July 21 Collierville Weekly

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Tuesday, July 21, 2015

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POLICE OFFICER HITS THE TRACK

CELEBRATION IN GRIZ NATION

Coach Hrukti Maat helps kids all over Memphis to realize potential as track athletes. Page 7

Fans at FedExForum shower Marc Gasol with adulation after re-signing. Page 16

Collierville Weekly PEACE TREE UMC

Church plant to host picnic Field Day a chance for fellowship, fun By Lisa Junkins Special to The Weekly

CRAIG COLLIER/SPECIAL TO THE WEEKLY

San Chambers (left) introduces her therapy dog, Ranger, to Sandy Brock, a participant in Camp Smile.

CAMP SMILE

HAPPY CAMPERS Camp for those with special needs brings big grins to people and dogs

By Craig Collier Special to The Weekly

In its 19 years, Camp Smile has provided a great deal of fun for those who have attended. Magic shows, cooking demonstrations, face painting, a trip to a local spray park and a chance to stand in the basket of a hot-air balloon are just some of the experiences those attending have had over the years. This year, the two-weeklong camp for those with special needs had everything you would want to have a great time. On July 16, the camp had a special visitor. Ranger, a therapy dog showed up with his handler, San Chambers, and when Ranger walked through the door, there was little doubt how the camp got its name. With four staf members and 10 volunteers to meet the needs of the 25 campers, every moment of the camp is well planned and well executed. The driving force of the camp is director Michelle Kelley, who is an assistant in the special education department at

Collierville High School. Kelley’s positive attitude is present in both the planning and the execution of the day to day operations. “I love working at Camp Smile,” Kelley said. “The kids are amazing and the daily life lessons I learn from them are as priceless as anything we teach them. We teach them that life really is simple and you do what you can do every day INSIDE and to smile when you are happy. More photos “Camp Smile provides our campfrom Ranger’s ers with a great time to be with old visit to Camp friends and to meet new ones. Our Smile. 5 staf and volunteers work very hard to provide daily themes and crafts with special guests that makes the camping experience a day of good old fashion fun.” The camp also was a family afair for Kelley. Her sister and her three nieces volunteered to help make Camp Smile a success. “We are already working on the 2016 version of Camp Smile,” Kelley said.

Peace Tree United Methodist Church will host its irst community event Saturday, from noon to 3 p.m., at Suggs Park. Field Day will be a chance to gather for fellowship, food and an opportunity to learn what this new church has to ofer. Peace Tree is a unique church seeking to reach people who are unable to worship on Sunday mornings or who have questions about Christianity. As the world moves at an increasingly fast pace, many people must now work on Sundays or travel on weekends. Others have even lost interest in traditional forms of church. Peace Tree seeks to focus on small “house groups” that commit to eat meals, worship God, and study the Bible. The groups will meet diferent days of the week in nontraditional settings such as restaurants, homes and parks. The Rev. Kristofer Roof is the lead pastor of Peace Tree UMC. He most recently served as the associate pastor at Collierville UMC. “Peace Tree is a new kind of church that is intentional about reaching people where they are,” Roof said. “Is your only free time on Thursday nights? We’ll have a house group meeting then. Are you intimidated by large groups and large buildings? Each group will be small enough to it around the dining room table or sit around a living room.” See PEACE, 2

CHILDREN’S THEATER

Inside the Edition

‘Inherit the Wind’ hits stage July 31

BONSAI PASSION Love for miniature trees keeps 91-year-old Olive Branch man’s garden growing.

By Renee Davis Brame Special to The Weekly

HOME & GARDEN, 21

WHAT’S HAPPENING Whether you’re looking for a date-night idea or entertainment for the kids, check out our local event listings. CALENDAR, 6 © Copyright 2015

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Based on the Scopes Monkey Trial of 1925, “Inherit the Wind” is a high intensity legal drama that GCT is proud to present through its All Children’s Theatre Program. The play follows Bert Cates as he is put on trial for teaching Darwin’s theory of evolution to his high school science class. As the trial unfolds, audiences are led on a search for truth and asked to consider their own limits when it comes to freedom of thought. The play will run from July 31 to Aug. 9.

“Inherit the Wind” is the inal production of GCT’s Summer ACT Series. The All Children’s Theatre program at Germantown Community Theatre is sponsored by the city of Germantown, Tennessee Arts Commission, ArtsMemphis, Members of the GCT Trust and the Germantown Arts Alliance. Shows are 7 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays and 2:30 p.m. on Sundays. The cost is $12 and $9 for those 17 years old and younger. Visit gctcomeplay.org for information. Renee Davis Brame is the operations director for Germantown Community Theatre.

RENEE DAVIS BRAME

Gabby Velaquez and Ben Chappell rehearse a scene from Germantown Community Theatre’s “Inherit the Wind.”

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In the News TEChnOLOGy

Program will aford Memphians Web access ConnectHome ofers high speed Internet By Michael Collins michael.collins@jmg.com 202-408-2711

WASHINGTON — More than 5,500 low-income residents in Memphis will gain access to highspeed Internet service under a new White House program that seeks to expand broadband service to thousands of public housing residents across the country. Memphis is one of 28 communities nationwide chosen to

participate in the ConnectHome pilot program. The initiative will bring together the public, private and nonproit sectors to make high-speed Internet available to more families. “We all know the transformative efect technology has had on the American economy,” said Jef Zients, director of the White House National Economic Council. A new analysis by the White House Council of Economic Advisers illustrates how wide the digital divide remains in many areas. Nearly two-thirds of households with the lowest incomes own a computer, yet

fewer than half have a home Internet subscription. Fewer than half of the nation’s poorest households have an Internet subscription, yet most college applications must be iled online and many job openings are posted online, said Julián Castro, secretary of the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. The ConnectHome program will pull together partners that include Best Buy, Sprint and the Public Broadcasting Service to bring high-speed broadband service to 275,000 low-income households — and nearly 200,000 children — across the

country. In some areas, the Internet service will be free or cost as little as $9.95 a month. Partners and stakeholders will convene over the next month to plan how the program will be carried out in various cities, said Reba Watkins, national partnerships and development manager of EveryoneOn, a nonproit that is collaborating with HUD on the program. More details about speciic offers in Memphis will be available then, Watkins said. Participating partners in Memphis are the American Library Association, Boys and Girls Clubs of America, ABC-

mouse, the Public Broadcasting Service, The College Board and GitHub. The program is projected to reach 2,842 Memphis households. Studies show Memphis lags the nation on Internet connectivity. According to U.S. Census Bureau data, just 67.7 percent of households in Memphis had some type of Internet service in 2013, compared to 79 percent nationwide. A study published last November by Governing magazine put Memphis near the bottom of large cities in terms of Internet adoption rates. Memphis ranked 273 out of 296 cities.

In brief

COLLIERVILLE

R OA D CO N S T R U C T I O N

Wolf River Blvd. road work to begin

Beginning Wednesday night, pavement milling operations will begin on Wolf River Boulevard between Germantown Road and Kimbrough Road. The milling work is in preparation for much needed major reconstruction and repaving work along this segment of Wolf River. Construction is expected to be completed by the end of September. Delays are to be expected during this time. Driveway access will be maintained throughout the construction period, however, short term reroutes and/or closures may be necessary. The City of Germantown NEW STEAKHOUSE

Stoney River coming to Germantown YALONDA M. JAMES/THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL

Amy and Billy Patton are the owners of Patton Computers. The store already doubles as a post oice, but Billy, a Collierville alderman, is seeking permission from the planning commission to expand the building to include a pharmacy — Amy is a pharmacist.

Retail triple threat Patton Enterprises computer store, post oice could soon add pharmacy By Jennifer Pignolet pignolet@commercialappeal.com 901-529-2372

Visitors to Patton Computers in Collierville can already kill two birds with one stone by mailing packages at the express post oice inside the electronics store. That soon will become three birds, as Patton Enterprises prepares to add a third venture — a pharmacy — under the same roof. It may not seem like a logical pairing, but for owners Billy and Amy Patton, it’s a joining of their two areas of expertise. The couple has owned Patton Computers since 2002 — Billy, a town alderman, has a degree in computer science. But Amy Patton has continued to work for Baptist Healthcare as a pharmacist. The new business plan will allow them each to own businesses while working side by side. “We like working with each other, so it’s a family-oriented thing,” Amy Patton said. Their two children work in the store two days a week during the summer. Last week, the Collierville

Planning Commission approved their renovation of the building at 264 Market Blvd. in the Poplar Market Plaza shopping center to be able to include a pharmacy. The plan will go to the full Board of Mayor and Aldermen July 27. They’ve already started relocating merchandise from the corner of the store next to the post oice, where the pharmacy will take up about 2,000 of the 11,000 square feet in the building. The post oice will have to move slightly, Billy Patton said, and an existing drive-through window—which he said they had installed during initial construction to one day accommodate a pharmacy—will serve both mail and pharmaceutical needs. Construction will add an additional drive-through lane with a tubular system for transferring small amounts of mail and medications. Patton said the post oice addition alone has brought in additional customers who may not have been familiar with their computer store. “Sometimes they start looking at laptops and start talking to us about computer repair,” he said of the post oice customers.

When Patton Computers, at 264 Market Blvd. in Collierville, was built the couple put in a drive-through with the intention of one day turning it into a combination pharmacy/computer store.

Patton said his wife’s two brothers are also pharmacists who each own independent express pharmacies, and they are going to mimic that business model. The model: “Getting people in and out as fast as possible,” he said. An express pharmacy, he said, is focused on prescriptions rather than over-the-counter medications, and the goal is to ill prescriptions in less than 30 minutes. Patton said they hope to open the pharmacy in October or November. The additional building work, he said, was part

PEACE

Germantown Police Reports JULY 9

■ Two vehicles collided causing no injuries at Farmington and Germantown at 8:30 p.m. ■ Two vehicles collided causing no injuries at Poplar and Germantown at 9:50 a.m. ■ Vehicle collided into a column support causing no injuries in the 7600 block of Poplar at 9:49 a.m. ■ Vehicle collided into a light pole causing no injuries at Poplar and West at 12:46 a.m. ■ Two vehicles collided causing no injuries at Germantown and Farmington at 3:35 p.m. ■ Two vehicles collided causing injuries at Wolf River and Germantown at 4:24 p.m. ■ Two vehicles collided causing

no injuries at Germantown and Wolf River at 4:55 p.m. ■ Two vehicles collided causing no injuries at Germantown and Wolf Trail at 7:38 p.m. JULY 10

■ Victim’s purses were stolen from an estate sale in the 2800 block of Oakleigh at 9:21 a.m. ■ A female shoplifted nine pair of sunglasses in the 2000 block of Exeter at 3:48 p.m. ■ Victim’s wallet was stolen from her purse in the 2100 block of Exeter at 5:15 p.m. ■ Someone used a stolen credit card for a fraudulent transaction in the 9300 block of Poplar at

of a six-year lease agreement with the shopping center owners signed in 2014 for the same rent. Amy Patton said they used to joke when she worked for K&B drugstore that one day they would open “A&B” pharmacy for Amy and Billy. Instead, they will name it Patton Pharmacy Incorporated. She said they haven’t told many people other than family that they are diversifying their business plan. “It will be interesting to see what the reaction will be,” she said.

from 1 7:53 p.m. ■ Two vehicles collided causing no injuries at Farmington and Germantown at 4;39 p.m. ■ Two vehicles collided causing no injuries at Germantown and Wolf River at 9:15 p.m. ■ Two vehicles collided causing no injuries at Poplar and Miller Farms at 5:17 p.m. JULY 11

■ Two vehicles collided causing no injuries at Pyron Oaks and Miller Farms at 9:11 a.m. ■ Vehicle collided into a light pole causing injuries at Wolf River and Farmington at 1:29 p.m.

In conjunction with Memphis’ annual conference of the United Methodist Churches, Collierville UMC is serving as a strategic partner and will be supporting Peace Tree UMC as its mother church for the initial launch years. “Peace Tree Church is keeping fresh God’s stories of hope and faith at the center of their life together,” senior pastor of Collierville UMC, David Atkinson commented. “Collierville United Methodist Church is honored to be the mother church

supporting founding pastor Kristofer Roof and his launch team is this awesome venture with God.” Peace Tree is one of many new churches that will be planted in the area. The United Methodist Church has a goal to plant 20 churches across middle and west Tennessee by 2020. “We know that new churches will reach new people,” Roof shares. “We hope that inquiring minds will ind their way to our Suggs Park Field Day.” Visit peacetreeumc.org for information. Lisa Junkins is Peace Tree volunteer.

A $1.6 million steak house will be built in Germantown, according to a building permit pulled on Thursday. A Stoney River Steakhouse and Grill is planned for 7515 Poplar in Germantown, according to the document. The site is apparently in or near the Shops of Saddle Creek, around the southwest corner of Poplar and Farmington. The owner is Nashvillebased J Alexander’s Holding. The restaurant’s website shows there are 10 other locations: Annapolis and Towson in Maryland; Atlanta, Roswell and Duluth in Georgia; Nashville and Franklin in Tennessee; Dear Park, Ill.; Louisville, Ky.; and Chesterield, Mo. The website describes the restaurant as “an upscale steakhouse, specializing in hand-cut steaks and gourmet entrees, served in a sophisticated atmosphere by professional servers.’’ The Commercial Appeal

THE

WEEKLY The Commercial Appeal Volume 3, No. 20 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

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In the News

PHOTOS BY CRAIG COLLIER/SPECIAL TO THE WEEKLY

The Wine and Unwind session at Page Robbins Adult Day Center was a big success as guests created their pieces of art using paint.

PAGE ROBBINS ADULT DAY CENTER

Caregivers learn the art of relaxation Wine and Unwind event illed with talk, laughter By Craig Collier Special to The Weekly

Page Robbins Adult Day Center has built a well-deserved reputation for the services provided to people with memory loss due to dementia or Alzheimer’s for 20 years. With a mission statement that says they intend on providing “Hope-illed and happy moments” for their clients, it sounds like that is their entire mission. It isn’t. Staf at Page Robbins also is concerned about the well-being of the caregivers who are tasked with the challenges that often come with caring for someone experiencing memory loss. “Providing support to our caregivers is equally important to providing care to our participants,” said executive director Herbie Kristle. “Often times caregiver need help just learning to relax by doing something for themselves. Something that is fun.” One approach to the idea of relaxation was the center’s Wine and Unwind event. Few, if any, of the 15 participants at the event had put a paint brush onto a canvas since grade school. Their looks of doubt quickly disappeared once Debbie Lovett

took center stage. Lovett is the art consultant at Page Robbins, as well as a professional potter. She explained that using art as a way to relax often means that you are creating art without rules. Her irst instruction was for the participants to, “just breathe.” She ofered an example she had painted of a ield with blooming lowers. Lovett provided instructions on brush strokes and blending colors. But mostly she gave encouragement and answered any questions. The materials provided were small canvases, colorful dabs of paint on a paper plate, brushes of various sizes, a sponge applicator, a small container of water and paper towels for cleanup. Maybe it was the wine, but perhaps it was the idea of creating art in a way few of them had experienced, but the most telling part of the event were the spontaneous discussions at the tables and the sounds of laughter. Most of the participants were strangers to each other but they had things in common. The chances that their paintings will hang in a museum are few but that wasn’t the point. They were there so they could learn to relax and unwind.

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Painting on canvas was something few people in attendance had ever done. At times it seemed to be a group efort with lots of talk and laughter. Even though Debbie Lovett’s artistic talents are deeply connected to pottery, she gave clear instructions and guided the participants through the process.

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In the News GERmantOwn munICIpaL sChOOL dIstRICt

Oicials consider chipping in for houston high turf By Jennifer Pignolet pignolet@commercialappeal.com 901-529-2372

The Germantown Municipal School District is considering a $125,000 contribution to the Houston High athletic ield project, which was billed as a privately funded initiative. The money would be matching dollars for a contribution the city is intending to make toward the project. While the city did not require the school district to match its donation, Supt. Jason Manuel said he thinks it’s the right thing to do.

With individuals pledging as much as $50,000 in some cases, Manuel said, “If we’re standing out on that ield cutting the ribbon ... I’d feel like we hadn’t stepped up as much as we should to come alongside them with this project.” But as board member Ken Hoover noted, the project was always intended to be done with private dollars. The city added a $125,000 donation to its 2015-16 budget after representatives from the Houston Arts and Athletics Foundation came to an aldermen meeting and asked if the city would like

to contribute. The project is expected to cost $700,000 to $1 million, depending on whether add-ons such as a digital scoreboard are approved. The school district’s portion would come from approximately $400,000 in extra funding the district recently received. Shelby County Schools leaders asked the county for more money for general funding, and when it was granted, all of the municipal districts also got a share. Manuel said some of Germantown’s slice of the pie should go toward pay-

ing of fees from architects who have been hired to create plans for a possible school expansion projects. The city would take out bonds, Manuel said, but the school district would still need some funds up front for the architects before the bond money is available. The project to install artiicial turf at the high school — on an accelerated time line due to a city drainage project that is eating away at the school’s practice ield — is scheduled for completion by Aug. 15, director of operations Josh Cathey

said. Manuel said the project has $800,000 in commitments. But some of those commitments span 10 years, he said, and if any fell through or defaulted on payments, the school board would be on the hook for the money anyway. To give a donation now would ensure the project was covered fully. Most board members said they agreed with Manuel, calling it an example of an efective public and private partnership. Board member Mark Dely said he would like to see a fund set up for the

board to use year to year to put toward projects as a “kick-starter” for private fundraising. “This could be the irst usage of that fund,” Dely said. As a result of that conversation, Manuel said $25,000 of the nearly $400,000 — in addition to the $125,000 for the turf — would be set aside to start that fund, pending the board’s approval at the Monday meeting. Hoover pressed his point, however, that the arts and athletics foundation was created to support the school district, not the other way around.

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KEEPING COOL AT SUGGS PARK Kaylan Jones, 12, of Whiteville, Tenn., plays in a splash fountain at Suggs Park in Collierville. “The water is cool and refreshing,” Jones said. The Memphis area continues to be stifled by temperatures in the upper 90s with heat indexes reaching triple digits..

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Pending a guarantee of funding, Collierville Schools will oicially own roughly 160 acres on which to build a new high school. The school board on July 14 voted 3-0, with Cathy Messerly absent and Kevin Vaughan recusing himself due to a conlict of interest, to buy the land at Shelby and Sycamore for just under $4 million. According to the contract, the school district will be buying just over 158

acres at $25,000 an acre. The Board of Mayor and Aldermen voted on July 13 to issue up to $95 million in bonds for the new 3,000-student school, to be funded by a 25-cent property tax increase and $1.7 million in sales tax revenue each year. But residents have 20 days to protest the bond sale. If the issue were to be sent to a referendum, and that referendum failed, Collierville could get out of the land buy. “If for some reason funding fails, the contract fails as well,” Collierville

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Community

CAMP SMILE PHOTOS BY CRAIG COLLIER/SPECIAL TO THE WEEKLY

San Chambers gives Ranger the command to wave goodbye to the campers and volunteers at Camp Smile.

Robert Welford, camp volunteer Mary Grace Donahoo, and Drew Maw take a break from their water color activity. This year’s Camp Smile has been a family afair for camp director Michelle Kelley (second from left). Kelley is happy to receive assistance from her sister Kendyl Brannon (left) and her nieces Emily Brannon and Taylor Morrison.

Seth Kicklighter, Sylvia Brainard and Crystal Minor show of their artwork they made during Camp Smile. Dustin Stout works on a piece of art he made for one of the staf members at Camp Smile.

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Robinwood Retirement Community Offers All-Inclusive Living for Seniors You or your parents may have lived in the family home for years, so the conversation around moving to an Independent Living community is easy to put off. Although you/they may not be eager to approach the subject of moving to a new place, it’s important to talk about this exciting time while everyone is healthy and can be active participants. When families wait until a crisis occurs, you might have to make decisions quickly, which can result in wrong choices based on apartment availability or without time to research properly. With the right option, change can be invigorating, especially when the move is to an all-inclusive community, one with a set monthly price, without large buy-ins or longterm contracts.“ “Robinwood Retirement Community, near the Whitten exit off I-40, offers an exciting lifestyle and the freedom to appreciate what’s most important - friends and family.You’ve saved your whole life, and our residents are happy to retire without signing their life or life savings away,” said Manager Tim Morford. “If you’re looking to downsize, or if the maintenance and upkeep of your house has gotten to be too much for you or your loved one[s], an independent living apartment at Robinwood Retirement Community ills a deinite need,” he said. “Studio, one-, two- and three-bedroom apartments are spacious, beautifully-designed living spaces that include fully-equipped kitchens, luxurious private baths, washer-dryer connections, and more. Our patio homes have additional amenities including raised ceilings, a dining room area, washer/dryer included, and a two-car garage.” Robinwood is a short drive from Shelby Farms Park, in a quiet and safe area that was once known as Robinwood Farms. Robinwood’s onsite managers and professional staff give peace and comfort to residents and their families 24 hours a day. At the push of a button, someone is available around the clock, in the event of an emergency. “In early spring of 2013, we received a lyer announcing an Open House event at Robinwood”, said residents Joe & Jeanne Morton. “Our home, in which we had lived for 18 years, had four bedrooms (one of which we had converted into a study), and a large game room. It was located on a one-acre lot that also had a workshop, storage shed, and a large L-shaped swimming

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

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


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Weekly community events Arlington The town of Arlington Senior Citizens Center, 6265 Chester, added new events to its calendar. On Monday a Qualifying for Extra Help with Medicare talk, from noon to 3 p.m. The Aging Commission will be here to assist in evaluating qualiications and completing applications for those who qualify. E-mail mbrown@ townofarlington.org or call 901-867-7698. The Historic Depot Square hosts Music on the Square, a free concert series, through October. Shows at from 7-10 p.m. Visit goo.gl/1sfce for information. Coming up: â– Aug. 15: The Velvet Dogs â– Sept. 19: Jam Cracker â– Oct. 17: Frankie Hollie and the Noise

Bartlett The Bartlett Library, 5884 Stage, invites kids to READ with Tootsie Saturday, from 10 a.m. to noon.

Children ages 5-11 can read to Tootsie, a registered pet therapy dog, for 15 minutes. Registration is required and opens the irst of each month for that month’s session. Call 901-386-8968. The 2015 Davies Manor Plantation Teachers’ Conference will be Thursday, from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m., at Hillwood at Davies Manor, 3570 Davieshire Drive. The program, lunch and tour of the 1830s historic house museum are all free. Shelby County Schools teachers also can earn one credit toward Professional Development. All educators will receive a certiicate of attendance. Visit daviesmanorplantation.org for registration form, submit through e-mail at daviesmanor@gmail.com or fax at 901-388-4677. 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 Blvd. 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. Kids Night Out, Parents Night Of! every Saturday, from 6-9 p.m. Fun-illed night for kids including movie, popcorn, crafts, group games, jumping and fun at ABA Development, 7953 Stage Hills, Suite 101. Cost is $20 for one child and $15 for additional siblings. E-mail ABAdevelopment101@gmail.com or call 901634-8005. The city of Bartlett, the Bartlett Recreation Center and Saint Francis Hospital-Bartlett hosts the annual Bartlett Kids Triathlon Aug. 8, starting at 7:30 a.m. It will be held on the streets of Bartlett and at the Bartlett Recreation Center, 7700 Flaherty Place. Cost is $25 plus $10 USAT insurance fee. Register at racesonline.com. Call 901-385-6470 or visit cityofbartlett.org/bkt. Bartlett City Beautiful sponsors a public garden tour on Oct. 4, from 1-4 p.m. featuring gardens in Bartlett. Nominations are now being accepted for potential gardens. Bartlett City Beautiful is looking for beautiful gardens, especially those that have special hardscaping, water features or garden art. Ideal gardens are those with a diversity of plant material that exhibit four-season interest. Also of interest are gardens that have successfully dealt with drainage issues, heavy shade, e.g. Contact Laurie Rieman at notoriety1@aol. com or 901-692-2291.

Collierville Preschool 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. Also coming up: â– Wednesdays: 2015 Kids Summer Workshops for children ages 6-12 explores diferent themes from the past each week. July 29, Civil War; Turn of the Century Collierville; July 22, Native American History. Programs ofered from 10-11 a.m. and 1-2 p.m. To register, call 901-457-2650 or e-mail museum@ ci.collierville.tn.us. 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 W. Poplar. 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. Also coming up: ■Saturday: Family Cornhole Tournament, starting at 10 a.m. Register at ymcamemphis.org. Call 901-8509622 for more information. The Carriage Crossing Farmer’s Market will be open 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. every Friday through Sept. 25. Farmers and vendors ofer locally grown produce. Located in Central Park roundabout. In case of inclement weather, visit facebook.com/shopcarriagecrossing for updates. The Harrell Theatre will hold auditions for its holiday play “A Christmas Story, the Musical� Aug. 2. Auditions for actors 15 and under will be 2-4 p.m. and actors 15 and up will audition from 4-5:20 p.m. Arrive 15 minutes before auditions begin. Actors will audition in groups of 10. The play runs Dec. 3-14. The Collierville Chamber of Commerce hosts a BBQ Social Thursday, from 4:30-6:30 p.m., at the Quonset, 178 S. Center St. Stop by for a little fun, food and fellowship and network with fellow chamber members, chamber board of directors and friends. Cost is $15 per person. Please register online at colliervillechamber. com. Call 901-853-1949. The Collierville Sewing Guild meets on the irst Thursday of every month at 10 a.m. at the Collierville Hobby Lobby. For more information, e-mail qltr10ac@ aol.com. The Sunset on the Square music concert series continues every Thursday through July. Free concerts begin at 7 p.m. The performers are: ■Thursday: Def Tonz ■July 30: Josh Threlkeld Bring the kids and come enjoy some of their favorites with Movie Night at Carriage Crossing, 4674 Merchants Park Circle. Movies begin at dusk in Central Park. ■Friday: “Sleeping Beauty� ■Aug. 7: “101 Dalmatians� ■Aug. 21: “Big Hero 6� ■Sept. 11: “Wreck-It Ralph� ■Sept. 25: “The Lego Movie� Join the Collierville Burch Library, 501 Poplar View Parkway, for a free Personal Financial Planning series, presented by Radian Partners. All sessions will be held in the Halle Room. Registration required. Visit colliervillelibrary.org or call 901-457-2600. ■Coming up: ■July 30: Taxes for Teens and Twentysomethings, 4-5:30 p.m. Teens ages 16 and up and young adults are invited to this introduction to federal taxes and what they mean for your earnings, savings and future retirement.

Cordova Big Easy Cajun Classics Cooking Class will be Friday, from 6-9 p.m., at L’Ecole Culinaire, 1245 N. Germantown. Unlike cosmopolitan Creole cuisine, more reined and seafood-centric, Cajun food leans toward the rustic and rural. Learn to start with a rich roux, and then execute the perfect rice. Throw in some andouille, crawish and robust spice. Includes instruction, three course meal and wine. Cost is $95. Call 901-754-7115 or visit lecole.edu/memphis/memphispublic-cooking-classes.asp. Also coming up: ■Saturday: Tasty Nutrition For Diabetics Class, 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Designed for home cooks adapting to diabetic restrictions at the family dinner table, this class focuses on nutrient rich substitutions that expand the palate and bring color to the plate. Includes instruction, meal planning tips and three course lunch. Cost is $55. 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 Parkway. Bring your classic car and enjoy the family atmosphere with “oldies� music and more. No entry fee. Call 901-8189774 or visit gailsline.com. The Cordova Library, 8457 Trinity Road, presents Explore Theater today, from 3-3:45 p.m. “The Play’s the Thing.� Summer performance of Theatre Memphis’ “ShoWagon.� Program is for all ages, no registration necessary. Coming up: ■Wednesday: Explore Art, 3-4 p.m. Dixon Gallery & Garden’s Art-to-Grow comes to the Cordova Library. Program for ages 12 and up. ■July 28: Explore Archaeology, 3-3:45 p.m. Dig for fossils, use a brush and a pick to dig your own dinosaur skeleton. Program for ages 5-12. Registration required. Those interested in acting in this year’s Spooky Nights events must attend one information session at Shelby Farms Park. Sessions are 6 p.m. Wednesday, Aug. 19 and Sept. 9. To sign up, contact Irene Montanez

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In the News I ind track and ield helps me get away from some of the issues that you deal with day to day, like crime. It’s somewhat a safe haven. It helps to not bring work of duty.�

at imontanez@shelbyfarmspark.org or 901-222-7266. Spooky Nights is a spook-tacular event that supports Shelby Farms Park Convservancy and takes place every Friday and Saturday in October. Get Pop-Cultured: Throwback Thursdays at Barnes & Noble, 2774 N. Germantown Parkway. Explore the books, toys, games, music, movies, TV and fashion that shaped diferent decades. Call 901-386-2468. ■Thursday: 1980s — Keith Haring Art Contest ■July 30: 1990s — Goosebumps Event Join Immanuel Lutheran Church, 6325 Raleigh LaGrange Road, for its God Connects classes, Sundays at 9:50 a.m. in the School, Spanish Room 23. Come learn about the Christian faith. Whether you have questions about Christ or want to deepen your faith in Him, this class will explore what the Bible says about our God. This is for those who are interested in learning or reviewing the foundations of the Christian faith. No obligations and everyone is invited. Child care provided. Pitter Patter Studio will host a Flower Arranging From Your Garden talk with Rick Pudwell Aug. 6, from 11 a.m. to noon, at the studio, 845 N. Germantown Parkway Admission is free and open to the public. Call 901-409-4449 for information. Chuckles Comedy Club, 1770 Dexter Springs Loop, will host comedian and former writer for Richard Pryor, Paul Mooney for ive shows Friday through Sunday. Tickets are $17.50. Shows start at 7:30 and 10 p.m. Friday and Saturday and 8 p.m. Sunday. Livitup, Inc., formerly United Cerebral Palsy of the Mid-South, will host its Scares & Spares Bowl-A-thon at Cordova Bowling Center Oct. 25. Registration begins at 1 p.m. and bowling will start 30 minutes later. There will be trick or treating, rales, costume contests and more. Contact Lyndsey Drotar at 901-283-0425 or email ldrotar@livitupinc.org for information. Shelby Farms Park, 500 N. Pine Lake Drive, hosts Board Game Meetup from 2-4 p.m. the second Thursday of every month. This social event can be for both board game champs as well as anyone interested in learning a new hobby. Visit shelbyfarmspark.org.

Hrukti Maat, Memphis police oicer who coaches an amateur track team

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 a food truck vendors, children’s activities and cooking demonstrations in a beautiful and relaxing farm setting. The Gardens of Germantown, 3179 Professional Plaza, will put on its free basics of Alzheimer’s disease seminar July 30 at 4 p.m. The program will cover topics such as treatments, signs of the disease, causes and risk factors and more. To reserve a seat, call 901-7555450 or 901-356-0440. The sixth annual Shoes for our Kids silent auction will be Friday at Bufalo Wild Wings, 3770 Hacks Cross, from 6-9 p.m. Funds from the event help with the purchase of new shoes for Shelby County schoolchildren in need. Items up for auction include memorabilia from the Pittsburgh Steelers, Dallas Cowboys, Houston Texans, Memphis Grizzlies, Memphis Tigers and more. Representative Raumesh Akbari will speak at the Germantown Democratic Club Meeting on Wednesday at Coletta’s Restaurant, 2850 Appling Road. Dinner at 6 p.m. and program at 6:45 p.m. Club meetings are open to all who are interested and visitors are always welcome. For more information, contact Dick Klenz at 901-756-4165. All Children’s Theatre presents “Inherit the Wind� at Germantown Community Theatre, 3037 Forest Hill Irene, starting July 31. Based on the Scopes Monkey Trial of 1925, this play follows Ben Cates as he is put on a trial for teaching Darwin’s theory of evolution to his high school science class. Tickets are $10, $7 for children 18 and under. Times are 7 p.m. Friday and Saturday and 2:30 p.m. through Aug. 9. Visit gctcomeplay.org or call 901-937-3023.

Lakeland The Delta Blues Winery, 6585 Stewart Road, continues its Re-Wine Concert Series Friday, from 7-10 p.m. with 901 Blues Band. Families are invited to bring lounge chairs and/or a blanket and enjoy the entertainment. No dogs allowed. A picnic is welcome but no outside alcohol allowed. Free entry. Wine, cold drinks, water, cheese and crackers available for purchase. For more information, visit on.fb.me/1KPJmJy or call 901-829-4685. Also coming up: â– Friday: Re-Wine with Micky Utley, 7-10 p.m. â– Aug. 7: More Parrothead music with Rick Williams, 7-10 p.m. â– Aug. 14: Terry Wall & The Wallbangers, 7-10 p.m. E-mail information about upcoming community events to Matt Woo at woo@commercialappeal.com.

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Coach Hrukti Maat of the Memphis Track Club is focused on helping kids from all over Memphis to realize their potential as track athletes.

Badge of honor Memphis police oicer sprints to his second job as track coach By Omer Yusuf omer.yusuf@commercialappeal.com 901-529-2303

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fter working the eight-hour morning shift, Memphis police oicer Hrukti Maat goes to his second job, where his favorite getaway spot — the track — awaits. Maat, 52, is the coach of the Memphis Mustangs, an AAU track club that has recently produced three All-Americans: Harrison Williams (Stanford), Erica Bougard (Mississippi State) and his son, Molei Maat (Illinois). Hrukti Maat has coached the Mustangs since the club’s formation in 2003 and currently coaches about 50 track athletes. “I ind track and ield helps me get away from some of the issues that you deal with day to day, like crime,� said Maat, who has been a Memphis police oicer since 1993. “It’s somewhat a safe haven. It helps to not bring work of duty.� If Maat had it his way, he would’ve never started coaching. Maat said he wanted his sons, Ojike and Molei, to join the Memphis Panthers, a former

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AAU track club, because he thought track would keep them in better shape when football season came around. However, Hrukti Maat’s track and ield background (he ran in high school and college) led the other athletes’ parents to push Maat to coach the team, and in 2001 Maat gave in and began coaching the Panthers. The Panthers dissolved in 2003, but the foundation of the Mustangs’ success was built. Maat’s trip to the junior nationals in 2001 opened his eyes. “I knew I had to step up to another level, because this was a national competition,� Maat said. “I researched the winning times in all the diferent categories from age groups 8-18. From there I planned to address the issue of how to get there. I changed the workouts through research and studying diferent coaching philosophies.� One athlete who didn’t buy into Maat’s coaching at irst was former Memphis University School star and current Stanford standout Harrison Williams. Williams, who had not run track before his freshman year of high school, joined the Mustangs after MUS track coach Bobby Alston advised him to join the club that summer to further his development. In addition to adjusting to Maat’s lack of positive reinforcement, and Maat’s stern, serious face at practice.

Williams said the coaching drills were strange to him at irst because Maat put a lot of emphasis on the form of running, while Williams thought you just ran as fast as you could. Once Williams grasped Maat’s coaching methods, he said it motivated him and the other athletes to just get a “good job� out of him. Maat acknowledges he’s harder on the multi-eventers than his other athletes, because they have to be mentally tough. Things may not go well in one event, but you have to focus on the big picture. Nevertheless, success followed aplenty for Williams, most notably in the decathlon. He won ive Division II state titles at MUS in 2013 and 2014 and the 2014 U.S. junior nationals. Williams also broke the high school record at the 2014 world juniors, scoring 7,760 points. “He’s always on top of you to make sure you’re doing everything right,� Williams said. “Once I bought in, my sprinting went through the roof.� Now, Maat said Williams is one of a few former Mustangs touted to be a future Olympian. “I always said if we could get one person from this club to be an Olympian, that would be a great feat,� Maat

said. “Now it looks as if we have an opportunity for three, four or even ive.� Because he’s an AAU coach and not a high-school coach, Maat has no restrictions on when his athletes can practice. The Mustangs practice 10 months a year, three to ive times a week and two hours per session. Whitehaven girls track coach Yusuf Sharif said track clubs are beneicial because they keep the athletes in shape in the summer. “The kids that do club track get more experience and are more prepared for the school season,� Sharif said. “The Mustangs are a really good program. A lot of the kids there compete at a high level. It’s always good for kids to be around other kids who are competitive. � Molei Maat, 19, has aspirations to coach track after his career because of his father. Hrukti Maat praised his son’s knowledge of track and ield in addition to his passion for the sport. Both father and son agreed their 12-year relationship as coach/athlete was a great experience because they established the diference between the father/son and the coach/athlete relationships. “I knew he knew what he was doing, so I never had any problem with it, because he really helped me improve as a runner,� Molei Maat said.

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Community PHILANTHROPY

Business owner leads annual D.C. service project

Germantown residents will have a chance to help make decisions on the city’s development by volunteering to serve on Germantown Forward task forces.

By Kim Brukardt Special to The Weekly

GERMANTOWN FORWARD

Task force accepting applications Special to The Weekly

Since the city’s recent request for community participation to openly discuss and plan Germantown’s future, a number of residents have called in their RSVP for the Wednesday town hall meeting. Participants will be asked to work in groups to help take what has been done by the 30-member Germantown Forward 2030 steering committee to the next level. Appointed in January by the Board of Mayor and Aldermen, the Germantown Forward group has worked hard to develop a vision statement for the city. There is still time for residents to reserve a seat at the table. The meeting will be at 6 p.m. Wednesday at The Great Hall and Conference Center, 1900 S. Germantown Road. Seating is limited, so those planning to attend are asked to contact Kristi

Ransom at kransom@ germantown-tn.gov or 901-757-7202. During the meeting, city staf will also discuss opportunities for residents to participate in focused task forces where members can engage and share their expertise in key performance areas. Task forces will meet regularly beginning in August and will generate ideas and initiatives designed to guide and move Germantown toward the deined vision. Task force members should have experience in the area for which they are applying. Residents may apply for: ■ Land and use and transportation: How land use and transportation policy decisions will be made regarding the modiication and/or management of land and how people move within our community in a more sustainable manner. ■ Natural resources:

How ecosystem integrity and biodiversity will be protected, how to provide a dependable supply of high quality water, how to reduce green house gas emissions and improve air quality and how to protect our rivers and streams from pollutants. ■ Public safety: How to protect the community from events that could endanger personal safety and how to prevent injury or property damage whether natural or man-made. ■ Quality of life: How arts, culture, recreation and leisure activities for both residents and visitors will remain relevant and delivered in a manner that exceeds expectations. ■ Education: How to provide an educational system that prepares students for a world that is rapidly changing and continue to address the economic, infrastructure and technological issues confronting formal and

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Local business owner Kenny D. Crenshaw, president of Herbi-Systems Inc., went on his annual trip to the nation’s capital. This year marks 12 years of patriotic volunteerism and leadership for Crenshaw. In Washington, D.C., he serves as a “champion” or leader in the Arlington National Cemetery Renewal and Remembrance project where he supervises 300 volunteers from across the country out of 500 participants. Last year, he picked up the inaugural Workhorse Award from then-Professional Landcare Network for his longstanding commitment to the project. This year, he took several family members with him plus two of his employees, enlisting them in the tradition. Crenshaw’s “home crew” consisted of his wife, Melissa, and their children, Michael, 20, Jenna, 17, and David, 15, as well as industrial weed control technicians and returning volunteers Phil Davis and Lee Tapley. The 19th annual National Association of Landscape Professionals Renewal and Remembrance project involves mulching, cabling of trees, pruning, planting and aerating of more than 200 acres of the grounds in the historic cemetery. According to Crenshaw, he and his 300-member team added gypsum last year

to improve soil organic matter and water penetration, as well as increase rapid seed emergence. The Kenny D. crushed Crenshaw l i me stone pellets also are added for the purpose of raising soil pH for healthier grass, he advised. The labor of love occurs each July and is collectively valued at more than $200,000. “I do it because it gives us a chance to give back to people who have served our country,” Crenshaw said. He also has a kinship with the project. His uncle, Ken Kruger, served in the U.S. Navy and is buried at Arlington. In his own community, Crenshaw also is recognized for his initiative. Herbi-Systems was a top ive inalist in the 2014 Memphis Business Journal’s Small Business Awards. The company garnered two Bartlett Chamber Barty awards for customer service and marketing in 2013, and Crenshaw was the organization’s Entrepreneur of the Year in 2012. Tennessee Gov. Bill Haslam appointed Crenshaw to the state Pest Control Board in December 2012 (serving through 2016). Crenshaw also received the Patriot Award in 2012 given by the Employers in Support of Guard and Reserve.

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Food EAT THE STREET

DOWNTOWN DINING South to north, Main Street is a walkable, edible, potable treat By Jennifer Biggs The lobster and bacon pizza at Spindini includes lobster, applewoodsmoked bacon crumbles, Roma tomatoes and mozzarella. It’s inished with fresh spinach, ricotta salata and chipotle aioli.

biggs@commercialappeal.com 901-529-5223

ain Street is home to the tallest building in town; 100 N. Main soars 430 feet and 37 stories. Our oldest craft brewery, MATA terminal, city hall, the county and federal buildings, the Orpheum theater and the most impressive fountain in town also have Main Street addresses. Horses pull carriages, folks ride bikes — including those wild bike bars they collectively pedal — and the trolleys are coming back.

M

also has a full bar for the irst time, deinitely since anyone living can recall, and the resident ghosts in what must be the most haunted dive in town aren’t talking. But don’t worry, you can still get a PBR to go with your Soul Burger, certainly the top burger on many a list in town and a contender on any. And while most places on this list have proper Main Street addresses, it’s hard to ignore The 5 Spot (84 G.E. Patterson; 901-523-9754), which you can enter through E&H, and which has a menu created by Restaurant Iris/The Second Line chef/owner Kelly English. The Watch Yo’ Hed sweetbreads are great; if you can’t stomach pancreas, try this: Fried chicken skin on your BLT. Not kidding. Bluff City Coffee (505 S. Main; 901-405-4399) ofers a light lunch

menu and all the trappings of a

food in a clubby but spacious dark wood room and is one of many of the spots on Main where you might want to go for a nice drink, too. Pizza is half-price on Monday, as are all bottles of wine under $70. South of Beale (361 S. Main; 901526-0388) might have been the

irst place in town to call itself a gastropub; certainly the food is elevated above pub grub, with duck-fried rice, fried olives and fried avocados.

Bedrock Eats & Sweets (327 S. Main; 901-409-6433) is brand-new,

just opened in the former Frank’s Deli space. Owner Brandi Marter serves primarily paleo- and primal- diet friendly foods, which just happen to taste great. Fred and Barney would have nothing to complain about on this diet, which is heavy on protein, from smoothies to protein wales. The Green Beetle (325 S. Main; 527-7337) was opened in 1939

by Frank Liberto and today his grandson, Josh Huckaby, is in

LLIERVILLE P T C•O•••••• •••••R•E•SENT E E •• S TR •••• •

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SUMMER SPECIAL

Spindini (383 S. Main; 901-5782767) serves up classic Italian

ry of the Arcade or Earnestine & Hazel’s, as chef/owner Brian Michael Patrick only opened in 2011 (around the corner on G.E. Patterson). But he scored a spot with Guy Fieri on “Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives” with his lobster pronto pup and his chorizo meatloaf. Add these deserving items to the list: Everything else. Jazz is always playing at Onix (412 S. Main; 901-552-4609), whether live at night or canned during the day. There are theme nights, happy hour specials and a treat for those who love chicken and waffles: Grilled chicken and

T

SUMMER SPECIAL TREMENDOUS TREMENDOUS PRINT SALE PRINT SALE

wales, served under a sweet maple cream sauce instead of plain syrup.

Rizzo’s Diner (492 S. Main; 901304-6985) doesn’t have the histo-

•••••••••••

sales of its beers every day except Sunday, including standards such as Riverbank Red, Golden Ale and 1887 IPA (commemorating the year the Memphis Sands aquifer was tapped) as well as seasonal brews. A few blocks to the north, we come upon the Arcade (540 S. Main; 901-526-5757). It’s the oldest restaurant in the city, opened at the corner of G.E. Patterson in 1919 by Greek immigrant Speros Zepatos, who in 1925 tore down a wooden shack and built the building that still stands today.

Hazel’s (531 S. Main; 901-523-9754)

good cofee shop, including WiFi and folks tapping away on laptops. It’s spacious but cozy, everything is baked from scratch, and um, they have Nutella in multiple kinds of dough. Get the Nutella Pop-Tart. Need a pop shop? Hop across to Love Pop (506 S. Main; 901-5721584), where you can choose from 300 varieties of a rotating stock of carbonated beverages, almost all sugar-sweetened. Build a pack to take home, buy a single or get an ice cream loat.

•••

Ghost River Brewing (827 S. Main; 901-278-0140), which ofers dock

It’s famous for its breakfast, particularly the sweet potato pancakes, and makes a decent thin-crust pizza. And oh yeah, it now has “a full liquor bar,” as they call it, and nighttime hours Thursday through Saturday. Catty-cornered, Earnestine &

••

a little home cooking or peach cobbler at the Center for Southern Folklore (119 S. Main), and ice cream at Maggie Moo’s (125 S. Main). Bounded to the south by E.H. Crump Blvd. and to the north by Henry, most of the action is between G.E. Patterson to the South and Adams to the North, though there are a handful of places worth discussing outside those boundaries. Keeping in mind that this is a street as potable as it is edible, make note that the southernmost spot of interest to us is

••

You can get your hair done, see your dentist, shop for furniture, clothes and art, take your dog to the vet, get your dog down at a yoga studio or your body hard at cross-it. All these amenities are on Main because the street is populated, from the North to the South, with apartment and condo dwellers. Tour the recently opened Blues Foundation Blues Hall of Fame (421 S. Main; 901-527-2583), shop in the National Civil Rights Museum Store (418 S. Main; 901-521-9699 — the museum is just behind it, at 450 Mulberry). Three small groceries, the soon-to-open 387 Pantry at 387 S. Main, City Market at 66 S. Main and Jack’s Food Store at 84 N. Main keep folks in provisions. Quick sandwich, pizza and burger spots dot the road, which is full of plenty of sit-down, fullservice places to eat and drink. There’s Lenny’s (153 S. Main); two locations of Sam’s Hamburgers & More (3 S. Main and 94 N. Main); Main St. Diner (97 N. Main); Wrapzody Gourmet Wrapz (99 N. Main); Guilt Free Pastries, a pop-up with a permanent location but odd hours at 344 S. Main. Grab a sandwich,

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Food charge. He’s taken his signature lasagna of the menu, but he cooks up a mean burger — deinitely go with the bacon, black and Tiger-blue burger if you like blue cheese — and has a nice selection of sandwiches, including a ine bacon, lettuce and fried green tomato. Café Pontotoc (314 S. Main; 901249-7955) is a sweet little place

that serves up a changing menu of mostly small plates, ranging from tacos to chicken wings to spring rolls, has a nice bar, and is just across from a ine dance club … Pearl’s Oyster House (299 S. Main; 901-522-9070) serves Gulf

Coast seafood such as oysters (including chargrilled, if you like raw but shy away when there are no Rs in the months), boiled shrimp, fried seafood platters and Louisiana dishes such as red beans and rice and étoufée, along with steaks and so on.

MIKE BROWN/THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL

The seafood gumbo at DeJaVu features chicken, sausage, shrimp, blue crab and fresh lump crab meat in a classic New Orleans ile roux served with rice and fresh bread.

Silly Goose Lounge (100 Peabody Place; 901-435-6915) is

another corner spot. This is a bar irst, with an extensive — huge — selection of spirits and a long cocktail list. But you can eat panini and latbread, as long as you’re already there. Or eat someplace else and settle in here for a while.

The Majestic Grille (145 S. Main; 901-522-8555) is one of the pret-

tiest places on Main, a beautifully restored theater built in 1913. Chef/owner Patrick Reilly serves a great brunch, cooks up a mean steak and makes an excellent soup of the day, whatever it is. The grilled cheese is among the best around, and the tiny dessert shooters are a perfect way to end a meal. A great bar and like all the restaurants with patios in this stretch of Main, a good place for people watching.

Blue Fin (135 S. Main; 901-5281010), because where else will

you get sushi and pizza? Or a roll named the Gary Parrish Anxiety Disorder? Looks like Horn Lake takes this round, Harvard. Get on back to your cofeehouse.

Blind Bear (119 S. Main; 901-4178435) is what you get when three

longtime bartenders get together and open their own spot. There’s plenty to eat, including the Hung Over Like a Bear brunch on weekends, but the drinks are stout and the dark, speak-easy atmosphere (lapper dresses on

full menu of lights at night. It’s great shareable food, the place is pretty and the patio small but nice. The dessert lights, preselected or pick-your-own, are a great way to inish an evening, even if you eat dinner elsewhere.

Café Keough, ofers a variety of fresh sandwiches and salads including this niçoise salad featuring seared ahi tuna.

Café Keough (12 S. Main; 901509-2469) should go in your

BRANDON DILL SPECIAL TO THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL

the servers) encourage the consumption of liquid calories. Aldo’s Pizza Pies (100 S. Main; 901-577-7743) cooks a great pizza.

Willie Cheech and Bob is a fave, the vodka pie is another, and you can get a slice at lunch. There’s also a $5 slice and drink combo at lunch, if you get it to go. Local (95 S. Main; 901-473-9573)

consistently serves up one of the best hamburgers in town, here and in Overton Square. You can ind plenty to eat besides a burger — salads are very good (and so is the chili, though it sounds better when the temperature dips a little), but you won’t go wrong with the burger. Half of bottles of wine on Tuesday. Yes, Oshi Burger Bar (94 S. Main; 901-341-2091) ofers great burgers, too, but here I particularly like the hot dogs and am a new convert to the alcoholic milk shake,

DAVE DARNELL/THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL FILES

B.J. Chester Tamayo of Alcenia’s ofers her turnip greens and hot water cornbread.

because it’s summer in Memphis and there’s bourbon in that ice cream. Kentucky Head Hunter is popular; give me the Malt Shoppe, because Whoppers. DeJaVu (51 S. Main; 901-5050212). Sure you haven’t been here

before? Chef/owner Gary Williams will lure you in again and yet again with his eclectic menu, a mix of New Orleans favorites such as gumbo, po’boys and étoufée, home cooking — great fried chicken — and vegetarian and vegan items. The curried cabbage egg rolls are crazy good; the bananas Foster cheesecake is over the top, creamy cheesecake smothered in bananas, pecans and a praline sauce. Flight (39 S. Main; 901-5218005) takes the concept of wine

lights to food and spirits, with lights of three salads or soups at lunch — always good — and a

breakfast rotation; the Bavarian breakfast, with smoked salmon, egg, black bread and cheese is great, but don’t miss lunch, with a roster of sandwiches and the beet and feta salad with sugared pecans, one of my favorite salads in town.

521-4674) serves up some of the best home cooking in town and has been doing it for around 40 years, back when it was in one of the coolest retro clubs way down on S. Third, which sadly burned in 2012. Moore reopened; he and his family still make stick-toyour-ribs food daily. Alcenia’s (317 N. Main; 901-5230200) is where you can feel the

good: Club, French dip and other sandwiches, plus Cajun chili, étoufée, gumbo, red beans and rice and so on. Prices are low, service is fast, people are nice. There’s your lunch.

love. B.J. Chester-Tamayo is a force, a hard-hugging, hand-slapping proprietress who passes around her comment/guest book when she delivers fried chicken and sweet potato fries. And she loves them; her candied yams are the sweetest you’ll ind, and her sweet potato cobbler is such a hit that even avowed sweetpotato haters have been known to sneak a bite now and again. All home cooking, mostly made to order.

Felicia Suzanne’s, (80 Monroe; 901-523-0877) probably has the

Ferraro’s Pizzeria & Pub (111 Jackson; 901-522-2033) is at the

best patio in town, and while the address is on Monroe, the entrance is on Main. Owner Felicia Willett is a leader in the local restaurant industry who worked her way from a place in Emeril Lagasse’s kitchen to her great place here. Her food has a New Orleans inluence, but it’s not Cajun or Creole — it’s Arkansas by way of Louisiana that’s now all Memphis.

corner of Jackson and N. Main, and serves up pizza, calzones, stromboli and so on. Beer is available; no corkage fee if you take you own wine.

Court House Deli (22 S. Main; 901-527-2253) keeps it simple and

Willie Moore’s (109 N. Main; 901-

Westy’s (346 N. Main; 901-5438646) has been around a long

time, and before that, it was the North End. The huge menu includes sandwiches and bar food along with rice bowls and the restaurant’s much beloved hot fudge pie.

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12 » Tuesday, July 21, 2015 »

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Community JUNIOR ACHIEVEMENT

Group empowering kids for 60 years Aims to teach economic success By Beth Okeon Special to The Weekly

Bailey Station Elementary student Cyanne Tate sketches a design for the Target Sign Shop.

This year marks Junior Achievement of Memphis and the Mid-South’s 60th anniversary of empowering children to reach their own economic success. The nonproit organization was founded in 1955 with the goal of educating youth about inancial literacy, free enterprise, entrepreneurship and workforce readiness to secure their future and improve the quality of their lives. Programming includes grade-speciic JA curriculum taught in K-12 classrooms in schools throughout the city; JA BizTown, a model city that fourth- through sixth-grade

Police oicer Adrian Salem from Madonna Learning Center in Germantown issues a citation to his classmate for walking on the grass at JA BizTown as his teacher, Colleen Cole, looks on.

students get to run for a day after preparing in class for a month; and job shadowing professionals on-site in their workplaces. JA of Memphis reaches thousands of students annually through its programs. It takes more than 1,000 adult volunteers each year to help reach these children through in-class curriculum,

JA BizTown and other yearround Junior Achievement programming that has now been leveraged to educate and inspire young minds for six decades. “Milestones of this magnitude deserve both celebration and a commitment to continue support,” says Larry Colbert, president and CEO of Junior Achievement

of Memphis and the MidSouth Inc. “I invite our city’s adults to become one of the few who make a diference by volunteering in a K-12 classroom, volunteering at JA BizTown or sponsoring a school for JA BizTown.” Beth Okeon is the owner of ABO Marketing & Communications.

ACHIEVEMENT

Dance Dynamics team earns top honors at Nashville competition Special to The Weekly

Traveling to Nashville to compete in the Beyond the Stars National Dance Competition, the Dance Dynamics company dancers dominated the fourday competition with numerous overall placements and national champion statuses. The studio also received the banner for the prestigious “Studio Excellence” award. This is awarded to one studio at the competition

that exhibits professional, courteous behavior along with stellar performances. Lexi Hivner received a $1,000 collegiate scholarship, which she will use at the University of Alabama and she was crowned Miss Beyond the Stars. Dance Dynamics won the highest score award for all small groups 13 and over in the advanced All Star category. The group also won the highest score award for all large groups 13 and over in the advanced All Star category and the

third highest score overall for groups 12 and under in the intermediate Rising Star category in the Ultimate Challenge. In all, the team won 36 placements in solo and group categories. Dance Dynamics will have two summer camps, one this week and another July 27-31. Contact the studio at 901-371-2255 for more information. Registration for the upcoming year will be Aug. 1, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the studio, located at 8059 Stage Hills Blvd., Suite 114.

Students at Dance Dynamics competed in the Beyond the Stars National Dance Competition in Nashville. The team took home 36 honors.


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Say Cheese! We asked Shelby County residents.

“What was your first summer job?” “Sacker at a grocery

store.”

DEBORAH FRAZIER

“Working at Sweet Noshings.” LAUREN GONZALEZ

“Working for my dad at his carpet store.” JILL FORRESTER

“Designer assistant at Holliday’s Flowers & Events.” ELIZABETH CASH

“Valet parking at

Chickasaw County Club.” EVA BROOKS PHOTOS BY CRAIG COLLIER

|

SPECIAL TO THE WEEKLY


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ME G/ M G M

Sports To me, to see all this attention, it’s too much for me, I don’t deserve all this love that you guys have given me. At the end of the day, it’s not about me.” Marc Gasol, Memphis Grizzlies

! D A R n B a C e r e e r h W d Mo in F ? s I g n i v a S

PHOTOS BY MIKE BROWN/THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL

Memphis Grizzlies center Marc Gasol was swarmed by friends and fans at FedExForum on July 14 as the city celebrated the All-Star center’s commitment to the team for five more years.

BIG MAN, BIG LOVE Griz Nation showers Big Spain with adulation

H

e was embarrassed, as much that doesn’t make it any less worthy of as anything. Embarrassed and celebrating.” grateful, too. Indeed, some within the Grizzlies Marc Gasol walked out organization have made the case that and saw the massive crowd gathered the Gasol signing is the most imporin the lobby of FedExForum and tant franchise transaction since the watched the fans rise to their feet in original FedExForum lease agreea standing ovation, and he wanted ment. That deal brought the Griznothing so much as zlies to Memphis in the for all his friends and irst place. This one asneighbors and fellow sured the Grizzlies will Memphians to sit back be relevant for the next down. ive years. “To me, to see all this It also said something GEOFF attention, it’s too much to Memphians about for me,” he said. “I don’t their own city, about the CALKINS deserve all this love that reality that life does not COLUMNIST you guys have given me. have to be better beyond At the end of the day, it’s 901. not about me.” “He’s the starting all-star center, he’s Except of course, on this particuan unrestricted free agent and he could lar day, it really was all about him. have gone anywhere,” said Pranica. “A It was all about the kid who moved few years ago, this would have been to Memphis because his big brother unthinkable.” happened to be drafted by the GrizSo the celebration continued, made zlies, and who then chose the city all the sweeter by Gasol’s reaction to it. as his home. It was all about Gasol’s Some athletes think they deserve attendecision to stay in this city. It was all tion. Gasol would prefer it be directed about what that means for the next somewhere else. ive years. That’s why he handled the negotiaSo by the hundreds, Memphians tions the way he did, proving that free skipped out of work, or took a day of agency does not necessarily have to of summer camp, or otherwise arinvolve angst and ive-city tours and ranged to ind their way to FedExFomedia big tops. rum on a Tuesday in the blazing heat. He went to Spain. He talked to Mike And shortly after noon, Grizzlies GM Conley. He had dinner with Grizzlies Chris Wallace said the words they owner Robert Pera. That was about it. had come to hear. Although there was one day, in the “Ladies and gentlemen, and Grizmidst of everything, when Gasol nozlies fans worldwide, without further ticed he wasn’t getting a lot of questions ado, I present to you the man of the from Cristina, his wife. hour and for years to come, Marc “She would never react, she would Gasol.” never ask me what I was thinking,” GaBedlam followed, as Gasol walked sol said. “One day, that kind of bothered in. me, ‘You don’t care what we do, where What’s the Spanish word for we go?’” “blushed”? Cristina responded: “No, I know There was a youth swim team in what you’re going to do.” the crowd, the swimmers all holding He was going to stay in Memphis. up handmade signs. Of course. A local barber college decided to So July 14 was a celebration of that knock of haircuts for the morning and realization, that inevitability, that recbring its students to the event. ognition that some people and places “That Marc Gasol decided to rejust seem to it. main a Memphis Grizzly was not unHe’s Marc Gasol, and he’s not going anticipated,” said Grizzlies television anywhere. play-by-play guy Pete Pranica. “But Now try not to make a fuss.

Grizzlies center Marc Gasol was a little uneasy with all the attention directed toward him at the July 14 news conference announcing that he signed a new five-year deal with the team.


ME/MG

««

T H E W E E K LY

« Tuesday, July 21, 2015 « 17

Sports U OF M BASKETBALL

University removes restrictions on Nichols By Jason Smith jason.smith@commercialappeal.com 901-529-5804

The University of Memphis has removed all restrictions from junior forward Austin Nichols’ release, allowing him to transfer to any school, the U of M announced July 14. The move came just hours after an attorney representing the Nichols family threatened legal action against the U of M if it didn’t grant Nichols an unconditional release to transfer. “The University of Memphis has reviewed an appeal submitted by Austin Nichols and has agreed to remove all conditions from his release,” the school announced in a statement. Earlier, Nichols was granted a conditional release to transfer by Memphis that prohibited him from accepting a transfer scholarship at another AAC school, a school on the Tigers’ 2015-16 nonconference schedule or Tennessee, Virginia, Providence and Iowa. Memphis had restricted Nichols from transferring to Virginia, Providence or

MARK WEBER/THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL FILES

The University of Memphis removed all restrictions from Austin Nichols release. Nichols can now transfer to any Division 1 school. He can accept a scholarship but will still have to sit out one year per NCAA rules.

Iowa because it could face those schools in the 2016 Emerald Coast Classic tournament in Destin, Fla. Nichols could have still gone to one of the schools on Memphis’ restricted list, but he would have had to pay his own tuition while he sat out a year per Division 1 transfer rules. Now, with the conditions removed, he’ll be permitted to accept a transfer scholarship at any school, though Nichols will still be required to sit out one year.

According to an ESPN. com report, Nichols is interested in Virginia. Earlier on July 14, the Nichols family’s attorney, Donald Jackson of The Sports Group in Montgomery, Ala., emailed several members of the national media, calling Memphis’ transfer restrictions on Nichols “a calculated effort by a dysfunctional staf to punish a player for taking a step to remove himself from a failing program.”

U OF M BASKETBALL/RECRUITING

Pastner checks prospects in 17-and-under event in Georgia By Jason Smith jason.smith@commercialappeal.com 901-529-5804

SUWANEE, Ga. — Sitting in a rental car outside the Suwanee Sports Academy, University of Memphis coach Josh Pastner wondered aloud Thursday if he had enough time to make a 13-minute drive to the Old Atlanta Rec Center to see T.J. Ford’s 17-and-under AAU team. Memphis-based Team Thad was about to play its second game of the day in less than an hour at the Suwanee Sports Academy. Could Pastner get to the rec center and back in time to see Team Thad tip of against the D.C. Blue Devils? “I’ve got to be here for Team Thad,” Pastner said, electing not to risk it. With Pastner and Memphis assistant coach Keelon Lawson watching from a front-row seat, a Jaylen Fisher-led Team Thad squad beat the D.C. Blue Devils 7462 on Thursday evening to advance to the second round of Under Armour Association’s 17-and-under national championship. Fisher, a senior at Bolton High and one of the nation’s top point guard prospects, was one of several recruiting targets Memphis’ staf had its eyes on Thursday during the second week of the July evaluation period. Memphis doesn’t have any players committed for 2016, though it did have two at one point in Dedric Lawson and Nick Marshall, who both reclassiied to 2015 and will play for the Tigers as freshmen this season. But Pastner sounded conident that Memphis is in good position to land what will be a critically important 2016 class — one that could include as many as six players. “One thing I know we’re gonna do is sign a good class. We’ve always had good classes here,” Pastner said. “It doesn’t matter whether you have a commitment right now or a commitment in September because you can’t sign until November,

FILE PHOTO BY NED DISHMAN / UNDER ARMOUR

Sedee Keita, a 6-11 prep forward out of Greenville, S.C., says Memphis has been recruiting him since last year. “They’ve definitely been reaching out to my AAU coach,” he said.

and then the next signing period isn’t until the spring. “If we had those two (Lawson and Marshall as 2016 commitments), we’d be a top-three class right now. But they both reclassiied. People can’t forget that. But we’re in good position (for 2016). We’re involved with some really good prospects, both high school and junior college.” Among the 2016 prospects Memphis watched Thursday in Suwanee were former Briarcrest small forward Micah Thomas, who’s headed to Huntington Prep in West Virginia for his senior season; South Carolina power forward Sedee Keita; Louisiana point guard Skylar Mays; and Missouri power forward Jeriah Horne, son of former Tigers forward Jerrell Horne.

U OF M FOOTBALL

Lynch named to national watch list By Phil Stukenborg stukenborg@commercialappeal.com 901-529-2543

University of Memphis Paxton Lynch, a relative unknown quarterback entering last season, is gaining national recognition as his junior season approaches. Thursday, he was named to a second national watch list. Lynch, from Deltona, Fla., was one of two dozen quarterbacks named to the 2015 Davey O’Brien National Quarterback Award watch list. Players on the list were selected based on their performance last fall and their expectations this season.

Earlier this summer, he was named to the watch list for the 79th annual Maxwell Award, annually presented to America’s College Player of the Year. Lynch led the U of M to a 10-3 inish last year, including a victory over BYU in the inaugural Miami Beach Bowl. He was named the game’s MVP. The Tigers also inished the season ranked 25th nationally, their irst appearance in the polls since 2004. During Lynch’s two seasons — in which he has started each of the team’s 25 games — Lynch has passed for 5,087 yards and 31 touchdowns. He has rushed for 15 additional

scores. He is one of three quarterbacks in U of M history to surpass 5,000 career passing yards. Mississippi State’s Dak Prescott, a finalist last year, is also on the list. Lynch is one of 15 making their irst appearance on the list. Cardale Jones, who helped guide Ohio State to a national championship in January, leads the group, one that includes Tennessee’s Joshua Dobbs, Cincinnati’s Gunner Kiel and Arkansas State’s Fredi Knighten. The Davey O’Brien Foundation will announce its 16 award semiinalists on Nov. 2 and three inalists on Nov. 24.

Look in Your D rivew Start ay ing J u ly, 2 They 8 are i n the b ag!


18 » Tuesday, July 21, 2015 »

T H E W E E K LY

««

MG

Sports SEC MEDIA DAYS/TENNESSEE

Vols on the rise, says coach Butch Jones

Ole Miss football coach Hugh Freeze (at SEC Media Days on Thursday): “I strongly believe it is time we move in a different direction and change the flag. ”

But nobody is doing backflips over last season

BRYNN ANDERSON ASSOCIATED PRESS

SEC MEDIA DAYS/OLE MISS

By John Zenor Associated Press

HOOVER, Ala. — Butch Jones promises nobody at Tennessee was doing cartwheels over a winning season, whatever Steve Spurrier says. The Volunteers coach opened Southeastern Conference media days July 14 responding to Spurrier’s earlier remark to reporters regarding how Tennessee and Arkansas were celebrating 7-6 seasons that exceeded most expectations. Spurrier’s South Carolina team had the same record after opening ranked in the top 10. “Contrary to reports, there were no backlips and there were no somersaults,” Jones said. “But I think in the world of college football, you’re judged by wins and losses but also you’re judged by does your team overachieve or underachieve. “And I think last year’s football team overachieved.” The Vols secured the program’s irst winning record since 2009 and beat Iowa in the TaxSlayer Bowl, thriving late in the season with the emergence of quarterback Josh Dobbs. They won four of their last ive games. Tennessee accomplished that while playing more freshmen than any other Football Bowl Subdivision team, adding to the perception it is a program

Freeze takes a stand on Mississippi state flag

BRYNN ANDERSON/ASSOCIATED PRESS

Tennessee coach Butch Jones speaks to the media at the Southeastern Conference NCAA college football media days on July 14 in Hoover, Ala.

on the rise. Jones thinks the strong finish and back-to-back highly rated recruiting classes have created some momentum for his program and “positive energy” surrounding the Vols. He says this season’s feel “is diferent for each and every player” from 2014. After all, observers are wondering what Tennessee can do for an encore instead of writing it of as a likely building year going into Jones’ third season. “I think our players re-

ally learned how to win last year,” the coach said. Dobbs said the strong inish carried over into the ofseason, but like Jones he believes it’s just the beginning. Defensive standout Curt Maggitt said taking part in bringing the Tennessee program back to national prominence was part of the allure when he was recruited. This team has designs on contending in the SEC East Division, not just making another bowl game.

HOOVER, Ala. — Hugh Freeze wants to change the Mississippi state lag. He wants Mississippi to remove the Southern cross that is incorporated in that lag. He wants a state lag that doesn’t represent hate to a good number of those who live in his state or play for his football team. “I strongly believe it is time we move in a diferent direction and change the lag,” he said. Hotty Toddy to that. And, yes, I know, some of you are asking why Freeze is talking about lags and race and politics anyway. Isn’t he just a football coach? No. He is the highest-paid public employee in the state of Mississippi. He is a man who represents his school and his state. So when Freeze showed up in Hoover on Thursday, he knew he would be asked about the debate that has roiled this country. Here’s the full version of what Freeze said: “In the late ’90s, our university made a move to go away

GEOFF CALKINS COLUMNIST

from the Confederate lag, and being a Mississippian, I have a great appreciation for the Mississippi people and the pride we have in the heritage and all those things. Unfortunately, that symbol has been hijacked by some groups that mean ill will toward some people. While I’m not a political igure, I strongly believe it is time we move in a diferent direction and change the lag. Hopefully that will happen.” Now, you can quibble with certain aspects of that statement if you like. The line about the lag being “hijacked by some groups that mean ill will” is particularly disingenuous. As if the armies that carried the battle lag meant nothing but cheery good will toward the enslaved? That’s silly, of course.

A sop to the true believers out there. But it shouldn’t obscure the fact that Freeze was willing to take a stand that won’t necessarily be popular with his fan base. Mississippi State coach Dan Mullen wasn’t willing to take that same stand. Presented with the identical question about the state lag earlier in the week, Mullen ducked. Of course, Ole Miss has had a lot of catching up to do on this issue. Credit the university for understanding that. The changes began under former Chancellor Robert Khayat. They haven’t always gone over well. There’s still a renegade Colonel Reb walking around the Grove during football games. It’s a lingering embarrassment. But Freeze’s statement is consistent with the school’s determination to do the right thing. Mississippi’s politicians haven’t yet shown the same courage. So the ofensive lag still lies. But when a popular coach says it’s time for a change, can progress be far behind?

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The tournament 64Squeezes AsShoshone — (usually) 10 In line with ofmaterial? soft packing 9 Fr.awoman with be good for them, around ideasand of what will seems most convenient. be rude to her, but you as you do not want 11 Skirt 40 Intertwined 67 Law-school chief shape 123 Rock blaster 69 Arnaz of TV 12 Completely 102 Tycoon Onassis 52 “As I see it,” to a was all LAVAZZA: The final was marredmaterial? by organizational11issues, 68 Squeezes (out) 120 Greek letters Hybridatmeat a halo the half. 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As usual, almost the top beyond those concepts. waiting, and the last all 127111 Arles article idol careSenate brand) e.g. 54 Turkey Day tuber 106 WoesYou ____ the 15 Beehive, 15 More-thanheroine with the Polynesian influence your friend’s many foreign professionals Still, there were interesting deals. In 126 — Tin Tin 71 Weed — (lawn 14 Wear away the — (escape) You cannot control or Send questions to two came in 45 minutes e? Bill teams were sponsored, and adequate supply Night” (Lennon dog Weenie 89 Important 113 ____-by-thecompeted. In sit the quarterfi- behavior. the Open Pairs, gotBeehive, to four e.g. 127 Arles article care brand) 106 WoesNorth-South 15 4, Turkey Day tuber later. We didn’t down many foreign professionals influence your friend’s askharriette@harriettecole.com 16 Like Goodwill song) 72 Runner-up in spades after West, Burrell wares 46 Device once Humphreys, every 1978 bid clubs. (Manysold pairs have treat17 “Dagnabbit!” in awould U2 Triple Crown 20 Half-witted Edition race ed his overcall asSpecial conventional, showing 24 Classical 47 Unwelcome bit 73 Perambulates, a two-suited hand.) performance of mail the K-A of clubs. western-style Humphreys cashed hall 48 Prefix with 75 Source of four He then found a diabolical shift — to therivers, in 29 Utah Valley metric great six of hearts! University city 50 Consume the Bible

ke

or

ip

DOWN TWO Declarer pondered. If West had the ace — likely on the bidding — and East had Q-x, declarer would go down two if he played the jack from dummy. The defense would take two hearts and a ru�. Since it was a matchpoint event, and an extra undertrick might be costly, South put up the king. He drew trumps

people 90 Tabloid show beginning in 1991 94 Given a start 95 Not working as a volunteer 96 Favored by fortune

Sea, N.J. 114 Rat Pack nickname 115 Multitude 119 Coverage provider, for short 120 Particle in seawater

Send questions to nals, moreafter than2.half the playhave witnessed to eat until or c/o Universal Uclick, 1130 WalInThis theis quarterfi- You behavior. askharriette@harriettec ers competed. were for from overseas. awkward everyone. that already. What you nut St., Kansas City, MO 64106. nals, more than the playYou have witnessed DIAMOND still half led after or c/o Universal Uclick, 1 Why is it no longer ers overseas. two-thirds offrom the match, but that already. What you polite towere be punctual? nut St., Kansas City, MO

Today’s birthday

Chess Quiz but later found that he had been swin-

dled. Humphreys got two hearts to beat a game made at most tables.

L U L V X M T U M K X D M V K GQuestions C and comments: Email Stewart at frs1016@centurylink.net

Sudoku

RL XDGTVMKBV GO JSGWMS

RMVX OGGB FDMYK.

day’s Cryptoquip Clue: F equals C

solution to rd puzzle in y’s editions.

BLACK HAS A CRUSHER Hint: Not 1. ... Ng4? 2. Qxg7 mate.

Solution: 1. ... Rxb3! If 2. Qxb3, ... Ng4! followed by ... Qxh2 mate!

KEND ZLE SS YX M TIONS

7-19-15

The New York Times Sunday Crossword | Start Again 7-19-15

YPTOQUIP: BECAUSE THE RESTAURANT By Patrick Berry / Edited By Will Shortz OWN New TO HAVE THOUSANDS OF GLOBAL The York Times Sunday Crossword | Start Again Puzzle solutions LL IT A VAST FOOD CHAIN.

MISS MANNERS

Barefootedness depends on formality

singing brother e.g.if the I have wondered the same efect today.46 Still, wares Devicewas once a steep 1/4-mile every 1978 drop Reaction to a 127 Climber’s spike “Dagnabbit!” sold inon a U2one side. The Tripleother Crown side boundaries of128what is you17 could show them of in slug Wet blanket? 20 Half-witted Special Edition race proper have changed about peep-toe shoes or sandals was the road, where there Guarantee Today’s Cryptoquip 24 Classical 47 Unwelcome bit 73 Perambulates, Harry’s 1948 DOWN showing feet. We now have with soles. deal of trafperformance of mailwasn’t a great western-style Dixiecrat Florida city, for The hall Prefix with 75 Source of four spas that do a1 booming propriety of 48 total ic. I considered the dropopponent short 29 Utah Valley depends metricof to be the greater great rivers, in business hazard, Horror film keeping 2 our “Ain’tfeet gonna barefootedness University city 50 Consume the Bible infeaturing beautiful condition. on what you mean by an so I walked on that side. happen”

WLFMTVL XDL ULVXMTUMKX DMV KGC

In our ever-changing informal dinner. Would it Was that the correct, society, how is current et- be a picnic on the patio? gallant decision? iquette decided? It seems Would the guests know Gentle Reader: Indeed. Today’s Cryptoquip to this reader that the “no that they need not change Just as a gallant gentlefeet lady J U showing” G C K rule X Gbelongs D M Rfrom L Xwhatever D G T they V Mlounge K B V man G Oprecedes J S GaW Mdown S in the 19th century when around in at home? a staircase, so that if she woman’s willVhaveKsomeanything WallLofFaM T V LbodyXhad D L IfUitLis V X M Tslightly U M Ktrips X she DM GC to be covered in public. more structured, Miss thing soft on which to But if it is still proper Manners would recom- land, a gentleman should that one should never mend starting with shoes, walk on the side of the clif.

Solution: 1. ... Bh4ch! 2. Rf2 Qxf2ch. Worse is If 2. Kd1 Ba4ch! 3. Qc2 Bxc2ch, etc.

/ ACROSSBy Patrick Berry Ghostface Edited By Will74Shortz 1 Hamlet Collared one PREMIER CROSSWORD SUDOKU 5 Possible cause 75 Miss Answer to yesterday’s puzzle of red eyes Woodhouse of Sudoku is a number-placing 10 Collared one Hartfield puzzle based on a 9x9 grid 27Stand-up Hands in 12 Return 14 Poker in a 76 Ghostface CROSS 29comic’s “Fifth need address with several given numbers. western Hamlet 74 Collared one Beatle” name The object is to place the 18Possible College Echo tester’s cause 7579 Miss Sutcliffe of Crunch numbers 1 to 9 in the empty sports’ ____ word of 17 red eyes Woodhouse Clarifying targets Valley 8031 Car-care brand squares so that each row, Collared one Hartfield Conference Paul Newman words 20 Slightly each column and each 3x3 Poker in a 7683 Stand-up 19 Disease spread title role 32 Makeneed joyous drunk box contains the same numwestern comic’s by bats 85 Lionel trains? Prepared to 21 Comic ber only once. 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Was nosy 100 sheet explaining” 106Plywood Former SAG ___” 101 Nail-removing 44“Prince Tree with president Ed (“Aladdin” samarassong) 107tool “That’s my last 103 Driveway 45Flipper? “La Bohème” trip to the store, Raced sealant songwith in which ever!”? 3 “Dirty” dish 30 Soft rock? 54 The olden days 77 Rodolfo regrets 104 112Become Indicates, as a runners 4 Track vehicle 32 Dennis the 55 Actress in saying too much gauge “You can stop tainted 5 Back again Menace’s mom “Selma,” 78 to his lover? 116Former Letup SAG explaining” 106 6 Youth 33 Holiday Inn rival familiarly 49Tree Except 117president Reserve Ed with for 7 Provides a 36 Oil source for 56 Chi-____ 51samaras Site of Italy’s 118“That’s One who’s 107 my last hideaway for, Asian cooking (Christian Grotto pretentious as “LaBlue Bohème” trip to the store, maybe 37 Exploit symbol) 80 52song Barclays Center hell? in which 8 sandals Undisturbed,except 38 on Lobbyingand org. then 62kicking Sinful them of, 81 By Judith Martin 121ever!”? wear player Study too much, 3 “Dirty” dish 30 Soft rock? 54 The olden days Rodolfo regrets 112 Indicates, as a after “in” formed in 1944 64 Diez menos 82 53 “I’ll obey say 4 Track vehicle 32 Dennis the 55 Actress in and Jacobina Martin the beach, it will save me as ladies in tight shoes are 9 Qualifying race 39 “Yeah, I bet,” dos saying much yourtoo medical 122gauge No-show in 5 Back again Menace’s mom “Selma,” Universal Uclick 10 Breach of trust e.g. 65 Neck lines? money in pedicures wont to do under the table to his lover? 116 Letup advice!”? Hubbard’s much 6 Youth 33 Intertwined Holiday Inn rival 67 Law-school familiarly Skirt 40 and711 ineProvides sandals. However, even at the most formal 57Except Bathfor bathroom 117 Reserve cupboard 36 Digs Oil source 56course Chi-____ 12 Having noaflex 41 in the for 84 of Italy’s 118 One who’s 58Site Prey for a dingo 123 Fictional resort Dear Miss Manners: Is on 100-degree days I may dinners. hideaway for, Asian cooking (Christian 13 Entreaty Arctic 69 Network owned Grotto pretentious ashit 59Blue Coat of arms in a 1988 #1 37 List Exploit symbol) 14 amaybe Buck, 42 entry Dear MissbyManners: Showtime Dur86 itBarclays OK toCenter host an 124 informal bit. in old hell? element Washed up, moan 8 Undisturbed, 38 “Whatever Lobbying org. Sinful of drivslang 43 Gets 7162Children’s 87 dinner while in121 bare feet? Reader: Actually, ing our adventure Study too much, Gentle 60player 1969 Nabokov careerwise 15 after More-than“in” You ____in the formed 1944 with the 64heroine Diez menos obeyaround my say novel 125 Standsin abuse?you9would I “I’ll walk home have loved the ing up Pikes Peak in Coloadequate supply Night” (Lennon dog Weenie 89 Qualifying race 39 “Yeah, I bet,” dos 61your Don Everly’s 126No-show Flexible Flyer, medical 122 in 16century, Like Goodwill song) 7265Runner-up in 10 Breach of trust e.g. rado, my Neck lines? bare feet all the time, but I 19th when the girlfriend and singing brother e.g. advice!”? Hubbard’s wares Device once 1978 90 11 Skirt Intertwined wonder if to it ais proper when spikeglimpse of a lady’s4640 trim I stopped67every toLaw-school admire the 63Bath Reaction 127cupboard Climber’s bathroom 17 Having “Dagnabbit!” a U2 Triple Crown 12 no flex 41 sold Digsinin the course slug 128 Wet blanket? Prey for a dingo 123 Fictional resort guests come over. I do not ankle considered erotview, and69race she wandered 20 was Half-witted Special 13 Entreaty Arctic Edition Network owned 66Coat Guarantee ofif arms in a 1988 24 exciting. Classical 47 73 Perambulates, 94 know it is perceived as#1 hitically up bit the road toShowtime take some 14 Buck, in old Somehow, 42 Unwelcome List entry by 68element Harry’s 1948 DOWN 124 Washed up, performance mail 95 slang 43 of“Whatever Gets 71western-style Children’s unsanitary, am inMiss Manners doesn’t pictures. Dixiecrat Florida city, for hall 48 Prefix with 75 Source of four 1969 Nabokov since1 I careerwise 15 that More-thanYou ____ Ithe heroine with the opponent short abuse? ishing preparing meal in think toenails, howjoined her, as 29 Utah Valley metric greatand rivers, inwe re96 novel 125a Stands adequate Night” (Lennon Weenie 70 Horror film 2 “Ain’t gonna University supply city Consume thedog Bible Donfeaturing Everly’s 126 Flexible Flyer, ever16stunning, my kitchen. have 50quite vehicle, there Like Goodwill song) turned to our 72 Runner-up in happen”

DIAMOND stilltoled then LAVAZZA went theafter — Late Arrivals Difficulty two-thirds the whip. Theylevel bidofa★★★★★ goodmatch, slam butHoroscope then LAVAZZA went to the Dear Late : Itgame, is still and polite and a lucky a DIAnswer toHoroscope yesterday's puzzle Today’s birthday to bewhip. punctual, some They bid a good By Jacqueline Bigar AMOND pairbut let through aslam SOLUTIONS: See BELOW for solutions to these puzzles Sudoku is ainconsidnumberfolks are simply King Features Syndicate and agame. lucky game, and a DIhopeless This year you often will wish placing based erate. If there is pair only one Then, inpuzzle today’s deal, By Jacqueline Bigar AMOND let through a to travel distant lands. Some on that a 9x9does grid with sevcouple this reguNorth-South for DIAMOND King Features Syndicate hopeless game. to gow Aries (March 21-April of you even Thismight year decide you often eral given numbers. The larly, feel free to tell them stopped atthe three spades, mak-deal, For kids Then, today’s If you are single, 19) ★★★★ Recognize what back to school. to travel distant land object is toin place the that the festivities start an ing four. At the1 other table, for DIAMOND you could involved needs toAries be done, and then numbers to 9 in the Zia ofbecome you even mightwith dec (March 21-April hourNorth-South earlier than you tell andempty Duboin for LAVAZZA someone from totallyIfdifferstopped atOtherwise, three squares sospades, that makeveryone else. back to aschool. you ar just do Free yourself up what 19)it.★★★★ Recognize reached four spades after ent culture. this person enters each row, each column ing four. At thefor other table, Zia here’s how it works you Ifcould become invol as soon as you can and get needs to be done, and then East-West competed boldly. and 3x3 box your lifesomeone after August, it will have chronically late family and each Duboin forconLAVAZZA from a total into a favorite outdoor hapjust do it. Free yourself up (North’s 2NT was a conventains the same number members: Set the time, and great significance. atreached four spades after culture.IfIfyou thisare perso pening. tional limit raise.”) only once. The difficulty boldly. as soon as you can and tached, get ent when that time arrives, hopefully this yearning East-West competed your life after August, it Taurus (April 20-May 20) West led theConceptis king of dialeveland of the sit down start into a favorite outdoor hapto know and understand more (North’s 2NTeating. was convengreat significance. If yo Sudoku increases monds andshow shifted tofrom aahigh ★★★★★ Looking at you, Those who up late will be shared by your sweetie. pening. tional limit Monday toraise.”) Sunday. heart. When East took his ace, one might think that you VIRGO can tached, hopefully this can be told to find leftovers be very critical when Taurus (April 20-May 20) to know West led king of diahethe needed to lead athe club to beat in kitchen or join you are on cloud nine, but that dealing with you. and understa monds andrest shifted ★★★★★ Looking at you, will be shared by your for ofreturned youto a high thedessert. game. The But East probably isn’t the case. Othheart. tookace his ace, should not When be held hostage one might thinkyour that you a diamond, andEast West’s VIRGO beany veryprecriti situation. Letcan go of ers simply are noticing waiting fordefenders’ them. hethe needed toUS leadlast a club to beat won trick. CONTACT are on cloudanine, but that dealing with you. conceived notions. tendency to smile lot. the game. But East returned probably isn’t the case. OthInstead of gaining six IMPs, Chris Herrington, 529-6510, herrington Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. Gemini (May 21-June Please your questions to DIAMOND lost six more. a email diamond, and West’s ace situation. go ofofa ers simply noticing your anniesmailbox@creators.com, 21) ★★★★ ShareLet more @commercialappeal.com, or20) Mark Richens, 529-2373, ★★★★ A are friendship East’s failure to shiftlast to atrick. won the defenders’ conceived notions. or writeatto:Trick Annie’s Mailbox, tendency to smile a lot. yourself when you are out could take an unexpected club Three was inrichens@commercialappeal.com. Instead of gaining six IMPs, c/o Creators Syndicate, 737 had Sagittarius Gemini (Maywith 21-June with friends. You have (Nov. many explicable. Surely West twist. How you deal DIAMOND lost six more. 3rd Street, Hermosa Beach, something in clubs for to aa changeable 21) ★★★★ Share wond e r f u lm 20) ★★★★ A friendship matter will East’sgood failure to shift CA 90254. his club double. BlameThree it on the Whatyourself the when you ideas; makecould a big di�erence in the take an unexpected at Trick was inpressure and fatigue af- had stars mean: just don’t with friends. Youget hav explicable. Surelythat West outcome. twist. How you deal with Chess Quiz flicts players in the late stage ★★★★★ feedback. something good in clubs for Cancer w o n (June 21-July a changeable matter will of ahis major event. Blame it on the Dynamic double. Capricorn What the ideas 22) ★★★★ might feel in the make aYou big di�erence ★★★★ pressure and fatigue that af(Dec. 22-Jan. stars mean: pulled in several di�erent just d outcome. flicts players in the late stage Positive 19) ★★★★★ directions. Interference ★★★★★ feedb Cancer (June 21-July of a major event. ★★★ Maintain Caa seems keep happening 22)to★★★★ You might feelAverageDynamic sense of huin thepulled form of and di�erent re★★★★ (Dec. incalls several ★★ Positive mor, even as quests from others. 19) ★ directions. Interference So-so a conversaLeo (Julyto23-Aug. 22) ★★★ Main seems keep happening ★ tion or an in★★★ You usually are very sense in the form of calls and re-DifficultAverage teraction begenerous; however, you ★★comes mor, quests from others. very might feel as if a friend or a con (Julybe23-Aug. confusing. So-so a loved Leo one might some- 22) BLACK HAS A CRUSHER tion o Hint: Bishops, East and West. You usually are veryAquarius★(Jan. 20-Feb. what★★★ deceptive or perhaps Difficult generous; however, you 18) ★★★★ You will teract be at completely unrealistic. the loved might feel as if a friend or beck and call of a come Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) confusing. one, but you’ll enjoy every a loved one might be some★★★★ A conflict could ocmoment. Your financial Aquarius (Jan. what deceptive or perhaps cur between you and a loved might not be wi as 18) ★★★★ You completely unrealistic. one. You might have put this well-being CONTACT US it needs to be.call of beck and person on a pedestal. Chris Herrington, Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. clear 22) asthe 19-March one,(Feb. but you’ll enjo 529-6510, herrington Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. could 22) oc-Pisces ★★★★ A conflict 20) ★★★★ A strange @commercialappeal.com, moment. Yourconfin ★★★cur As between much as you youand lovea loved versation could occur withno a or Mark Richens, well-being might to go one. out and also Youabout, mightyou have put this dear friend. What becomes 529-2373, richens@ need person some time with a loved clear as it needs to b on a pedestal. you are not on commercialappeal.com one or by yourself. Make clear is that Pisces (Feb. 19 Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. the 22) same page. plans around these needs. ★★★ As much as you love 20) ★★★★ A stran Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) to go out and about, you also versation could occu ★★★★★ You will become Jacqueline Bigar is at What b friend. need some time with a loved dear more in tune with a certain www.jacquelinebigar.com. clear is that you are one or by yourself. Make plans around these needs. Sudoku Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) ★★★★★ You will become more in tune with a certain

7-19-15

the same page.

Jacqueline Bigar is at www.jacquelinebigar.c

Sudoku

Horoscopes

“Law & Order: 97 Radio-era SVU” actor dummy Ruler 102 Religious entombed in doctrines Handle a domestic issue before By Jacqueline Bigar the Great 104 Cylindrical King Features Syndicate the day ends. Pyramid holder 7-19-15 LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Sets (on) 105 Lying flat Dressage gait (March 106 Berkshire ARIES 21-April 19) HHHH It would be smart to 77 “Law & Order: 97 Radio-era Western city racecourse SVU” actor dummy HHHH Step backsite and let others get over your fussiness quickly, named after a 78 Ruler 102 You Religious Shoshone 107 Indistinct reveal their thoughts. could as you will be dealing with a lot entombed in doctrines chief be taken aback byshape a change of of people at once. All you are Great 104 Cylindrical Cardthe game from 108 1980s auto seeing is what you want to see, pace. Honor what is happening Pyramid holder Mattel 109 Dies down 80 Sets (on) 105 Grimm figure 110 ifBlender around you, and youLying can’tflatgo and nothing more. Be careful, as 81 Dressage 106 Berkshire Hatch in the setting along withgait it, head in aracecourse new di- it might be your distortions that Senate 82 Western city 111 Polynesian idol upset the apple cart. rection. Important 113 ____-by-thenamed after a site people Sea, Shoshone VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) 107 N.J. Indistinct TAURUS (April 20-May Tabloid show 114 creativity Rat Pack chief shape reHHHH You might have a sense 20) HHH Your beginning in 84 Card game from nickname 108 1980s auto that a problem has gone too far. mains your unique 1991 115 Multitude Mattelhigh. Apply 109 Dies down Given a startto 119 is Coverage How you handle a personal matability what happening 86 Grimm figure 110 Blender Not working provider, for 87 Hatchnow. inas theLighten right upsetting about a ter could change this situation. a volunteer short Difficulty level ★★★★★ Senate 111 what Polynesian idolListen to your instincts, and you situation, and120 know Favored by Particle in lies 89 Important 113 ____-by-thefortune seawater ahead. Someone close to you will land well. Your expenses

or maybe just snooze. Don’t allow anyone to slow you down. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22Dec. 21) HHHH Open up a discussion in the most positive way possible. Loosen up; a friendship could play a significant role in what happens. Remain sure of yourself. Don’t back down on a matter that’s important to you. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHH You might feel pressured by someone in a position of authority. You could feel burdened by a set of commitments and responsibilities. Let others know you have had enough. AQUARIUS (Jan. puzzle 20-Feb. people Sea, N.J. Answer to yesterday's be outis ofawhack, so try to 18) HHHHH You have a way and This might 90 seems Tabloiddetached show 114 cold. Rat Pack Sudoku numberin nickname use more self-discipline. isbeginning just a phase. about you that implies that placing puzzle based 1991 115 Multitude LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) you can handle anything. Your on a 9x9 grid with sev- 22) Chess 94 Given a start Quiz 119 Coverage eral given TheYou Your numbers. energy soars. You as might feelprovider, as if youfor HHHH plate is full, but you’ll have an 95 HHHH Not working object is to place the a volunteer to be much more together are finally justified in short a choice seem opportunity to take a short trip Difficulty level ★★★★★ numbers 1 to 9 in the 96 you Favored by made.120 in right now, and you’ll make a have BeParticle careful or switch gears. You are full of empty squares so that fortune seawater no matter energy here, as you could burn some strong and open possibilities.p Answer to to yesterday's eachimpression row, each column you do. If youbox have an im- As a result, doors will open. bridges. Lighten up about a what and each 3x3 Sudoku is aconnumbertains situation the same number pending, push personal matter that is close to portant PISCES (Feb. 19-March placing puzzle based only once. on a The 9x9 difficulty grid with sev- 20) HHHH You might be in your heart, and watch as new it forward. Chess Quiz leveleral of the Conceptis given numbers. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.Thethe mood for a close encounter. possibilities appear. Sudokuobject increases isand tofrom place the You would like to see life from Say little, concenCANCER (June 21-July 22) 21) HHH Monday to Sunday. to 9work. in the a more logical point of view. A project or 1your HHHH Make a call first thing in trate on anumbers empty squares so that involved you are, the discussion with a key person in the morning, especially if it is The lesseach row, each column the3x3 outcome. important. Your ability to move more successful and each box con- your life will help you bottomBLACK A CRUSHER alsotains mightthe need somenumber per- line what is happening. Underforward andHAS come to terms with You CONTACT US same Not 1.matter ... Ng4?could 2. Qxg7 mate. sonal time to once. rethinkThe a decision aHint: personal change. only difficultystanding will evolve as a result.


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Home & Garden

PASSION

for BONSAI

Love for miniature trees keeps his garden growing at age 91 When 91-year-old Maury two sheds built — one for Strauss was 50, his late wife, storing large items such as a Jane, gave him a tree for his riding lawn mower and one birthday. equipped with air conditionIt wasn’t just any tree. The ing where the smaller tools miniature ive-needle pine, and containers needed for sometimes called the “queen” bonsai are kept. There is also of bon sa i , space for potting sparked a hoband other bonsai by that Strauss chores. enjoys almost Behind the every day deshed is a greenCHRISTINE spite having to house where cope with sevStrauss keeps ARPE eral inirmities the young bonGANG associated with sai he propaGREEN THUMB living a long gates by air life. layering during And that, my fellow garden- the winter months. Mature ers of all ages, is just the way bonsai trees — like the pines, he planned it. crape myrtles and Japanese The idea of pursuing bonsai maples — stay outside all seriously came from his father, winter in protected places who, as he outlived most of his with soil and leaves heaped friends, found himself without over the containers to keep buddies to share his favorite the roots cozy. pastimes: ishing and playing In the summer, they are cards. placed on a long table shaded “He couldn’t even get a gin by trees during the morning game,” Strauss said. “I decided hours. Strauss sits and clips I needed to do something that of errant twigs that get in would keep me occupied in my the way of his vision for a tree old age.” with the key elements of bonBonsai proves to be just sai design: an appearance of that. age, fragility and asymmetry. Instead of having to down“I take advantage of what size a garden or give up hor- God gives,” he said, referring ticulture completely, Strauss to the seedlings he calls “bastill enjoys pruning, training, bies.” propagating and maintaining In front of the two sheds is a sizable collection of bonsai a Japanese garden installed by — the prized miniature trees Matt Smith, a garden designer of Japan and China. Their size and an online bonsai mermakes it easy for Strauss to sit chant who lives in Cordova. and work with them. “I tried to make the garden About a year after his as self-sustaining as possible,” wife died in December 2013, Smith said. “It requires only a Strauss and his daughter minimal amount of physical Madison moved to a house maintenance.” situated on six acres in Olive In keeping with the JapaBranch. They quickly had nese aesthetic, the ground

CHRISTINE ARPE GANG/SPECIAL TO THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL

The bonsai collection of Maury Strauss includes this Japanese maple, a black pine and several satsuki azaleas that are covered with pink flowers every spring.

is covered with two kinds of rocks — small blue to black river stones that suggest a running brook and larger brown stones that represent land beside the stream. The dark rocks appear to “low” under a low bridge formed by the wood plank walkway that meanders through the garden. The rocks and other design elements of the garden aren’t just pleasing to the eye. They also function as part of a drainage system that carries water away from the sheds during heavy rainfalls. The beds are ringed with small pieces of tumbled Pennsylvania blue paving stones stood on edge. Strauss’ collection of mature bonsai, including the

ive-needle pine from Jane, is displayed on terra cotta chimney lues of varying heights. Travertine tiles cover the lue openings to support the trees and their containers. The flues and tiles are heavy enough to stay in place yet cost much less than other pedestals, Smith said. They are also in the same color family as the reddish paint used on the two sheds. Each bonsai gets regular watering from an automatic irrigation system that delivers water to the base of the trees. The collection includes Strauss’ beloved satsuki azaleas that are covered in pink lowers in the spring. A black pine (known as the “king” of bonsai), a crape myrtle now showing pink flowers and

Japanese maples are also in the display. “I didn’t have a lot of time to work on the garden, so I was pleased that it all came together well,” Smith said. “I like the aesthetics of various textures and colors in the garden.” Strauss, who worked as a commodities analyst for Continental Grain, visited gardens and bonsai nurseries in Japan and elsewhere as his passion for the tiny trees grew. He also partnered with Brussel Martin in establishing Brussel’s Bonsai Nursery in Olive Branch but is no longer involved in the company. Bonsai has been the lasting hobby that Strauss started decades ago with a birthday gift. “They (the trees) seem to like me, and I love them.”

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22 » Tuesday, July 21, 2015 »

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Community SNAPSHOTS

Josey Moore won irst place in the solo division of the National Dance Competition in Myrtle Beach, S.C. She also placed in some of the group routines. Moore is a student at NVS Dance Studio in Collierville. The Germantown Area Chamber of Commerce held a ribbon cutting to welcome Sylvester Tate, owner of Tate Computer Systems Inc., located at 3800 Hacks Cross, Suite 103, to the chamber. TCSI provides IT staing, remote backup, network management and hardware products and services for various companies. TCSI is a longtime partner with Microsoft, Dell, Hewlett-Packard, Sharp and Samsung and in 2010 became an Apple Authorized Service Provider. For more information, go to tcsitech.net.

The Suburban Garden Club of Germantown ended its 85th year as a club by welcoming new oicers for the coming year. The meeting took place at the home of Liz Baker. The new oicers are Lauren McGehee, vice president, Kay Black, corresponding secretary, Priscilla Thompson, recording secretary, and Lynda Smith, president. Sandy Sherman (not pictured) was named treasurer.

SEND US YOUR SNAPSHOTS Send snapshots of family gatherings, community events, out-of-town adventures and more to share in The Weekly. 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 and all the pertinent details.

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Residents and staf at Germantown Plantation Senior Living enjoyed a fun project making chocolate and peanut butter bark. Making the sweet treats are Mariah Bordelon, Jean Straub, Thelma Hembrof, Carol Burchett, activity director, Willa McKnight and Helen Pollard. Lexie and her owners recently took a long drive from Germantown to Jerry’s Sno Cones in Memphis for a special treat. Lexie patiently waits while her owners make their purchase.


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T H E W E E K LY

ÂŤ Tuesday, July 21, 2015 ÂŤ 23

Community PETS OF THE WEEK | Germantown animal shelter

Name: Sherbet Age: 14 weeks Breed: Dilute tortoiseshell, short hair Description: She purrs nonstop.

members of the Collierville Citizen Police academy wore the same gear police oicers would use during a recent exercise. the 18th police academy class will graduate tonight at the harrell theater.

Name: Phoebe Age: 4 1/2 Breed: Boxer/pit bull mix Description: She loves to go on walks.

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

COLLIERVILLE

Police celebrate graduates of Citizens Academy class Special to The Weekly

The Collierville Police Department is celebrating the 18th graduating class from the Citizens Police Academy tonight with a graduating ceremony at the Harrell Theatre, 440 W. Powell Road at 7 p.m. The ceremony will

include remarks from Mayor Stan Joyner, relections from a class graduate and recognition of participants in the program. Since the Citizens Police Academy started in 2000, Collierville residents have learned details about diferent areas

of law enforcement and participated in simulated training scenarios. Upon graduation, participants are given the opportunity to join the Citizens Police Academy Alumni Association to serve as “ambassadors� to the Collierville community.

a member of the Collierville Citizens Police academy class writes down a few notes while looking over the evidence sitting on the table.

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MOTORCYCLE SALES PROFESSIONALS • Earning potential: $80K-$100K annually • The South’s fastest growing Harley dealership • Fun and lively work environment where you can 903-960 express your individuality • The only requirement is a ATV’s, great personality ---------------------------------------- Go-Karts, Looking for motivated, Motorcycles customer service focused individuals who are interested in finding a career, not just another job. ---------------------------------------Apply online at: SouthernThunderHD.com 4870 Venture Drive Southaven, MS 38671 (662) 349-1099 Only 3,500 miles, "American Flag" Custom paint job, cover included. $10,800 Call 901-493-7357

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24 » Tuesday, July 21, 2015 »

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EVERY PRE-OWNED VEHICLE COMES WITH 3 MO./3000 MI. WARRANTY AT NO CHARGE! www.colliervillechryslerdodgejeepram.com USED CARS UNDER $10,000 Stk# Z769653A

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2014 DODGE

RAM 1500 4X4 17,942 miles

$27,757

Stk# JB51303A

SILVERADO

2013 CHRYSLER TOWN &

$24,927

$20,782

Stk# 1247A

Stk# J726641A

Stk# R591499A

16,022 miles

59,243 miles

$23,989

$26,442

$14,559

$7,995

Stk# 1278

2014 RAM

COUNTRY TOURING L

FUSION SE

24,093 miles

Stk# R660459A

2013 TOYOTA TUNDRA

77,482 miles

Stk# 1291

$40,678

$26,996

Stk# J741381A

Stk# D227960A

2014 NISSAN

60,412 miles

15,647 miles

SENTRA SR

$16,066

2010 JEEP

PATRIOT

99,799 miles

$9,115

Stk# D723707A

$10,000

LARAMIE LONG HORN

Stk# R724915A

Stk# J644706A

VOLKSWAGEN PASSAT

2011 DODGE JOURNEY

$23,997

$14,441

53,803 miles

Stk# CJ631445B

Stk# 1279

Stk# J711591A

2013 DODGE RAM

LARAMIE LONGHORN

CHARGER SE

1500 BIG HORN 4WD

$35,633

$18,530

$27,463

39,769 miles

32,379 miles

2013 CHEVROLET CAMARO

SS CONVERTIBLE 8,533 miles

$33,769

2015 JEEP RUBICON UNLIMITED

$4,000

OFF MSRP

Stk# J635496. MSRP $44,070 Winchester

Collierville Chrysler-Dodge-Jeep-Ram

Byhalia

www.colliervillechryslerdodgejeepram.com

MAIN STREET

3,945 miles

Hours: Mon-Sat 8am-8pm • Closed Sunday 393 S Byhalia Rd. Collierville, TN 38017

901-854-JEEP

Stk# D550380A

FORD MUSTANG 2015

62,143 miles

2014 DODGE

$17,465

$23,771

$17,499

$37,460

62,647 miles

OFF MSRP

2012

SONATA SE

KING RANCH

Stk# 1293

Stk# R663090A

Harley Davidson Edition, 61K miles

2015 RAM 1500 1/2 TON CREW CAB HEMI

Stk# 1292

Stk# J847555

22,537 miles

2013 DODGE RAM 1500

$18,367

$18,898

$35,233

69,962 miles

2008 DODGE

CHARGER RT

8,619 miles

11,059 miles

106,342 miles

42,692 miles

$19,973

2014

2015 HYUNDAI

22,269 miles

CHALLENGER

35,349 miles

TOYOTA TACOMA

WRANGLER RUBICON HARDROCK

2010 FORD EXPEDITION

2014 DODGE RAM 1500

PLATINUM CREWMAX

Stk# J658036A

Stk# R660315A

2014 JEEP

2010 FORD

2011 DODGE

COUNTRY TOURING

2011 CHEVROLET

$17,033

Stk# C611146A

DODGE CHALLENGER SXT

TSX

51,840 miles

39,009 miles

CAMARO LT

Stk# 1273

2015

CHALLENGER RT

34,273 miles

Stk# J631308B

WRANGLER UNLIMITED

2010 ACURA

2014 CHRYSLER TOWN &

$15,393

$18,561

1500 OUTDOORSMAN

2012 TOYOTA

PRIUS 1

Stk# 1294

2015 JEEP

$57,995

Stk# 1276A

2010 DODGE

CHARGER SE

Dark Blue, Black/Light Frost Beige w/Base Cloth Seats, Audio Jack Input for Mobile Devices, Front Bucket Seats, Fully automatic headlights, Power door mirrors, Power driver seat, Remote keyless entry, Remote USB Port, 37,569 miles

$17,939

1,184 miles

$44,682

2014 DODGE

200 LIMITED

1500 BIG HORN

Stk# 1288

Stk# 1280

385


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