this King Features crossword 69 of minutes. room whilefriends. my husband relaxed than out with . rather than at the beginning. Still, proceed ★★★★★ diversity in your life. You also will asand Lassie use the rest of you have been in a while. with care. You might want to wait until Dynamic The average solution time for this King Features crossword is 69 minutes. Virgo (Aug. sume greater responsibility. Underthe My husband hasF22) R house. UW Q23-Sept. CU D R F Aquarius U N N T(Jan. N 20-Feb. RMRO ZPFUIGP R ★★★★ tomorrow14 before declaring that you haveSimon no 49 Poke ★★★★ Try to relax at home. 106 Go quickly Rudely terse CROSS 70 “Simple stand that you will need time (out) just for interest in my feelings Positive successfully bypassed the issue. on theseem mattertoand refuses 5149 Nomadic sort ★★★Babies seen 108 15Rudely New York 1you. SeeYou 19-Across met aSimon — ...” might not be aware how You have kept your 18) ★★★★★ You are playPokeof (out) 106 Go quickly 14 tersetribe 70 “Simple ACROSS em Average tofeelings considertoayourself compromise. full of energy. For54 Head demons moving wavily 16 Lummox 6highly Bird refuge 71 Prefix with others think of you. If you are for some ful andDear Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Harriette: For 51 Nomadic sort 108 15 New York tribe 1 See 19-Across met a — ...” ★★ Babies seen What do you think? tunately, you have a lot of licensed in prenatal 17 Device used in 0single, Girl, to Scots caching someone could enter your life ★★★★★ 16 You have a lot going you, and time, but despite your best 54 Head demons So-somoving wavily Lummox 6 Bird refuge 71for Prefix with the past five years, I Dear Harriette: For Can’t Stop Crying tolicensed market friends around you who Twister 4and Tree thicket Frozen ★ scans? you need17 to Device trust yourself how youwater, to e�orts, —they change the very nature of your in prenatal used in with73 10 Girl, to Scots caching will emerge the have been complainpast five years, I Difficult Y X D N X G D O C R M R E Y D X D J P products? 114 Shaw jazz 18Twister End-of-list 9life’s With 1-Across, Wilhelm want to make more of this Y U G G D U D R X E . what you have to o�er. Just bewater, au- to to market direction. this roscans?ofpresent 14 Tree thicket You will enter 73 Frozen from of the blue. Dearout Crying : According have been complaining about my husband 62 Article south of 115 Rear, as legs abbr. spring prank thentic, and everything will work out. 74 L followers products? 114 Shaw of jazz 18 End-of-list 19 With 1-Across, Wilhelm day, too. mance happily. If you are attached, to the Humane Society, Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) ing about my husband to everybody. He was the border victims 28abbr. Units of Beastly site? 62 Article each south of 116 115 Film Rear,director as legs spring 74 75 L followers the two ofprank you will rediscover Pisces (Feb. 19-March crating a dog is a perfectly ★★★★ A call comes with to everybody. Capricorn (Dec. He was so irritating to me in a border Film director increases victims 28 Units of 22-Jan. 19) 75 76 Beastly site? 0other Difficult resistance t’s Elegant tree andduty act as if 63 youItthe are newly-on a 116 Ephron appropriate way to train 20) ★★★★ You are full ★★★★★ might understand an invitation. Don’t negate so HARRIETTE irritating to me in a of It increases on a 117 Puts Ephron 20 dutymore 63 Elegant tree car birthday freight on You 1weds. JaiDifficult — Be even 29resistance “Oh yes,want Juan!”to 76 79 First Ford thousand di�erent ways. the animal not to destroy spontaneous, excitement. You might not someone else’s perspective more clearly. HARRIETTE what your inner voice is tell- thousand di�erent ways. birthday 117 Very Puts freight 21 — will see your 29 yes, Juan!” 79 80 First Ford car 64 Single-file 118 best on 2and NotJai inclined 30“Oh Russia’s Online ’zine the house. The crate COLEQ X R E D . Earlier this year, a friend you relationship Know that person’s words are likely be sure R W the Udog’s Z X“home.” I D if you D X Earlier CP Uthis Fwhich Jyear, D direction P X R NCOLE REY ing’ you, but say “yes” Single-file 118 performance Very best 22 Not topper inclined 30this Russia’s 80 81 Online ’zine to becomes 6564is Somewhat, 3benefit. Papal aJher friend Gromyko Increase ype SAGITTARIUS too strong of mine lost husband mean something di�erent from what of the you should head in, but give 65informally Somewhat, performance Papal Gromyko 81 82 Increase SENSE & SENSITI haveso, any in what is of mine lost her husband Even it isinterest not recom119 Met melody 4of23 Long hiketopper for you. 36people Go for hear. it Apropos of a Long personality majority of toCryptoquip cancer. She Clue: had been SENSE & SENSITIVITY yourself some time. informally to a 120 119 A Met melody hike 36 Apropos of mended that you leave the happening. Today’s N equals L part of 5 24 Crooner Crosby 67 Alternative 38Go “—forgoit bragh!” 82 86 Eds.’ piles 8-23
This is a sobering truth, because it re-
20 » Tuesday, August 2015who » Twe H Eare WE LY minds us that no25, matter orE K8-23-15
Amusement SUNDAY BREAK
Friend’s grief causes w Friend’s grief causes wife to rethink her marriag to rethink her marriage
to cancer. She had been
a big complainer about Alternative a 121 120 Action A part of Crooner Crosby 67Cert 38 go bragh!” 86 87 Eds.’ dogScorpio in the crate(Oct. too many or a TictoTac scene 6S.25 Tomb artifact, 39“— With, to Yves 18) Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. Seepiles 94-Down 23-Nov. a big complainer about your revelation. Te 22) or a Tic Tac 121 Action scene 26Virgo Tomb (Aug. artifact,23-Sept.Cert 39 the With,daylight to Yves hours 87 to Seethe 94-Down hours at a time, because all your revelation. Tell him him, too. I have watched, ★★★★ Use max. 70 Hamburger unit 122 Fight off e.g. 40 Act of liturgy 88 Lift in the back ote 21) ★★★★ You might be ★★★★ You might wish that someone had that you want to ha him, too. I have watched, Jacqueline Bigar is at 70 Hamburger unit 122 Fight offExpect some need exercise and e.g. 40 Act of liturgyto arise 88 from Lift inout the of back though, how has grief has that you want to have a changes the animals 71 More gutsy? Kinski 41 Battle 7a Failure to keep shout of a shoe greater for you than he123 or Nastassja coveting a special item that though, how grief www.jacquelinebigar.com. healthier, human interaction, and 71 More gutsy? 123 Nastassja Kinski 27 Failure appreciation to keep 41 Battle shout of a shoe healthier, happierhappier mar- m blue through your friends. You89often close changed her of view 7272“— is human” film developing 42ToTo a greater Quaint she does. This person verbalizes you don’t want the crate to changed her view himof him “— is human”his or her developing film 42without a greater 89to. Quaint riage, and that you out others intending riage, and that you hope By Frank Stewart 73 Estevez of the a villain’s 124 Camp sight extent 91 Task lists dissatisfaction more73often than not. You and their relationship. become a punishment. BySudoku Frank Stewart Estevez of the a villain’s 124 will Camp sight extent 91 Task lists and their relationship. he wants that, too. Sudoku Agency screen character? 125 46Key Keyabove above in the wash Tribune want to set stronger boundaries. If Tribune youContent areContent trying to preShe seems be filled he wants that, too. SugAgency screen character? 125 Cheeky Cheeky Pisces 46 D D 20) 92 92 RanRan in the wash (Feb. 19-March She seems to be to filled gest that get co 1 31 Summer zodiac 47are Literary intro 93 Baseballer gest that you getyou counselvent Lassie from leaving Letter#26 #26 Summer zodiac 7575Letter 47 Literary intro 93 Baseballer with remorse about ★★★★ You full of fun and liveliness. ngs, with remorse about his hisSudokuing Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) is asupport numberto help A sign in the or research 7777Gobble house sign DOWN 48stopped? Paleshade shade Randy Johnson’s hairAaround ing support to help guide sign inthe the research de- de- death and about how she Gobbledown down sign DOWN 48 Pale Randy Johnson’s Can you be Probably not. However, s,★★★★★ You say what you mean, but you death and about how she down theafurnipartment of major company: 2 32 OnOn anan adad —— basis 11 Lethal 49Sprightly Sprightly nickname, you both. partment of a major company: Newlycoined coined basis 7878Newly Lethal do direct49 placing puzzle based on a nickname, withwith wearing you both. this energy appropriately. Handle often cloak—the wordssynonyms with charm and a2 Shared views was unkind toeven him, even was unkind to him, ture through normal usfor “The problem, when solved, 3 33 “Sprechen dance “the” “The problem, when solved, synonymsfor for “Sprechen Shared views dance “the” Dobest your best to r your responsibilities. Do your to re9x9 grid with several given smile. Try to—be more forthright and direct, you are being unfair. though she admits that he though she admits that he be simple.” depression? Deutsch?” Speaking pro willwill be simple.” 50Consume Consume depression? With 87-Down, age, Speaking pro 50 94 94 With 87-Down, member happy tim member happy times that andDeutsch?” you will receive a more appropriate3 yet Of course, your husband tech-techwas also to her.to her.numbers. The object is to was unkind also unkind buddy(close (close 34 Decade count Most “card-reading” getget a strong 8383——buddy 4perhaps Decade count 4 Old Italian Italiancoin coin 5252“Looky Most “card-reading” “Lookyhere!” here!” a strong you have 8-23-15 is being uncomfortable response. youspent havetogether. spent tog Jacqueline Bigar is at www.jacquelinebigar.com. equally unreasonfriend) “I — care” ThisThis has got me tome think53 GIs’ desire niques are simple in principle. place numbers 1 to 9 in friend) 5 35 “I — care” 5 Mill refuse refuse has got to think53Ex-combat Ex-combat GIs’ desire niques are simple in principle. Whatthe did youdid enjoy able by banishing you to than What youdoenjoy Dad’s mate of the 6 52 Person forging Later gp. 96 Charge to attack Many involve no more 5 Some campaign 30 Wielder John McCain, 79 Strong sideless 109 Songstress ing: I don’t want to die 8484Dad’s mate 7ie37 Person forging Later gp. 96 Charge to attack the bedroom. Many involve no more than ing: I don’t want to die the empty squares so that Tell your ing when you first got ing when you first purchases hammer Mjölnir for one wagon Eydie Daily Bridge Club 85 Anxious duel weapons 7 Tenor Caruso 55 Possessed 97 Côte d’— counting. are within 85 Anxious duel weapons 7 Tenor Caruso 55 Possessed 97 Côte d’— mad mad at myathusband or at or at counting. are within my husband husband thatThey youThey are will6 a D.C. ballplayer 86 Volcanic 31 Lowerpeak chamber 53 org. with 83 *W.W. II “You’re ____ each row, each and married? Whatcolumn made you big film in FilesSports aa case faces 98110 Strong-force reach of any player, but forfor a7 big peak in 88 Files case Sun 5656Watch Watch faces 98 Strong-force reach of any player, but many myself. I really wouldwould like like married? What ma ing to rethink the issue if many It’sfilm worth 100 86 Volcanic 32 Some stadium the teams propagandist One, Mr. myself. I really smile? Talk to each other studio? N. Oregon against 57 “Nay” voters particle players miss them due to lazieach 3x3 box contains the By Frank Stewart smile? Talk to each studio? smackers N. Oregon against 5784“Nay” particle noise and Sky Suit tovoters ____ Grinch” the two of you canthem discuss players miss due to lazito have a happy marriage, to have a happy marriage, Tribune Content Agency Trailer-park Limerick’s rhyme 99 55 Gives 58 Betray byby 99111 AWOL pupil aboutnumber dating again. Act or aTrailer-park ora adog lack of focus. 8 Patisserie buy9090 34 Slimming In athe mail Directive Köln coinpupil 3 43 Limerick’s rhyme Gives a double double 5886 Betray itness with 99 AWOL about dating again same only once. ness or atrainer lack ofand focus. but I don’t have a clueaasclue as ds parkers, for as eyes pattern cluck of blabbing 100113 Greek island 9 Sunken, surgery, 59 Wing in some “Same here” but I don’t have Inpromise aIn pairs event, today’s East like newlyweds and ex-an both to abide by parkers, for pattern cluck of blabbing 100 Greek island a pairs event, today’s East like newlyweds rs to how to mend our old Rose, my member whose61 kind10 Low voices informally Household Stars,types at the short 94 club Cedar’s kin reproach 59 Andautomated not 101114 Vampy opened one club, and South to how to mend our oldplore your city and each the professional advice. short 94 Cedar’s kinthrough reproach 59 And not 101 Forum Vampy types d 44 11 It may be lined 35 River brand name messages opened one club, and South ness and courtesy are admirable, took on plore your city and wounds. What do you “— deal?” (“Are 95 Providing refuge 10 Diagnostic 60 Most arid 107 Elia offering overcalled one heart on his wounds. What do you other. Take it slow with a with mailboxes: Bristol with a lowercase 6088Most Holyarid Land 115 Letter-shaped 4 “—we deal?” (“Are 95 Providing refuge 10 Diagnostic 107 Elia offering overcalled one heart on his Unlucky Louie as a project. on?”) for people who procedure 61 Cooks, as some 109 Angling need suggest? other. Take it slow good four-card suit. No doubt Dear Anni e: My sister Abbr. 36people *Tom Seaver, first letter line as some 109 girder renewed commitment to weNun’s on?”) who procedure 61clams Cooks, Angling “He’s not for as bad show,” good No doubt suggest? 45 string ofrooms use bleach? 11 64 Et —Crib strip États— ofneed — Reclaiming Love, 12 Different e.g.as his results 89 With 27-Down, 110116 Sounds renewed commitm he been imagined thatsuit. North’s has infour-card long-term care 5 Nun’s string of had102 use Et —Google enjoy the precious time clams États- — insisted. — Reclaiming Love, he imagined that North’s in aRose museum, 39 bleach? At 3,000 Wallet firm figure: beads Granola bit feet 11 12 66 Wooed with a 66 Dilettantish 111110 Nilscolding for more than a year a and hand was short in as clubs Syracuse, New York enjoy the precious beads bit ni”46 with a 66 Dilettantish 111 Nil maybe above sea level, 12 Wooed alternative Abbr. 119 Put on board “How’s it Granola going?” I asked. that you have together. Lederer who was102 103 Adore, cutesily melody 68 Gold, to Juan 112 “Ah, so sad” hand was short in clubs and Syracuse, New York result of several strokes so might have heart support. 13 *Smidgen highest Kind switch 69 “Stop 120 Grieg’s that you have toget 6 Lederer who was cutesily melody 6891 Gold, toyour Juan 113112 “The cost overruns on my project areofinker, “Ah, home so“____ sad” better known as 103 104Adore, Hosp.the test 13 68 Contract 1950 Asimov O’Hara so might have heartWest support. Answer: Be grateand a broken hip. Sure enough, when 14 Cooker with a provincial 69 habits They hover over nonsense!” Death” mounting,” Rose sighed. “His bad as 104 Hosp. test 13 Contract inker, 69 1950 Asimov 113 O’Hara home Ann known Landers 105 Exist e.g. classic 114 Swiss river I recently ran into her Sure enough, when West a better dial capital in Italy some icons 93 Funny-car fuel, 121 Violins and jumped to three clubs (pre- ful thatAnswer: grate- Send questions to your eyesBe have are hard to break.” Ann15Landers Exist e.g.In the know classic 114 violas: SwissAbbr. river brother-in-law. asked Having no 105 43 ____ cake (dim 70 informally jumpedNorth toHe three clubs emptive), cue-bid but(prefast. He was today’s head Louie plays toosum staple) 71 Release to 16 Luxury 45 spades, *Dr. Seuss’declarer took the public, East,Hyundai and at four 17 Gaping things the ace of hearts genre and led a diamond.informally 20 Relative of the 46 Mysterious 73 Pad thai LouiePlus signaled with the seven, and Rose, Contour sighting ingredient West, queen win. won the 21 Poe poem let South’s 48 *Challenge for She74 Coal locale 24 Like “Annabel a right-handed Actress Diana next diamond, took the queen of77hearts Lee” —among Louieallthrew a golfer diamond — and lednicknamed the Poe poems 49 Newsman David the “Blonde jack. 27 See 89-Down 50 Brings up Bombshell”
at
ed
ip
CLUB RETURN Declarer ru�ed low in dummy (not best; he must discard a club), and Louie promptly overru�ed with his eight. South won the club return, drew trumps with the A-Q and discarded clubs on the good diamonds. Making four. Rose patiently explained that Louie
95 Danish king who conquered England 97 Boondocks 99 Catch in the North Atlantic 103 Tough going 106 Al Jolson standard 108 “Aw, c’mon”
123 U.S.’s largest labor union, in brief 125 Oscarnominated Joaquin Phoenix film 126 “The Two Towers” denizen
must pitch hisChess last diamond on the third Quiz heart. If South then takes the A-Q of trumps and leads a high diamond, Louie ru�s, and South loses two clubs.
F U N N T N R M R O Z P F U I G P Questions R and comments: Email Stewart at frs1016@centurylink.net
Sudoku
day’s Cryptoquip Clue: N equals L
solution to rd puzzle in y’s editions.
BLACK GAINS A ROOK Hint: Create a queen fork.
Solution: 1. ... Rxf6! 2. Rxf6 Qd4ch! (picks up the rook).
MREY DX DJP YUG GDUDRXE. KEND ZLE TIONS CPUFJ DJP XRNREY QXRED.
8-23-15
8-23-15 The New York Times Sunday Crossword | As It Were
YPTOQUIP: I AM PRACTICALLY LIVID By Don Gagliardo and Zhouqin OT LOST DRIVING TO THE Sunday GAS STATION. Burnikel / Times The New York Crossword | As It Were Edited By Will Shortz Puzzle solutions O REACH THE OILING POINT.
By Don Gagliardo and Zhouqin ACROSS Burnikel76/ Ungainly PREMIER 78 Identified 1 Engaged CROSSWORD Edited 80Shortz Drink with 10 Jacques whoBy Will
SUDOKU Sudoku is a number-placing puzzle based on a 9x9 grid with several given numbers. The object is to place the numbers 1 to 9 in the empty squares so that each row, each column and each 3x3 box contains the same number only once. The difficulty level of the Conceptis Sudoku increases from Monday to Sunday.
Answer to yesterday’s puzzle
ful to that eyes haveaskharriette@harriettecole.com Send questions to opened theyour possibility me how shewhen wasNorth doing. emptive), cue-bid subsided SouthHe signed but opened to the possibility askharriette@harriettec or c/o Universal Uclick, 1130 Walof change! Go home and said he didn’t know where o� at game. subsided when South signed nut St., Kansas City, MO 64106. or c/o Universal Uclick, 1 sheWest was staying. of change! Go home and tell your husband about the deuce of clubs: o� atled game. Please, people, don’t fornut St., Kansas City, MO tell your husband about His pair’s agreement was to West led the deuce of clubs: get about your loved ones. leadHis third-best orAnd fifth-best. pair’s agreement Don’t give excuses. if was toHoroscope Difficulty level ★★★★★ South wanted overtricks. He lead third-best or fifth-best. you decide to visit, refrain discarded aabout diamond from He Horoscope from carping your South wanted overtricks. Answer to yesterday's dummy, took thefrom By Jacqueline Bigarpuzzle lot indiscarded life. and East a diamond SOLUTIONS: SeeFeatures BELOW for solutions to these puzzles Sudoku is a—led numberacedummy, of clubs and the queen King Syndicate This year you express yourHer Sister and East took the By Jacqueline Bigar placingwon puzzle of spades, bybased dummy’s self in aThis way that can’t ace of clubs and led the queen King Features Syndicate yearothers you expre on aSister 9x9 grid king. Dear : A lotwith of sevAries (March 21-April 19) resist. You will be unusually of spades, won by dummy’s eral given numbers. The in a way that othe How do you think people are reluctant todeclarer For the kids ★★★★ You could be full of lucky inself your choices. You are king. object isor tofriends place the Aries (March 21-April 19) resist. visit relatives in attacked the trumps? You will be un energy, ready to take o� for to dream the impossible numbers to 9 feel in the How do1They you think declarer ★★★★ You could be fulllikely nursing home. South knew from the openof lucky in your choices. version of an escape. dream. If you are squares so that single, be attacked the trumps? awkward avoid going. ingempty lead and that East had three your energy, ready to takea o� for likely to dream the im each row, each column You might want to invite ready to say “no” a lot until So hereSouth areknew some suggesknew from the openclubs. He each defender version an escape. and each 3x3 box condream. youRight. are si tions: Bring photographs childyour or a loved oneof along. you meet Mr. orIfMs. If ing lead that East had three hadtains four spades, else someone the same number You might want to invite a of people they know, play ready to say “no” a Taurus (April 20-May clubs. He knew each defender you are attached, the two of would have bid the suit. So only once. The music they grew updifficulty with, child orYour a loved one along. youyour meetlife Mr. Ms. 20) ★★★★ imaginaEast’s pattern had to be 4-3-3had four spades, else someone you enjoy farormore level of the Conceptis read from a favorite book, have Taurus (April 20-May 3. With 4-2-4-3, he would are attached, th tion takes you beyond the would have bid the suit. So than in you the past. SAGITTARISudoku increases from ask whether you can take opened one diamond. 20) ★★★★ Your imaginaEast’s pattern had to be 4-3-3obvious and prepares you Monday to Sunday. you enjoy your life f US can create a lot of tension them for a walk. Once you Trick Three, South lethave 3. With 4-2-4-3, he would tion through takes you beyond the to follow on an ad- in your than life. in the past. SAG see At how simple it is, you dummy’s jack ofdiamond. hearts opened one will be more inclined to goride. venture. obvious and prepares you US can create a lot of He drew trumps, cashedSouth the let again. At Trick Three, not sure you can afon an you’re ad- in Gemini (Maythrough 21-June 20) your life. kingdummy’s of clubs, ru�ed took ride. to follow jack aofclub, hearts ford. Take a step back and ★★★★ You will listen careventure. theHe ace of spades and ru�ed a the Please email yourtrumps, questions to drew cashed shopping. you’re not sure you fully while someone Chris South Herrington, spade. next led529-6510, the jack herrington Gemini (Mayshares 21-June do 20)comparison anniesmailbox@creators.com, king of clubs, ru�ed a club, took Sagittarius (Nov. his or her ideas, but later ford. Take a step22ba of clubs: queen, ru�. He came @commercialappeal.com, or Mark Richens, 529-2373, or write to: Annie’s Mailbox, ★★★★ You will listen carethe ace aceSyndicate, of and ru�edwill a ask for a compromise. Dec. 21) ★★★★★ You feel to the of spades diamonds c/o Creators 737 and do comparison shop richens@commercialappeal.com. fully while someone shares spade. Southlast next led the jack 3rd Street, Hermosa Beach, impulsive. Some of you are threw dummy’s diamond The other seebut no later Sagittarius (No his orparty her will ideas, of clubs: CA on90254. the ten of queen, clubs. ru�. He came likely to pick reason for negotiation. Dec. 21) ★★★★★ Y to the ace diamonds will ask for a compromise. Making six, of plus 480. For and Cancer What the up the phone (Juneparty 21-July 22)see no impulsive. Some of threw dummy’s lastit diamond The other will aChess thoughtful declarer, was stars mean: and reach out Quiz ★★★ For some reason, you on the at tenthe oftable clubs.than on likely no harder reason for negotiation. ★★★★★ to a loved one seem to be able to help othpaper.Making six, plus 480. For Whatat the up the Dynamic Cancer (June 21-July 22) a distance. ers relax and enjoy their
Today’s birthday
Today’s birthday
CONTACT US
a thoughtful declarer, it was stars mean: and re For some reason, Capricorn day. ★★★ You forgot about one you★★★★ no harder at the table than on ★★★★★ to a lo Positive seem to be able to help oth(Dec. 22-Jan. person, though — you forpaper. Dynamic a di ers relax 19) ★★atYou got about you. and enjoy their★★★ ★★★★ Ca Average have a sense day. You23-Aug. forgot about Leo (July 22) one Positive ★★ (Dec. of ne e dperson, though — you for★★★ You could be one of So-so ★★★ ing space 19)or★ got about you. the major players of the day, solitude. You have whetherLeo you (July are at 23-Aug. a base- 22) ★ Average will be more ★★ Difficult of ball game or simply hanging ★★★ You could be one of relaxeding than So-so sp out with friends. . the major players of the day, WHITE HAS A CRUSHER you have been in a while. ★ solitu Virgo (Aug. you 23-Sept. 22)a baseHint: Checkmate is lurking. whether are at (Jan. 20-Feb. will b ★★★★ Try to relax at home. Difficult ball game or simply hangingAquarius 18) ★★★★★ You are relaxe playYou seem to have kept your out with friends. . fullhave of energy. Forfeelings to yourself for some ful andyou been in aw Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. tunately, 22) you have a lot of time, but despite your best Aquarius (Jan. ★★★★ Try to relax at home. around you who e�orts, they will emerge friends18) ★★★★★ You a CONTACT US seem to have kept your want to make more of this fromYou out of the blue. ful and full of ener Chris Herrington, feelings to yourself for some day, too. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) tunately, have 529-6510, herrington time, but comes despitewith your bestPisces (Feb. you 19-March ★★★★ A call @commercialappeal.com, friends around yo e�orts, they will emerge an invitation. Don’t negate 20) ★★★★ You are full of or Mark Richens, want You to make more from out of the blue. excitement. might not what your inner voice is tell529-2373, richens@ day, too. direction which (Sept. 22) sure ing you,Libra but say “yes” 23-Oct. if you be commercialappeal.com Pisces (Feb. 19 you should head in, but give A call comes have ★★★★ any interest in what is with 20) ★★★★ yourself some time.You are happening. an invitation. Don’t negate what your inner voice is tell- excitement. You mi Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. be sure which di 21) ★★★★ be if you ing you,You but might say “yes” Jacqueline Bigar is at you should head in, coveting special item that havea any interest in what is www.jacquelinebigar.com. yourself some time. happening. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. Sudoku 21) ★★★★ You might be Jacqueline Bigar is at coveting a special item that www.jacquelinebigar.c
spices was “alive and f 7wellFlamenco Move like a On the ____ and living in 768124 Ungainly CROSS (at large) Paris” call worm 7882 Identified ____ Hall, 14Engaged Island near the 8 Rome native 25 CopenhawithHarlem Jacques who shortest Mariana Trench 80 Drink 9Pueblo SetIndian aside gen native spices “alive and Globetrotter 18was 81 On the well and living in 12 Best____ man’s 8527Irving riteDella and (at large) protagonist 19Paris” Places light PeeforWee wear 82 ____ Hall, Island near the 8729Pit bull biter gatherings? 16 Stadium Principle shortest Trench 9030 Dirt pie Harlem 21Mariana Mario who section More Globetrotter Pueblo Indian ingredient played Enrico New York 8592 Irving confident ____ shake Caruso rite21 city New Throat’s York 9431 *Deep 22Places *Pricey wrap protagonist for light *Triple Crown e23gatherings? 22 Dreaded city 87 Pitidentity bull biter Rogen winner 909632 Dirt pie and Mario whowho 23 Royal Outdoes Green himself sired a ingredient Enrico n played furs 36 “— had 98 “Show me”it!” type Kentucky Derby 92 ____ shake Caruso Hunger winner 94100*Deep Throat’s *Pricey wrap 101identity Budgetary 25*Triple When repeated, Crown excess an aerobics 96 Rogen winner who CRYPTOQUIP 102 N., E.,and W. and S. class cry Green himself sired a 104 Thumbs-up vote 26 ____ bar 98105“Show me” type Derby I AM PRACTICALLY LIVID Lean-____ 28Kentucky New faces 107Hunger With under29winner Rejecting higher 100 BECAUSE I GOT LOST 101 Budgetary When repeated, statedness authority? aerobics 109excess “Two New 33an Dodger DRIVING TO THE GAS 102 N., E., W. and S. class cry Sciences” manager with 104 Thumbs-up vote ____ author twobar World STATION. I’M ABOUT TO 112Lean-____ Hedge clippings, 105 Series New facesrings grass cuttings, 34Rejecting Shout from the 107 With REACH THE OILING POINT. underhigher etc. crow’s-nest statedness authority? 115“Two IdealNew setting for 37Dodger Seminary subj. 109 a fan 38manager Giggle syllable Sciences” with Features of 40twoPrefix with state 117author World green clippings, rooms 41Series “____ seen 8-23-15 112 Hedge rings 118 “That’s the enough!” grass cuttings, Shout from the way the cookie 42crow’s-nest “Skedaddle!” 5 Some campaign 30 Wielder of the 52 John McCain, 79 Strong sideless 109 Songstress etc. crumbles” 44 Impressed with purchases hammer Mjölnir for one wagon Eydie 115 setting for subj. 122Ideal *Start a 47Seminary Village V.I.P. 6 D.C. ballplayer 31 Lower chamber 53 Sports org. with 83 *W.W. II 110Bigar “You’re ____ LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) and be willing to make the irst By Jacqueline a fan Giggle syllable construction 51 *Carpenter’s 7 It’s worth 100 32 Some stadium the teams Sun propagandist One, Mr. King Features Syndicate Prefix HHH Your eiciency is being move. project of toolwith withstate a cord 117 Features smackers noise and Sky 84 Suit to ____ Grinch” seen 8-23-15 124green Backrooms then ... or a 8 Patisserie buy 54“____ “Dogs” 34 Slimming 55 In the mail 86 Directive 111 Köln coin tested more than ever before. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22118 “That’s hint tothe the ends 56enough!” Single 9 ISunken, as eyes I’m sure surgery, While 59 I Wing in some 113 “Same here”19) You could be full of energy and Dec. 21) HHHH A financial By Judith Martin ARIES (March 21-April which disagree. am pleased he way theanswers cookie of the 510 Some campaign 30 informally 57“Skedaddle!” Black rock Wielder of the 6152Household John McCain, 79 Strong sideless114 Stars, 109 Songstress Low voices automated at the and Nicholas HHH haveEydie enjoyed playfulness, yet you will need to decision may have you feeling By didn’t crumbles” with Ivor Martin to the starred you 11understand.” 58Impressed White-tailed purchases hammer Mjölnir complain for name one or de- messages wagonYou might Forum It may be lined 35 no River through brand 122 *Start Village V.I.P. clues a raptor with ballplayer mailboxes: a lowercase Universal Uclick 88 83 Holy Land 115 Letter-shaped 6 should D.C. 31 Bristol Lower mand, chamber I would 53with Sports org.to with *W.W. II 110 “You’re re____ muster as much self-discipline out of sorts. You like taking risks, the excitement surrounding means you let them like tell 127construction Save up 60*Carpenter’s Dad-blasted Abbr. 36 Seaver, firstthe letter line propagandist girderOne, Mr. 7 It’s worth 32 *Tom Some stadium teams Sun cent events, but time has come as possible. Lightness and pro- but not to the point of setting you inrooms a100discussion him his instincts are cor128project Bone: Prefix engage 62toolFed. property 12 smackers Different e.g. 64 Crib strip 89 With 27-Down, 116 Sounds of with a cord noise and Sky 84 Suit to ____ Grinch” toDirective buckle down and up. ductivity will be a winning com- yourself back. If you try to be Dear I’m...in orof as being a polite 86 129Back Giovanni, agencyMiss Manners: in a museum, 39 3,000 rect feet as far 66 55 Google Wallet firm figure: scolding 124 then a why. “Dogs” 8 Patisserie buy 34 AtSlimming In the mail 111 catch Köln coin “Don Giovanni” 63 Black ____ maybe above sea level, alternative Abbr. 119 Put on board hint to the ends Single conservative, you probably will You have a lot to do,113 and“Same it needs not wealthy, but I’m quite Dear Miss Manners: My host goes.59Are they? 9 Sunken, as eyes surgery, Wing in some here” bination. 130ofRusso of “3065Black Halfrock a Beatles 13 Low *Smidgen the highest 68 61Kind of switch 91 “Stop your 120 Grieg’s “____ thegive answers 10 voicesmy 18-yearinformally Household 114sooner Stars, at the VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) like the outcome. Your intuitive toautomated be done ASAP. The you well of. Rather than mother took Gentle69Reader: Congrattitle 14 It Cooker with a They hover over nonsense!” Death” toDown” the starred White-tailed 11 may be lined 35 provincial River through brand name messages Forum Morales of “Laold sonwith 67raptor Like the telecast HHHH Tap into your ability to side comes forward. dive the happier youLetter-shaped will be. me gifts, several 131 members out to lunch atcapital a inulations to your son for his dial Italy some icons 93 88 Funny-car fuel, 121 Violins and clues mailboxes: Bristol with a lowercase Holyin, Land 115 Bamba” of the 1954 Rose Having no ____ cake (dim 70 In manners the know informally violas:20-May Abbr. get what you want. If you could TAURUS (April CAPRICORN (Dec. 22ofDad-blasted my family observe milenice15restaurant. She4336 does impeccable and 127 Save up Abbr. *Tom Seaver, first letter line girder 132 Very cold Bowl parade, head sum staple) 71 Release to 95 Danish king 123 U.S.’s largest Prefix this12 Fed.notably property Different rooms a 45 e.g.Seuss’ 64theCrib strip With 27-Down, Youlabor 116 Sounds wish upon a star, what would Jan. 19) HHHHH Take a deep 20) HHHHH haveunion, an endstones in my life128 byBone: donatonce year. wise decision not to speak 89 16about Luxury Hyundai *Dr. public, who conquered inof 129 Giovanni, in in a museum, 39 genre At 3,000 feetMiss Manners 66informally Google Wallet firmimagination. figure: DOWN 17 they Gaping things 69agency ____ Macbrief scolding less Dive into your you wish for? Try to manifest breath. You might feel as if you ing to____ charities of their After inished their up. assures England “Don Giovanni” Black maybe above sea level, 73 Padalternative Abbr. 119 Put on board 20 Relative of the 1 Ones holding 46 Mysterious thai 97 Boondocks 125 Oscarmillan, 1950sa realistic goal by deciding to are on top of the world right work and tap into your ingenuity choice in my name. meal, a centipede dropped you both that his instincts 130 Russo of “30Half’60s a Beatles 13 *Smidgen the highest 68 Kind of switch 91 “Stop your 120 Grieg’s Contour Plus sighting ingredient 99 Catch in the hands? nominated “____ British title 14 Cooker with a onto provincial They hover over Death” tononsense!” clear out what you can. Allow make it so. You will begin to see now. What you hope to accomIn howwere correct. 21 the Poe ceiling poem 48 my *Challenge for absolutely 74 69Coal locale North Atlantic Joaquin Phoenix 2 Down” French act from P.M.recent years, Morales of “Lason’s the telecast dial in Italy someDiana icons Funny-car fuel, 121and Violins and more of what you can accom24already Like “Annabel acapital right-handed 77 mother Actress 103 93 Tough going film 3 has Comment 72LikePlants above the 131 time for networking socialplish is not far from reality. You ever, one couple beempty plate. If your is going Bamba” of the 1954 Rose 15 Having no all 43 golfer ____ cake (dim 70nicknamed In the know informally violas: Abbr. Difficulty level ★★★★★ Lee” among 106 Al Jolson 126 “The Two before “Be that timberline izing, as they will be stimulated can do no wrong! The planets gun donating to charities The restaurant apoloto split hairs, as it were, 132 Very cold parade, head sum staple) 71theRelease 95 Danish king 123 U.S.’s largest plish in the long run as a result. Poe poems 49 Newsman David “Blondeto standard Towers” way!” 75Bowl Skin LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) Answer bywho your creative abilities. are rooting you on. puzzle that are anti-gay,4and they needgized ofered and attempt to 27 and See 89-Down 50 Brings up Bombshell” 108 “Aw, c’mon” denizen 16 Luxury Hyundaitwo notably 45free *Dr. Seuss’ Stamping thebring public, ownconquered labor union, in to yesterday's conditioners Solution: 1. Rxd8! If ... Qxd8 2. Qxh6 mate! [Lanad-Belezky ’15]. THIS FEATURE IS NOT AVAILABLE
MISS MANNERS
Sudoku
Horoscopes
Contribution brings no pleasure to honoree
17 Gaping things genre ership into this informally ____ MacEngland brief 20) HHH You have demands GEMINI (May 21-June AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. know I am gay.DOWN Am I un- desserts. The restaurant equation, Sudoku is amany number20 Relative of the 1 Ones holding 46 Mysterious 73 Pad thai 97 HHHH Boondocks 125 be Oscarmillan, 1950splacing puzzle based on you that you haven’t let othSomeone will knock18) HHHH You have pushed der any obligation to thank then ofered two free fushe might have taken note Contour Plus sighting ingredient 99 Catch in the hands? nominated ’60s British a 9x9 grid When with severson know about. you are yourself as hard as you can. on your door to have a longthem? ture21desserts. thatforthe coupons were a ing Today’s Cryptoquip Chess Quiz Poe poem She eats 48 at *Challenge 74 Coal locale North Atlantic Joaquin Phoenix 2 French act P.M. eral given emotionally, numbers. Theit is Like “Annabel a right-handed Actress Dianathat 103overdue Tough going Plants above Reader: the 3 Comment conversation.film Even if unavailable Investigate what’s happening Gentle Miss this24 restaurant fairly often. result of a77 centipede Difficulty level ★★★★★ object is to place the among all home, golfer descended upon nicknamed Al Jolson 126 make “The Two timberline because of 9concerns person does not the often Manners would before go “Be to thatWhen Lee” they came your son’s 106this numbers 1 to in the in- with a loved one with care. Avoid Poe poems 49 Newsman David the “Blonde standard Towers” way!” Skin thissquares area of your life. You making of you volving judgments. Facts needp greater lengths than youneedhe talked the two plate, not hers. Possession irst empty so that See about 50 of up “Aw,move, c’mon”know the two denizen Stamping Answer to yesterday's Rconditioners Usomeone W Q4 C U FputD R them F U27Ngoing N89-Down Tto the N RrestauM RBrings Ois, Z P Fall,Unine-tenths IBombshell” G P R of 108will berow, inspired revitalize a validation. More is happening need to clear this matter up might to stop from after each eachtois column Sudoku a numbereach 3x3 box con-based than originally thought. dietand or exercise habit. soon. ting her name on a charity rant again to take advan- the law. placing puzzle tains the same number SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. CANCER (June 21-July 22) that she condemns. Rather tage of their coupons. My So your son’s polite reon a 9x9 difficulty grid with sev- PISCES (Feb. 19-March Today’s Cryptoquip Chess Quiz once. The HHHHH Reachnumbers. out to oth-The20) HHHH Focus on what you than thanking them or not, mother said that as she had quest to share the coupons HHHH You will need to defer to 21)only eral given level of the Conceptis instead of waiting for them object is tofrom place the want. Don’t settle for anything you might attempt to stop paid, both coupons were was not only warranted, it someone else, even if you think ersSudoku increases numbers 1 to 9 play in the less. Honor fast changes. You out toto you. You can you have a better idea. Under- to reach the hers. Y Xtransaction D N X GinDadvance OCRM R EHe Y said D Xthank D J PyouY Uwas G also G Djust. U DInRtheX interE. Monday Sunday. empty so that might not want the same things gamesquares like no other by saying, “I appreciate for the lunch and dropped est of keeping the peace, stand that this person needs to the waiting UW QCUFDRFUNNT NRMRO ZPFUIGP R row,question each column the real is: you once did. Listen to your gut. you thinking of me, but I the subject, but still feels however, it would be best see what happens and realize sign, buteach each really 3x3 box con- Anything is possible, as long as behavior serve would prefer not to be as- that my mother was a little to keep this between our- how successful his or her own Does thisand tains the same number BLACK GAINS A ROOK CONTACT US you? Listen to news sociated with a cause with discourteous. selves — and the centipede. ideas are. only once. Theopenly, difficultyyou push toward that goal. Hint: Create a queen fork.
MG
««
T H E W E E K LY
« Tuesday, August 25, 2015 « 21
Home & Garden
‘More beauty, fewer plants, less work!’ Kerry Ann Mendez not only lives by that motto, she wrote the book on it A book that guides us in selecting the right plant for the right place is invaluable. Many of us have well-thumbed copies of “The Southern Gardener’s Book of Lists: The Best Plants for All Your Needs, Wants, and Whims” by Lois Trigg Chaplin. Now a new book, “The Right-Size Flower Garden,” is providing lots of lists, photos and descriptions of plants for those who want to achieve a great-looking garden with far less maintenance. Because it’s written by New Englander Kerry Ann Mendez, you’ll f ind lots of references to plants that can endure extremely cold winters. But Kerry Ann most of the Mendez featured plants also thrive in a broad range of climates, including ours. (I shivered to discover that many Northern gardeners engage in a fall ritual of “dressing” their marginally hardy shrubs with bulky and expensive covers. I can barely manage to throw a sheet over a camellia bush when a hard frost threatens its flower buds.) Mendez decided to ditch those covers forever, reduce the size of her beds, swap many of her perennials for fewer flowering shrubs and make other changes to lessen her workload without depriving herself of a visu-
CHRISTINE ARPE GANG GREEN THUMB
ally pleasing garden. Make no mistake: It requires work and a financial investment to achieve that gardening nirvana. But Mendez says the result will reduce your energy expenditures by 50 percent to 75 percent afterward. A plant collector at heart, Mendez has adopted a new motto: “More beauty, fewer plants, less work!’ Sounds good to me! Like with so many projects we undertake to simplify our lives, Step 1 is an inventory of what you now have and a list of what has to go. This can be emotional when it comes to plants. “Remember and repeat after me: Plants are not my children or my pets,” writes Mendez, an awardwinning author and popular lecturer. Some of her right-sizing decisions involved replacing a small pond and water garden with water bubbling from a rock “fountain.” She still gets the soothing sounds of moving water. Her redesign included removing some of the flower beds in her extensive garden and replacing them with sod. Some would argue a lawn is not a low-maintenance solutions, but it sure is easier to hire someone to cut
PHOTOS BY KERRY ANN MENDEZ
A redesigned shade bed lets hosta, astilbes, bleeding hearts and some ground covers carry it throughout the seasons.
the grass than someone who can weed and trim a flower bed. Other beds, including those next to the exterior walls of her house, were reduced to a more manageable size. Short-lived plants including biennials that bloom one year and die the next had to go, even though it meant saying farewell to foxgloves. Her hit list includes the fleeting pleasures of irises, tender plants that must spend the winter indoors, suckering shrubs that wander too far, diseaseprone plants and any others that don’t perform well enough and long enough to earn their space in a small garden.
Here are some of the design ideas she shares: ■ Replace mixed perennial beds with flowering shrubs such as ninebark, gold- and blue-leafed spireas, fothergilla, weigela, blue mist shrub and azaleas. ■ Depend on foliage for long-lasting colors, shapes and textures. She estimates two out of three plants in her garden have captivating leaves that persist long after flowers are gone. ■ Use inanimate objects as focal points, such as urns, birdbaths or metal sculptures. ■ Use fewer varieties but more of each variety you choose. Not only will your garden appear more
unified, but the constant need to provide specialized maintenance to individual plants scattered here and there also will be reduced or eliminated. ■ Select supersize perennials that masquerade as shrubs, such as hostas like Sum and Substance and Empress Wu; ligularia, hardy hibiscus, goats beard and big rudbeckias like Herbstonne and Henry Eilers. ■ You can make a small garden appear larger by placing plants with delicate airy leaves behind large-leafed varieties, or by placing plants with dark- colored flowers and/ or foliages behind those with hot colors like red, yellow and orange.
Useful lists with photos include long-lived perennials, perennials that do not need dividing, perennials that bloom for eight weeks or longer, perennials that do not require deadheading, long-lived bulbs, shrubs with threeseason interest, shrubs that rarely need pruning, fragrant flowering shrubs, ornamental trees, tidy evergreens and great plants for containers, including shrubs. You can find more tips at Mendez’s Perennially Yours website, pyours.com and on her Facebook page. The book, which is published by St. Lynn’s Press, is available at amazon.com or by special order at local bookstores.
IRON CHEF
ìþ ª[@ a
# .8
sushi & steakhouse
ªÓÓªü ª[@ a
, 1. #1 ! #.1 n×á ª@¥ .@án×a
, 1 # n×á ª[@ n¥enÓa
..; #;
ª¥á@[á ..; #; ª| , 1. #1 ! #.1 |ªÓ á n @Qת ìán Qn×á Ó@án× ª¥ þªìÓ
ª¥ûn¥á ª¥@ b b ªÓ 8 ª@¥ |ªÓ @ ,ìÓ[ @×n ªÓ .n}¥@¥[nÁ
Íãé ; ./ # ! ! !
# .8 Î ..; #;
! / © Ą s²
9ªÓ a ¦Ą² s Ûãsã
n a ¦Ą² ã ² ãéĄ @ a QªþeOeªü¥ ª nQ@¥ Á[ª 9nQ× ána QªþeO»@áÓ ªáán¥¥n××nnÁ[ª
NOW SERVING ALCOHOL
15
% LUNCH ONLY
OFF
Buy One Get One
Dine-in or Carry Out
IRON CHEF
50% OFF
French Fries/ Chicken Nuggets
IRON CHEF
IRON CHEF
With Coupon. Not valid with any other offer. Offer Expires 8/31/2015.
With Coupon. Not valid with any other offer. Offer Expires 8/31/2015.
sushi & steakhouse
sushi & steakhouse
With Coupon. Not valid with any other offer. Offer Expires 8/31/2015.
$
Buy 2 Entrees Get FREE
2 OFF 4 OFF $
Any Purchase of $15 Any Purchase of $30
IRON CHEF
IRON CHEF
With Coupon. Not valid with any other offer. Offer Expires 8/31/2015.
With Coupon. Not valid with any other offer. Offer Expires 8/31/2015.
sushi & steakhouse
sushi & steakhouse
sushi & steakhouse
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK Mon-Thurs: 11:00am-2:30pm 4:30pm-10pm Friday: 11:00am-2:30pm 4:30pm-10:30pm Saturday: 11:30pm-10:30pm Sunday: 11:30pm-9pm
942 W. Poplar Avenue #5 Collierville,TN 38017
(901) 853-5588
Like Us on Facebook
*DINE-IN & TAKE-OUT AVAILABLE
All Major Credit Cards Accepted
22 » Tuesday, August 25, 2015 »
T H E W E E K LY
««
MG
In the News
Forecast: Farewell Well-known Channel 5 weatherman Dave Brown is retiring By John Beifuss beifuss@commercialappeal.com 901-529-2394
A
Memphis broadcast personality for more than half a century, Dave Brown has what a meteorologist might call snowy hair and a sunny smile. He also has pale blue eyes and a resonant, authoritative voice. He’s a handsome, reassuring guy, yet he probably has caused more Mid-Southerners to cower beneath tables and hide in closets than any other living person.
old song, I’ll act my later, he also was host shoe size, and I hapof the weekday mornpen to wear a 12.” ing “Dialing for DolBrown cut back his lars” movie program schedule a few years and a “weatherman” ago, so now he apon the noon news. pears only on the 4 Wrestling, in parp.m. newscast, Monticular, made him day through Thursa star, so when TV day. wrestling moved to One of the most recWMC in 1977, Brown ognizable and popular followed, remaining personalities in the one of the region’s Mid-South, Brown most respected and began his Memphis trusted news personbroadcast career as a alities, even though disc jockey on radio his Saturday mornCOMMERCIAL APPEAL FILE station WHBQ-AM ing job required him 56 in 1964, when it was Brown (shown here in 1975) has to keep a straight face a Top-40 pop station. been a Memphis broadcast person- while interviewing (Before that, he had ality for more than half a century, Plowboy Frazier and worked on radio in starting on the radio in 1964 before the Mongolian StomMilan, Tenn., near his moving to television in 1967. per. hometown of Trenton.) “You could never do He joined WHBQ-TV Channel 13 today what I did,” Brown said. “You in 1967, to be an announcer on the could not host a wrestling show on station’s hit Saturday morning pro- Saturday and do the weather on the fessional wrestling program. A year weekdays and expect to have any
your beds.
A
RA
Family owned since 1982
Growing Gardener. MEMPHIS, TN
901.755.4037
LL TOD
Your Home SOLD Guaranteed... or I’ll Buy It!
he Place for the 5576 HACKS CROSS RD
E
D L SO CA
Visit us to learn more about perennials to plant this fall.
NTE
AY
You want us in
GU
“He’s saved my life more times than he’ll ever know,” said Andrea Ahlers, 35, a receptionist at WMC-TV Channel 5 headquarters on Union Avenue, recalling evenings when Brown caused her to take cover with his warnings of tornadoes, severe thunderstorms, high winds and other alarming weather phenomena. Unlike Brown, Ahlers is not a certiied broadcast meteorologist, but her sad eyes Aug. 17 afternoon were a barometer providing an accurate measurement for a forecast calling for tears, hugs and other forms of bittersweet public afection. Before a gathering of friends and coworkers in the WMC Action News 5 studio, Brown announced he was ending what may be the longest full-time television career in Memphis history. His inal broadcast as chief meteorologist will be Aug. 31, the day before his 69th birthday. After that he hands the baton to his longtime colleague, Ron Childers, a whippersnapper who has worked at Channel 5 for only 28 years. “I don’t plan on acting my age,” said Brown, who lives in Lakeland with his wife, Margaret. “In the words of the
MIKE BROWN/THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL
WMC Action News 5 co-anchor Ursula Madden gives an emotional hug to longtime station chief meteorologist Dave Brown after he announced his retirement after more than four decades on the air during a staf meeting Aug. 17 in the station’s studio.
credibility. “It was a totally diferent world,” he added, recalling an era when Memphis had only four television stations: the three commercial network ailiates, plus PBS-connected WKNO-TV Channel 10. This was the heyday of original local television programming, when such Memphis figures as kiddieshow host Happy Hal, sportscaster “Big Jack” Eaton, horror host Sivad (“the Monster of Ceremonies”) and Dick “Mr. Magic” Williams were as familiar as Johnny Carson or Oprah Winfrey. Brown’s colleagues paid tribute to their exiting co-worker Aug. 17, even though his honorary title of chief meteorologist emeritus leaves the door open for him to return for the occasional special report. “There’s no more generous guy you could ever meet,” said sports anchor Jarvis Greer, a youngster with only 36 years of experience at Action News 5. “He always had a smile on his face, even through tragic times.” The most tragic of these times was in 1997, when Stefanie Kuehl, one of Brown’s three daughters, was killed by a drunken driver in an accident that also took the lives of Kuehl’s 6-monthold daughter, Zadie, and her unborn son, already named Thomas by Kuehl and her husband. The tragedy transformed Brown into an activist against drunk driving but also demonstrated the bond that existed between Brown and his audience. “The absolute worst time of my life, obviously, was when the kids were killed,” he said. “This was before e-mail and the Internet, and people took the time to write literally thousands of cards and letters, and I read every one of them. They don’t know how much that helped.” Everywhere he goes, he said, he’s recognized — and not just in Memphis. “But that’s part of the fun. I feel like that’s a great compliment, that people feel like they know us.”
DABNEYNURSERY.COM
20% OFF Sale on all perennials (including hostas). Must bring coupon in to redeem. Valid through 8/31/15.
Call 901-871-HOME (4663) www.sellnotlist.com CALL NOW AshleyKoon
901.878.5478
2657 Appling Rd #102 Memphis, TN 38133
Producing Branch Manager, NMLS #723341 Direct/Cell: 901.277.7982 Fax: 901-443-4652 Ashley.Koon@SupremeLending.com www.AshleyKoon.SupremeLending.com 985 Cordova Station, Suite 101 Cordova, TN 38018
MG
ÂŤÂŤ
T H E W E E K LY
ÂŤ Tuesday, August 25, 2015 ÂŤ 23
Community GERMANTOWN
Pet briefs and adoptions
Schools will cost G’town $12 million, no tax hike till 2018 Janda, alderman representative to the city’s inancial advisory commission, a group of about 20 experts from the private inance sector who scrutinize bond sales and other budget issues and pass their recommendations to the Board of Mayor and Aldermen. The board approved the city’s budget last spring. Opening it now to include school debt will require three readings before the board, including a public hearing scheduled Oct. 12. “We told you we would be back before you to talk about the school needs,� city administrator Patrick Lawton told the panel as the discussion began. An expansion at Riverdale will allow the suburban district to get rid of 22 portable classrooms behind the school that Supt. Jason Manuel described as looking like a “Third World country.� Riverdale was built in 1968 to accommodate 755 students. It has more than 1,200, including 315 nonresident students. “We really don’t want to build something for nonresidents,� Manuel said, adding that the district could control the student numbers by allowing few-
By Jane Roberts robertsj@commercialappeal.com 901-529-2512
Germantown is prepared to begin adding capacity to its crowded schools with no tax increase to citizens, at least until 2018. Even then, at least one alderman believes, new retail and other businesses in the city will ofset the cost through increased sales tax revenues. The city’s advisory financial commission Thursday unanimously approved a recommendation to amend its currentyear budget to add $12 million in capital projects for schools, including a $10 million expansion at Riverdale Elementary and $2 million to build an athletic complex at Houston High. It’s possible both would be ready for the start of school in 2017. Germantown Municipal School District would fund $300,000 of the bond debt a year for 30 years. The city’s share would be approximately $680,000 a year, starting in 2017. “Let me point out, there is no tax increase with this scenario,� said Rock
er transfers as resident numbers increase. The addition at Houston would alleviate the stress of farming athletic practices out around the city and stacking them up in the school gym until as late as 10 p.m., Manuel said. Germantown is the third of the six suburban districts making plans to build new schools just a year after they opened. Lakeland issued $20 million in capital outlay notes this summer for a new middle school. Collierville is moving forward on plans for a $95 million high school, even though residents in an unscientiic poll said they were against it, 2,232 to 2,194. Germantown is the irst where the school district itself is ofering to foot some of the bill. Its portion would be $5 million over 30 years. The district also desperately needs more elementary space. Dogwood and Farmington are each over capacity by 150 students this year. By 2018, Germantown projects it will need to issue $18 million in bonds for a new elementary — potentially raising taxes 15 cents per $100 of value.
/
Building/ Construction
139
Concrete Finishers, Form Carpenters, Rod Busters, Skilled Laborers & Foremen
HAMILTON-ELLES, INC., a commercial concrete contractor located in Memphis, TN, is now hiring. Verifiable experience & drug screen required. WE OFFER HIGHLY COMPETITIVE WAGES AND BENEFITS! EMAIL RESUME:
info@hamilton-elles.com OR FAX TO:
901-213-9322 General Laborers
CLASSIFIED 161
960
Automobiles For Sale
´´´´´
CADILLAC ‘12 CTS Coupe, 33K miles, diamond white, certified. #26277. Oscar, 901-761-1900
Ă’ÂżĂŒĂ—Âż ĂŠĂ—ĂŒ Ă€Ă?ÂżĂ‚Ă‘Ă†ĂƒĂ?ÂŞ ³°ª Ă&#x; Ă Ă‹Ă&#x; °³ª ¯¡´¹š Ă&#x; Ă‹ Ă&#x; Ă‹ Ă„ Ă&#x; Æ Œ¡Ž¯§¾°³Ž¯ŽŽ
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 or 901222-7265. 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. Visit memphispetsalive.org or call 901-636-1416. PET ADOPTIONS
â– Mid-South Greyhound Adoption will be at Hollywood Feed, 2648 Broad, from 12-2 p.m., Saturday. The cost to adopt is $275. For more information, see midsouthgreyhound.com or call 870-735-7317. â– The Mid-South Grey-
hound Adoption Option
will be at Hollywood Feed 5070 Goodman, Saturday, from 1-3 p.m. Cost to adopt is $275.
Ă ĂŠĂƒĂ? ĂˆĂƒÂżĂŒ Ă Ă?Ă‰ĂƒĂ?ÂŞ ³²ª Ă‹ ÂŞ Ă’ĂŒ Ă‘ Ă&#x; ÂŞ Ăˆ ¯¡ª °Ž¯³ Ă?ÂŹ Ă‘ÂŹ ĂŠ ¤ Ă‘ Ă„ Ă&#x; Æ Œ¡Ž¯§³°´¹°´²
à Æ¿Ă?ĂŠĂƒĂ‘ ÆĂ?Ă•ÂżĂ?Ă‚ ÆÇÊÊ Ă ĂŠ Ă ÂŞ Ă‹Ă‘ÂŞ Ă&#x; Ă&#x; Ă&#x; Âż ¯²ª °Ž¯³ Ă‹ Ă„ Ă&#x; Æ ¡Ž¯¾°³Ž¯ŽŽ
Ă‹Ă?ÂŹ Ă“ĂŠĂ‡Ă‘Ăƒ Ă ÂŹ  à À  Æ¿ËÎÒĂ?ĂŒÂŞ ĂˆĂ?ÂŹÂŞ ´¡ Ă&#x; Âż ÂŻÂŽÂŞ °Ž¯³ Ă?ÂŹ Ă‘ÂŹ ĂŠ ¤ Ă‘ Ă„ Ă&#x; Æ Œ¡Ž¯§³°´¹°´²
ĂˆĂƒĂ•ĂƒĂŠ ÂżĂ‡ĂŠĂƒĂƒĂŒ Ă ÂżĂ?Ă‘Ă?ĂŒ Ă•Ă†ĂƒĂƒĂŠĂƒĂ?ÂŞ œœª Ă&#x; Ă&#x; Ă&#x;
Âż ϻ °Ž¯³ Ă• ĂĄ Ă&#x;ÂŞ Éя Ă„ Æ
Ă„ Ă&#x; Æ ĂƒĂ&#x; Œ¡Ž¯§¹œ°¯ŽŽŽ
JOYCE CHASTEEN & THE CHASTEEN - MORGAN TEAM FOR CLOSING 1.5 MILLION DOLLARS IN JULY.
BUD DAVIS CADILLAC
FORKLIFT DRIVERS with Crown Reach & Order Picker Experience $11.00-$12.00/Hr. ALL SHIFTS APPLY AT:
205-240 Horses-Equip Supplies,Train and Board
212
www.applyplx.com
´´´´´ Logistics/ Transportation
166
´CLASS A CDL DRIVER´
3 HORSE -Trailer, CM 2002, living quarters, microwave, ref. great condition. $14,000. 662-671-0482
Home Most Nights & Weekends!
ATLANTIC TRUCKING
161
•••••••••••••••••••••••••
www.commercialappeal.com
www.commercialappeal.com
Advertise Today Call 901-529-2700 visit:
ATV’s, Go-Karts, Motorcycles
905
HONDA '05 Rebel 250,
Trucks, SUV’s and Vans
955
CADILLAC ‘15 Escalade, red, Luxury pkg., $74,855 incl. $499 doc, excl ttl. #15740A. Alex, 901-288-7600
BUD DAVIS CADILLAC
CADILLAC ‘14 CTS, 53K Hwy Miles, shinny black, Certified beauty. 901-218-9105, Keith Dial
BUD DAVIS CADILLAC
CADILLAC ‘14 CTS, Performance Pkg., MSRP was over $63K, white. Ron Lewis, 901-761-1900
BUD DAVIS CADILLAC
CHEVROLET ‘15 Corvette, ex-GM show car with lots of extras! 7K miles. #26281. Tony, 901-761-1900
BUD DAVIS CADILLAC
CHEVROLET ‘14 Corvette Convertible, 3K mi., LT3, silver w/red, Z57. #26282. Stephen, 901-288-4946
BUD DAVIS CADILLAC
CHEVROLET ‘13 Malibu, blue, 27K miles, very clean. #15494A. Jesse, 901-761-1900
CADILLAC ‘15 Escalade Premium 4x4, granite color. #15729A. Barbara Wright, 901-761-1900 FORD ‘15 Mustang GT, Premium pkg., auto. #26264. David Poley, 901-761-1900 CHEVROLET ‘90 SS454, 19K miles! Original showroom new! $17,988 incl $499 doc, JAGUAR ‘10 XF, 22K miles, excl ttl. 901-761-1900 V8, 5.0, great color, well kept. See Dial for a deal, 901-218-9105, Keith Dial
BUD DAVIS CADILLAC
BUD DAVIS CADILLAC
BUD DAVIS CADILLAC
302-399 Elvis Presley Memorabilia
344
COMMERCIAL APPEAL, Aug. 17, 1977 Special Edition of Elvis & also in the Memphis Press-Scimitar. Both in excellent cond. 901-476-7485 •••••••••••••••••••••••••
BUD DAVIS CADILLAC
Automobiles For Sale
960 ´MERCEDES-BENZ´ BUD DAVIS CADILLAC
Buick 10 Lacrosse CXS, 21K Low price High qlty since 85 ´2 Indoor Showrooms´ mi, real nice, local trade, 50+ Mercedes in stockmature non-smoker. Askfor Keith Dial 901-218-9105 miles as low as 998 Most in factory warranty, w/100Kextended warranty available CADILLAC ‘04 Deville, 15,000 + Happy Clients! bronze, sunroof, cooling All trades welcome, seats, very nice, #26316A. Excellent finance rates Stephen Harris, 901-288-4946 w/approved credit. Sales • Service • Bodyshop Please View CADILLAC ‘14 & ‘15 Demo Loaners. 2965 S. 3RD 901-332-2130 Call Keith Dial, 901-218-9105 for information •••••••••••••••••••••••••
BUD DAVIS CADILLAC BUD DAVIS CADILLAC
SMITHIMPORTS.COM
Cabinet/Millwork
•••••••••••••• Call today to place an ad 901-529-2700 •••••••••••••••
903-960
like new, only 3,600 miles. $2,200 901-581-2368
PROLOGISTIX
LEASE- PURCHASE AND STRUCTURAL STEEL COMPANY DRIVERS CONTRACTOR in Memphis, AVAILABLE! Lots of TN seeks a qualified CONTAINER WORK and PROJECT MANAGER. TOP PAY. Need 2 yrs Must have at least 5 yrs. TRC/TLR EXP. and good experience and/or MVR. ALSO HIRING Construction Degree. OWNER-OPERATORS! Go Competitive Pay and To: atlantictrucking.com Benefit Package! Please email resumes to: Or Call Janie: 901-969-4108. Tow Truck Operators hr@qifab.com Heavy Haul Drivers No Phone Calls Please!!! Rollback Wrecker Need Memphis area. Valid DL, F endorsement or General CDL, A. DOT Health card. Help Wanted 25 yrs. or older. 1 yr. exper. Apply Mon-Thur. 10am-4pm 3501 Knight Arnold Rd. Memphis, Tn Cabinet shop help needed ••••••••••••••••••••••••• for comm’l millwork/ casework mfr. Somerville, TN. Cabinet construction experience a +,will train. Email resumes to: allen@bsw1.com
visit:
CL1
General Help Wanted
Local Construction Company seeking to hire general laborers to assist ongoing job sites. Duties consist of loading and ´ Pay Scale up to .43cpm unloading trucks, cleaning ´ Affordable Benefits job sites & assisting ´ Paid Vacation/Direct supervisors in various tasks Deposit Must be able to pass a drug ´ 2 years OTR in the last test & background check. 3 years Competitive pay. Construct CALL DANCOR TRANSIT -ion experience not req’d, @ (866) 677-4333 but preferred. Please www.dancortransit.com contact office to fill out an application: 901-385-8606 DRIVERS
PROJECT MANAGER
Tuesday, August 25, 2015
SHELBY COUNTY
faithful owners. Enter the Hollywood Feed Top Dog contest to win prizes for Best Trick, Most Fitting Name or Best Costume. Contests start at 4 p.m. Connect with Memphis’ best resources for raising a happy, healthy pup at the Doggie Expo, with samples and information provided by local companies and organizations. Tickets at the gate are $5 for members and $10 for nonmembers. The PT Squared Golf Scramble beneiting Tails of Hope Dog Rescue will be 1 p.m. Oct. 16 at Memphis National Golf Club, 10135 National Club Drive. This is a four-man scramble to help raise money and awareness for the Tails of Hope Dog Rescue. Call Josh at 901-221-2619 for more information. Cost is $500 per four-man team. 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,
CONGRATULATIONS!
Name: Magpie Age: 4 months Breed: Domestic short hair Description: She loves to play with toys.
Germantown Animal Shelter is open 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday-Friday, 9:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday.
LLIERVILLE APPEAL
kitten adoptions. All felines at the shelter and the Hacks Cross/Winchester PetSmart habitat are eligible for this reduced fee. The shelter is located at 7700 Southern Ave. The second annual Doggiepalooza will be Sept. 1, from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m., at the Cooper-Young Farmers Market, corner of Cooper and Walker. Celebrate our canine friends with giveaways, dog adoptions, photo booth, live music, beer, arts and crafts and more. E-mail caitlin@cycfm.org, visit cycfm.org or call 901570-0565. The YMCA at Schilling Farms will host a Doggie Pool Pawty beneiting the Collierville Animal Shelter Sept. 12, from 2-4 p.m. Call Tish Lewis at 901850-9622 for more information. Memphis Botanic Garden, 750 Cherry Road, presents Dog Day at the Garden Sept. 27, from 2-5 p.m. Four-legged-friendly event for dogs and their
ÕÇÊÊÇ¿Ë À
Ă ÂżĂ?ĂŠĂ‡Ă‘ĂŠĂƒÂŞ œœ Ă‹ Ă&#x; Ă&#x; Ă&#x; Âż ¯¹ª °Ž¯³ Ă‹ Ă&#x; ĂŽĂ&#x; Ă„ Ă&#x; Æ Œ¡Ž¯§¾´¾œ¡¹Ž
PETS OF THE WEEK | GERMANTOWN ANIMAL SHELTER
Name: Jasper Age: 8 months Breed: German shepherd mix Description: Jasper is a goofy puppy.
Through August, the Germantown Animal Shelter will feature $40 cat and
Advertise Today Call 901-529-2700
••••••••••••••••••••••••• visit:
www.commercialappeal.com visit:
www.commercialappeal.com visit:
www.commercialappeal.com
Chase
Joyce
Matt
WANT YOURS SOLD? • CALL US NOW
BUD DAVIS CADILLAC
CADILLAC ‘13 XTS, full top, black beauty, low mi, must see! 901-218-9105, ask for ‘Dial for deal’, Keith Dial
BUD DAVIS CADILLAC
CADILLAC ‘14 CTS Premium, rare plum color, 9K miles. #26274. Keino, 901-761-1900
BUD DAVIS CADILLAC
Advertise Today Call 901-529-2700
•••••••••••••••••••••••••
To Place Your Classified Ads Call 901-529-2700
COLLIERVILLE
JOYCE CHASTEEN: 485-3986 MATT MORGAN: 605-1071 OFFICE: 854-5050
24 » Tuesday, August 25, 2015 »
T H E W E E K LY
««
MG
Let Serra Chevrolet make your buying experience
FAST, FUN & FRIENDLY.
We’ve already done the shopping for you, and we are offering the best pricing available.... DRIVE A NEW 2015 CHEVROLET
MALIBU LS Starting As Low As
$18,488
Stk# 150173
Over 25 to choose from at this price!
DRIVE A NEW 2015 CHEVROLET
EQUINOX LS Starting As Low As
$20,988
Stk# 150286T
DRIVE A NEW 2015 CHEVROLET
SILVERADO LT CREW CAB All Star Edition
$9000 Off On Select Models
Stk# 150965T
Save Even More On Specially Marked Chevrolet Bonus Tag Vehicles In Stock. Experience The Difference-Serra Chevrolet In Bartlett! With Over 400 Vehicles In Stock To Choose From, Your New Chevrolet Is Waiting For You @ SerraBartlett.com Nobody Beats A “Serra” Deal! In stock only.All factory incentives and rebates included in prices. Prices do not include titles and licensing fees. Silverado discount is off MSRP and includes all incentives and requires inancing through Ally, GM Financial or Wells Fargo. Offers good through close of business 8/31/15. Pictures for illustration purposes only.
7850 HIGHWAY 64 | BARTLETT,TN 38133 | HOURS: MON-SAT 9AM - 8PM | 800-984-4030 • 901-382-5644
W W W . S E R R A B A R T L E T T . C O M