Thursday, June 5, 2014
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CHARITY HORSE SHOW IN FULL GALLOP
GOLFERS TEE UP FOR ST. JUDE
Julia Alexandra Livesay reigns over annual event, full of excitement, music, food and crafts. Page 4-5
Head out to TPC Southwind through Sunday to cheer your favorite pros in annual charity golf tournament.
Germantown Weekly SCHOOLS
Munis assume keys to schools Suburban districts take over buildings By Jennifer Pignolet pignolet@commercialappeal.com 901-529-2372
and Clay Bailey bailey@commercialappeal.com 901-529-2393
Municipal school systems in Shelby County took a major step Monday toward opening this summer, oicially assuming ownership of their buildings from the county school system. While the responsibility for the buildings now falls to the individual suburbs, nothing of signiicance changed at the facilities from the time employees left work on Friday. The county didn’t change the locks, and the buildings weren’t cleaned out by the former owners over the weekend. They weren’t cleaned up, either. That responsibility now falls to the six municipalities taking over the properties. In Germantown, Supt. Jason Manuel and his staf started making adjustments early in the day. Manuel and director of operations Josh Cathey met Shelby County Schools personnel in Arlington to retrieve the master key sets, but maintenance and administrative staf were in the buildings throughout the day. “Every time you walk in the building, you see something else you have to take care of,” Cathey said as he and Manuel strolled through Houston High. Several signs in the schools, for example, have the Shelby County logo. A water main at the high school broke during inal exam week. Manuel said Shelby County ixed
PHOTOS BY JASON R. TERRELL/THE WEEKLY
Home inspector and part time woodworker Jim McGhee demonstrates the use of tools dating to the 1850s, many of which belonged to his great-great-grandfather, a cabinetmaker from the Midwest. McGhee manned a table at the second annual How-To Festival at the Germantown Community Library.
GERMANTOWN COMMUNITY LIBRARY
How to have fun Annual How-To Festival teaches, reaches kids, families
By Jason R. Terrell terrell@commercialappeal.com 901-529-2509
Young Alma Morrison pointed to an auburn-colored hen near the side of a small, hay-lined enclosure and proudly proclaimed, “That’s RED!” This wouldn’t be unusual if Alma was showing livestock at the fair. But on this sunny afternoon she showed of her four chickens next to the information desk in the center of the Germantown Community Library. Alma and her parents, Steve and Emily, were just a few of the presenters that represented 30 diferent areas of interest at this year’s How-To Festival held on May 31. In its second year, the celebration of do-it-yourself skills brought together presenters through social meSee LIBRARY, 2
Master Gardeners Jane Carter (in blue) and Brenda Higgins talk about container gardening with attendees at the second annual How-To Festival at the Germantown Community Library.
See SCHOOLS, 2
Inside the Edition
FAITH IN ACTION
RETURN TO FRANCE
Pharmacist hopes to fill need for getting, managing meds
Forever Young helps World War II veterans travel to Normandy for 70th anniversary of D-Day. NEWS, 5
By David Waters waters@commercialappeal.com 901-529-2377
SUPPORTER, SABOTEUR? Partner’s encouragement is critical to success in starting — and sticking to — a new fitness program. HEALTH & FITNESS, 8
ZOMBIE INVASION Collierville Middle pom squad gives ghoulish performance at Zombie Walk. NEWS, 2 The Commercial Appeal © Copyright 2014
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I looked at my 78-yearold father’s list of prescribed medications the other day and felt bad that I hadn’t gone to medical school. Or at least to pharmacy school. Other than two medications I recognized and actually could pronounce, I had no idea what the other 10 were for, how long he’d been taking them, or how much longer he should. My 75-year-old mother helps him with his luctuating formulary, but she’s got her own pharmaceutical regimen. And neither of them went to med school.
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In the News GERMANTOWN BOARD 0F MAYOR AND ALDERMEN
Spat over GHS-TV called a ‘misunderstanding’ By Jane Roberts robertsj@commercialappeal.com 901-529-2512
Germantown Alderman Rocky Janda says the lareup over funding of the student-run TV station at Germantown High School is a misunderstanding he hopes can be worked out. “The whole thing is based on having receipts for capital purchases,” Janda said. “I am not going to give someone $203,000 just because that is the way
it was done in the past.” For more than 20 years, money that Germantown city officials collected from cable-television subscribers for the public TV access studio at the school was deposited quarterly into a foundation account managed by the city and the school. When the Shelby County Schools district made purchases, it sent an invoice to the foundation, and the bill was paid, said Ted Horrell, former principal of GHS.
PHARMACY
“I take exception to the idea that the terms of the contract were not met by GHS-TV and the community TV foundation,” Horrell said. “I was at numerous meetings and it was never mentioned that there was missing documentation. We were reassured repeatedly that the money would be forthcoming.” Shelby County Schools says Germantown is being diicult because three schools in the city, including GHS, will continue to
be run by SCS. “It’s historically always been done a certain way. Now all of a sudden, the game changes,” said SCS legal counsel Valerie Speakman. “It just seems very clear it’s a punishment to SCS for keeping those schools.” Janda expects a solution can be worked out. “Right now, if I have documentation for $203,000, which we don’t beneit from, common sense is going to say, ‘Why would you do that?’ ”
Germantown Police report MAY 26
■ Oicers initiated a traic stop and arrested an adult male found to have marijuana in his possession in the 7000 block of Poplar at 9:02 a.m. MAY 27
PHOTOS by NIkkI bOERTMAN/THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL
Members of the Collierville Middle School pom squad give a ghoulish rendition of Michael Jackson’s “Thriller” in front of the Orpheum theater last Friday.
The Living End Zombie horde stumbles, dances through annual walk By Jonathan A. Capriel capriel@commercialappeal.com 901-529-2370
Instead of crawling out of a cemetery or breaching a biohazard quarantine, living-dead enthusiasts Jordan Geiger and her iancé Robert Frost arrived last Friday to the annual Memphis Zombie Walk in their 2001 Acura. After parking in front of the U.S. Post Oice on G.E. Patterson Avenue and Second Street, they joined the growing crowd of participants at Navy Park smearing faux gore on each other. “This is our irst time here,” Frost said while splashing stage blood on Geiger’s white shirt. Both love zombie movies, Frost said, though he prefers the scary ones like “28 Days Later” while she favors comedies like “Zombieland.” “Opposites do attract,” Geiger said. Even though the walk’s number of pretend-lesh eaters has increased every year, the event is still loosely organized on Facebook, said coordinator Jeremy William. “We have kept it pretty grass roots,” he said while looking up at the storm clouds. “If it rains it will be the irst time in eight years. But we walk rain or shine. Last time we had about a thousand people I expect more this year.” At about 5:30 p.m., rain washed on the roughly 300 early participants, turning puddles at Navy Park pink with fake blood. But, half an hour before the walk, the rain eased up and
the number of undead more than tripled. The walk has changed since 2005, Williams said. While the mass moved along South Main, Williams and three other coordinators place boxes of donated canned food into their cars. “This is a new element we added to the walk,” Rogers said. “Nobody’s forced to donate, but we have been able to give a lot to the local food banks thanks to this walk.” Just as the reanimated horde reached the corner of South Main and Beale, a lash mob of girls limped under the Orpheum theater’s marquee and broke into a rendition of Michael Jackson’s “Thriller.” The choreographed-zombie dance was “absolutely” not a coincidence, said Kanette Rodgers director of communications for the Orpheum. The girls were recruited from Collierville Middle School by the theater. “Every year we look for a way to help this growing celebration of the undead,” Rodgers said. Aside from organizing the lash mob, the Orpheum kicked of its Summer Movie Series with a zombie double feature, the 1968 classic “Night of the Living Dead” and 2009’s horror-comedy “Zombieland.” Walkers were not turned away, Rodgers said. Those who donated to the Memphis Zombie Walk’s food drive received a $1 discount on their ticket price and “decontamination centers” outside the theater cleaned any damp “gore” from clothing while plastic bags were placed on seats to protect them from staining, Rodgers said. “The Orpheum belongs to the city,” Rodgers said. “So in a way it belongs to Memphians both living and nonliving.”
■ Two male subjects took merchandise from the business and left without paying for it in the 1300 block of S. Germantown Road at 3:27 a.m. ■ Someone damaged construction equipment in the 2700 block of Calkins Creek at 9:21 a.m. ■ Oicers arrested a male juvenile after he was observed taking items from a vehicle in the 1800 block of Exeter Road at 9:21 a.m. ■ Someone opened credit accounts using the victim’s personal information in the 8800 block of Somerset Lane at 3 p.m. ■ Male and female subjects observed taking merchandise from the business without paying for it in the 7700 block of Farmington at 6:35 p.m. ■ Vehicle collided into a warning sign, crossed a gulley and struck a retaining wall causing injuries at Forest Hill and Farmoor Road at 10:39 p.m. MAY 28
■ Someone cut a tire on the victim’s vehicle on the 7600 block of Cross Village at 9:54 a.m. ■ Someone used the victim’s Social Security number to open credit in California in the 7600 block of Cross Village at 11 a.m. ■ A known suspect used a ladder to enter the second story window of the residence and take prescription medication and a garage door opener in the 2100 block of Shallow Ford Cove at 12:50 p.m. ■ Two vehicles collided causing injuries at Germantown Road and Watkins Road at 11:38 a.m. MAY 29
■ Unknown suspects forced entry into business and took several irearms in the 6600 block of Poplar at 6:41 a.m. ■ Someone forced entry through the front door of the residence and took various electronics in the 7500 block of Conner Cove at 12:05 p.m. ■ Victim alleges that a co-worker’s husband is harassing and stalking him in the 3800 block of Forest Hill Irene at 3:45 p.m. ■ Someone took a delivery package from the front porch of the residence in the 1800 block of Woodridge Cove at 5:04 p.m.
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dia and by word-of-mouth that represented hobbies and interests as diverse as beekeeping, ingerprinting, knitting, jewelry-making and metal-detecting, just to name a few. A inal count revealed that 930 people came through — up from 700 people last year. According to library director Daniel Page, the festival was the brainchild of adult services librarian Emily Baker. Page said the festival has become the library’s biggest single-day event. The festival not only featured hands-on demonstrations of various arts, crafts and hobbies, but also had a live band and food vendors, as well. While banjos and guitars played outside, inside the Morrisons shared their stories and gave out advice culled from their experience of raising four chickens in the backyard of their East Memphis home. At peak production, the birds can lay 20 eggs per week which the family
town City Administrator Patrick Lawton said the city was withholding the funds because SCS failed to meet a May 31, 2013, deadline for informing the city what it intended to purchase. On Monday, Horrell, who is now superintendent of Lakeland city schools, presented the city with the e-mail he sent to Janda on May 22, 2013, listing equipment worth $203,000 the studio manager intended to purchase.
DOWNTOWN
from 1 Baker is leasing 1,500 square feet of the old food court, next to the old theater. Dr. Leigh N. Hersey’s nonproit administration grad students at the University of Memphis helped him develop a fundraising and marketing plan. If all goes well, Baker and his medical partners plan to open the charity pharmacy in January. “Patients will also be ofered this list on a jump drive they can keep in their wallets,” Baker said. “At every face-to-face followup appointment this jump drive will be updated and revised with recommendations and action plans.” Baker is working with pharmacy directors from Baptist and Le Bonheur hospitals, as well as Union University’s pharmacy program, a national medication management organization called Outcomes MTM, and Dispensary of Hope, a Nashville nonprofit that distributes donated meds. He also hopes to work with Christ Community Health Services and the Church Health Center. “What good is a brilliant diagnosis if the patient cannot aford the medicine,” said Dr. Scott Morris, executive director of the Church Health Center. “There is deinitely a role for what Philip wants to do. We are certainly supportive.” Nearly half of the U.S. population has at least one chronic condition that requires medication. And yet, nearly half of the nation’s patients don’t take medications as prescribed, resulting in nearly $300 billion a year in trips to the emergency room, the hospital or other medical facilities. For Baker, what he does isn’t just a job. It’s a healing ministry. “As pharmacists, we have been blessed with an intimate knowledge of medicine,” he said. “We have an obligation to use this knowledge to serve our patients.” Only as prescribed, of course. For more on Good Shepherd Medication Management, visit good shepherdmm.org.
This year, Horrell says the money was not deposited in the account, and the studio leaders, nervous about spending money they didn’t have, made no purchases. “They were not willing to take it on faith that the money would be forthcoming, particularly in light of the uncertainty with the school situation,” Horrell said in an e-mail Monday. The city’s agreement with GHS-TV ends June 30. Last Friday, German-
Steve Morrison talks about his pastime of raising chickens in the backyard of his East Memphis home. The four birds can provide the family with up to 20 eggs per week. Morrison, his wife, Emily, and daughter, Alma, shared their passion with visitors at the Second Annual How-To Festival. JASON R. TERRELL THE WEEkLy
consumes or shares with friends and neighbors. Jim McGhee helped interested kids try out a few of the tools on display in his booth on woodworking. McGhee, a home inspector by day, says he likes working with power tools, but is proud to demonstrate the proper use of several 19th-century tools that belonged to his greatgreat-grandfather, a German cabinet maker from
the Mid-west who died in the 1870s. Behind him was a booth teaching CPR skills and behind them were two master gardeners touting the beneits and ease of container gardening. But, toward the end of the day, the longest line was at the booth of Lea Winield of Balloons by Lea who twisted and molded balloons into animals for the kids.
from 1 the pipes, but not the concrete broken to repair the break. Manuel said he expects Shelby County to complete the work. “I have good faith that that will happen,” he said. The high school staf also went to work converting two large rooms that the plant manager formerly used into space for the new television studio. The oicial transfer of title for the buildings from Shelby County occurs as the new suburban districts prepare to open for the 2014-15 school term, after years of legal and political debate. Each suburb received most of the public school buildings within its boundaries as part of the lawsuit settlement for municipal schools. However, in Germantown, the three namesake schools — Germantown Elementary, Middle and High schools — stayed with Shelby County Schools. While the buildings were transferred to the suburban cities for token
WEEKLY costs, the suburbs are paying various amounts annually over the next 12 years to settle the lawsuit regarding formation of the schools. The money is designated to cover retiree beneits through the county school system. The Collierville school board was moving into its new oices Monday. Collierville Supt. John Aitken spent most of the morning supervising movers hauling boxes, ile cabinets and some furniture from Town Hall to Collierville Historic High School near Town Square at Poplar and Walnut. The central oice will occupy the irst loor of the campus, last used as Collierville Middle School. Aitken was wearing shorts and tennis shoes when he arrived to pick up the keys for the eight schools in Collierville. “It’s a culmination of hard work and efort by a lot of people,” Aitken said. “Once we pick up the recorded and signed deeds, the bills of sale and the keys, it makes it real.” Staf reporter Lela Garlington contributed to this story.
Volume 2, No. 14 The Weekly, a publication of The Commercial Appeal, is delivered free on Thursdays to select residents throughout Germantown and Collierville.
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In the News GerMANToWN
Board tentatively agrees to 2 start times for schools
Meghan Claney (left), health and wellness specialist, and Nancy Kelley, school counseling and intervention supervisor, help bring in boxes at the newly renovated Collierville Historic High School building Monday morning. The new municipal school campus is at 146 College, about two blocks from Town Hall.
By Jennifer Pignolet pignolet@commercialappeal.com 901-529-2372
WILLIAM DESHAZER THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL
Collierville
Homecoming Municipal district opens oices at historic high school pus at 146 College fronts Poplar and is two blocks from Town Square. The IT department with another 10 employees will work out of nearby Collierville Elementary. Town officials spent about $200,000 getting the irst loor of the building ready and are planning a $2 million renovation in 2015 at the city-owned facility by tearing down an addition and renovating the upstairs, the basement and the auditorium. “I think everybody has enjoyed — the chaos,” said Town Administrator James Lewellen as Supt. John Aitken and others left their temporary home at Town Hall for their new school digs. “It’s a milestone in our progress.”
By Lela Garlington garlington@commercialappeal.com 901-529-2349
Human resources clerk Cindy Mills dusted her desk inside Collierville’s Historic High School Monday morning and placed a planter between two family photos. Her daughter had painted the new municipal school’s logo on the planter. Like other school employees, Mills illed her car with oice items before workers from General Moving Co. arrived at 9:25 a.m. Monday at Town Hall. She was one of about 20 or so employees arranging their oice spaces for the town’s irst central oice for Collierville’s municipal school district. The cam-
For Collierville, the property has been hallowed school grounds since 1872, when Bellevue College opened on the site as a private college for women. It became a Shelby County school in 1899, but the original buildings have since been replaced In some ways, the recent ight of merger/de-merger between Memphis City and Shelby County schools resembles the contentious arguments when affluent Collierville parents opposed free or public schools in the late 1800s. “The less affluent were of the opinion that it was not the school’s purpose to teach students, ‘To speak Greek like pigs squealing, but to teach them, black and white, to know their duty and the right that every youth may learn to love justice and truth,’ ” wrote Clarene Pinkston Russell in her book, “Collierville,
Germantown Hardware & Paint
Tennessee: Her People and Neighbors.” The two-story building with a basement features modern and neoclassical architecture common when construction started in 1930 and was inished in 1936 under President Franklin Roosevelt’s Works Projects Administration. It even has an outdoor sunken garden. For the town’s irst municipal school superintendent, Monday’s move turned into a homecoming. “I started my Shelby County school career here as a math teacher and assistant basketball coach,” said Aitken, who had ditched his usual coat and tie for shorts and tennis shoes. Stopping in to see the school, Mayor Stan Joyner, a 1968 CHS graduate, said, “This is just a natural location to anchor Collierville schools.”
The Germantown Municipal School Board voted 5-0 on Monday to tentatively move forward with two start times for its ive schools this coming school year. The motion was vague in its language, asking the administration to bring the schools to “less than three start times … as soon as possible.” The vote means the administration will work on a plan to have the ive schools start at two different times as soon as this school year. If the administration discovers it can’t be done this year, then the board can reconsider. The board members and administrators have said they agree two start times are preferable to three, as some schools are starting as early as 7 a.m. and others as late as 9. The debate has been the feasibility of making the change this year. Supt. Jason Manuel said if the board moves forward with two start times, it may cost several hundreds of thousands of extra dollars, and the district may have to go back to the city and ask for more money to make it happen. Preliminary estimates from bus company Durham Services indicated it could cost as much as $500,000 to merge three start times into two. Manuel said there is no extra room in his budget to come up with that much money.
Board member Mark Dely said his goal is to exhaust all possible ways to change the start times this year before resigning to the idea that the change is impossible. “Let’s go charge down the road, see if we can do it, and if we need more money, we’ll cross that bridge when we come to it,” he said. In a work session before the meeting, the board heard from Durham representative David Brabender, the regional manager for the company. Brabender said the change is not impossible for this year, and he would do his best to make it happen if that’s what the board wanted. But he cautioned it could come at a price, not just inancially, but of smooth logistics on the irst day of school. Manuel said last year’s change, with Shelby County Schools merging with Memphis City Schools, often left students hanging around school at the end of the day or on their street corners in the morning. Brabender said he thought he could find enough buses for Germantown to do two start times instead of three, but the issue is hiring enough staf. Because the company will now be servicing all of Shelby County Schools and the municipal districts, the irm is already stretched thin trying to hire an additional 400 drivers. Merging start times would mean an additional 10-15 drivers to hire in less than 60 days.
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Community GERMANTOWN CHARITY HORSE SHOW PRINCESSES
MARY MARGARET ANDERSON
LILLIAN SCOTT BURROW
CISCILY BLYTHE CRISLIP
SARAH ELIZABETH CURRAN
ROSEMARY VIRGINIA DUNN
EMMA CLAIRE EFKEMAN
O’NEAL EMILY GREEN
AUDREY GRACE HANISCO
MARY MARGARET HYDE
LANA REBECCA KABEL
MARIA RENEE KRAMER
MCKENZIE GRACE MANESS
JULIA ALEXANDRA LIVESAY Germantown Charity Horse Show Queen
SHANNON KATHLEEN MCGOWAN
KARSON MICHELLE NELSON
CHANDLER-GRACE LYNN MICHAEL
ALANNA MARIE OLIPHANT
STEPHANIE ANNE PIEROTTI
MICAELA MARIE PRESTON
LETA ANDREA ROWAN
HEATHER ELIZABETH WALTERS
HANNAH MARIE WILLIAMS
CARTER HALL RICE
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In the News BOARD OF MAYOR AND ALDERMEN
Collierville to consider raises for mayor, aldermen By Lela Garlington garlington@commercialappeal.com 901-529-2349
Collierville oicials approved a resolution May 27 that changes how the town sets the pay scale for salaries of the mayor and aldermen. The resolution was passed unanimously by the Board of Mayor and Aldermen with no discussion. In other action during a nonvoting work session that followed the board’s business meeting, Collierville — along with Arling-
ton, Bartlett, Lakeland and Millington — are looking at having the same health insurance administrator as the towns’ ive municipal school districts to save health care costs. The Collierville school board approved the health insurance component as a part of its shared services agreement with the other municipal school districts except for Germantown. Germantown’s school district and the city’s municipal staf may join forces to open a health clinic for both city and school workers.
Collierville would still have its same separate selfinsured health plan and beneits it has now but the company that administers the plan may change. Town oicials considered last year more than doubling the salaries of the mayor and aldermen after the next two election cycles in 2014 and in 2016. The town has staggered terms with the mayor and two aldermen running in 2014, and three aldermen running in 2016. “You can’t give yourself a raise while you are sitting in that seat during
that term,” said Collierville Mayor Stan Joyner after the meeting. The aldermen talked last year about increasing the mayor’s annual salary to $35,000 from $15,000, the aldermen’s salaries to $12,000 from $4,800 and $5,200 for vice mayor, who is an aldermen. Joyner said he expects a resolution to change the pay rates in the next two or three months. If approved, this would be the first change in salaries since 2001. The salaries of elected oicials are part of the
town’s charter, which makes changing them more diicult. During the discussion about health care costs, Human Resources director Jay Jefries said Aetna proposed a $5 million a year contract compared to $8.9 million from the current provider, Health Cost Solutions, and $8.4 million from HCC. If approved, the group’s size will grow from the town’s 422 employees to a combined workforce of about 3,100 employees with ive school systems and five city govern-
ments. The change is making the premiums more attractive because the claims risk is spread out over a larger group. Jefries said Collierville initially projected single health coverage would cost about $105 a month and family health coverage at about $249 monthly. Now he said, it likely will be $96 a month for singles and $224 for families of town workers. After the presentation, Alderman Tom Allen said, “I don’t think we have a choice.”
GERMANTOWN
Charity horse show in full gallop By Jennifer Pignolet pignolet@commercialappeal.com 901-529-2372
PHOTOS BY BRANDON DILL/SPECIAL TO THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL
World War II veteran Bob Bedford is greeted by Bill Ledford with the Patriot Guard Riders inside the terminal at Memphis International Airport before traveling to Normandy, France with fellow veterans who fought in the D-Day invasion of Europe on June 6, 1944.
WORLD WAR II VETERANS
That longest day Veterans return to Normandy for 70th anniversary
The 66th annual Germantown Charity Horse Show kicked of Tuesday with ive days of equestrian competition in multiple disciplines. More than 900 horses and their riders will descend on Germantown through this weekend for the show, which culminates in a Grand Prix jumper show on Saturday. Show president Jimmy Chancellor said the economic impact on the region is estimated at $2.5 million to $3.5 million every year. “We don’t have enough stalls. There were more people who wanted to come,” Chancellor said before the show began. “I think we’re going to have a real good show.” The show features competitions for all ages and levels of ability, including
waters@commercialappeal.com 901-529-2377
World War II veteran Phil Nicastro walks past members of the Patriot Guard Riders as he heads through the terminal at Memphis International Airport before traveling to Normandy, France.
tro said. “It brought me home.” Seven decades, nearly 26,000 days, have passed since Nicastro took part in D-Day, history’s largest seaborne invasion, which included 11,000 planes, 50,000 vehicles and 150,000 Allied troops. After the war, Nicastro met a girl at a post in Virginia. They were married in 1946 — but not before he removed one of his ive tattoos. “I told him that he wasn’t going to hug me with an arm that said ‘Betty,’” said Ramona Nicastro. Nicastro brought his new wife home to Memphis. He made a living by working in a body shop. The couple lived in the same house in Byhalia, Miss., for 45 years. They raised three children who gave them seven grandchildren and a dozen greatgrandchildren. D-Day resulted in 10,000 Allied casualties, including 4,000 dead, German casualties were probably about the same. The Battle of Normandy also killed more than 20,000 French civilians. Friday, President Barack Obama, French President Francois Hollande, and other European leaders will gather near Omaha to commemorate the 70th anniversary of D-Day. Nicastro and seven other Memphis-area D-Day veterans will have frontrow seats. “Didn’t want the frontrow seats I had 70 years ago,” said Jack Claiborne, 90, a seaman who was driving troops to shore at Omaha. The Memphis veterans also will join Michael Reagan, son of President Ronald Reagan, for the opening of a new exhibit
at the Airborne Museum in Normandy. The trip was arranged by the Forever Young Senior Wish Organization and its founding president, Diane Hight. Hight and several Memphis-area veterans met Michael Reagan when they visited Normandy a year ago. Reagan donated $25,000 to help fund this year’s trip. “Most of these men haven’t been back to Normandy since D-Day,” Hight said. “Not physically anyway.” Monday morning, Nicastro, seven other D-day veterans and more than a dozen of their family members boarded a Bellevue Baptist Church bus. An armada of Harleys, mounted by police oicers and veterans of more recent wars, escorted them to the airport, where they were met by a Navy band and a line of American lagholding well-wishers. “I didn’t expect the escort,” Nicastro said as he walked into the airport. “We had an escort on DDay too, but people were shooting at us that time.” This time, Nicastro is taking a commercial light to France. This time he’s traveling with his wife, Ramona. This time, the only equipment he’s carrying that might qualify as a weapon is his walking cane. “This trip will be much easier and a lot quieter,” Nicastro said. “Thank God.” Forever Young will host a trip to Belgium Sept. 2028 to commemorate the 70th anniversary of the Battle of the Bulge. For more information, visit ForeverYoungSeniorWish.org or contact Hight at 901-299-7516.
native and Olympic gold medalist, Taylor has been the NBC commentator for the equestrian events in the Olympics, and will provide the announcing for the Charity Horse Show’s Grand Prix. “We’re really happy to have Melanie because she is a Germantown person,” Chancellor said. “She started riding at the Germantown Charity Horse Show.” The show beneits the Exchange Club Family Center, which works to bring an end to child abuse in the Mid-South. The events take place at 7745 Poplar Pike and are all open to the public. Parking is available behind Germantown High School. Entry is free in the mornings, and $5 for the evening shows. The Grand Prix, sponsored by local heating and cooling company Conway Services, and worth a total of $25,000 in prize money, is Saturday at 5 p.m.
Christ Centered, Child Focused Education
By David Waters
The last time Phillip Nicastro went to France, he was a it and fearless 17-year-old Navy machinegunner in a 5,000-ship armada sent to rescue Europe from the Nazis. “I wasn’t scared of the devil back then,” Nicastro said. “None of us were. We were all kids when we went to ight that war.” A few months before, Nicastro had boarded LST495, a new transport ship laid down and launched in Evansville, Indiana. LST stood for Large Ship Tanks, but sailors dubbed it a Large Slow Target. The 495 was designed to transport troops and tanks from shore to shore, not to ight. The ship passed by Memphis on its way to the gulf, the ocean, and then the English Channel. Nicastro and his mates arrived on the coast of Normandy, France, at a beach dubbed Omaha, on June 6, 1944. D-Day. They were met by lines of logs, metal hedgehogs and other mined anti-tank barriers, as well as German machine guns and artillery. “The closer we got to the beach, there were dead bodies loating everywhere upside down,” said Nicastro. “The bodies were just parting as the ship moved closer to shore.” Nicastro, a ship’s cook, was manning a 20mm machine gun on his loating target, trying to provide cover for the soldiers storming the beaches. “When a plane would go down, everyone would say, ‘I got ’em.’ I’d say it, too, but I hope I didn’t,” Nicastro said. “Shoot, I didn’t want to kill nobody. The Germans were kids just like me. They were just doing what they were told to do just like I was.” Nicastro served on the 495 through 1944. The ship was decommissioned in 1946 and sold for scrapping in 1948. “To me it was the best ship in the leet,” Nicas-
children and some of the country’s top professionals. Chancellor’s sister, publicity chairwoman Wanda Chancellor, said the number of horse training barns in the area helps make the show so INSIDE successful. Germantown “It’s not Charity Horse just a loShow queen, cal show, princesses. 4 a lt h o u g h it is a big show for all of our locals,” she said. One local addition this year will be a performance from a group of teenagers from Eads who perform a drill team-style routine with their horses. They call themselves the Old West Special Trail Brand Entry Team and often are the opening act for major competitions. Chancellor said they will perform after the Grand Prix on Saturday. Also new this year is announcer Melanie Smith Taylor. A Germantown
PreK - 8th Grade Co-Educational
SCHEDULE A TOUR OF THE INCARNATION CATHOLIC SCHOOL CAMPUS TODAY! Established in 2000, Incarnation Catholic School was built upon the many rich traditions of the Catholic Diocese of Memphis. Children are valued and taught as gifts from God. The religion curriculum is taught daily and is integrated across all subject areas. Students benefit from small class sizes and inspiring faculty. Incarnation Catholic School provide an atmosphere of learning where Christian values supersede all else! Incarnation Catholic School 360 Bray Station Road, Collierville, TN 38017 www.goICS.org • (901) 853-7804
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SUNRISE EDITION IF YOU OWN A
KING OF THE ROAD
HUMMER,
then Jason Moore is the technician for you! He started out as an ASEP student 10 years ago at Sunrise Wolfchase. He is GM and ASE Certiied. His specialties include Hummer repairs and heavy engine repairs.
Jason with his wife, Lillie, and 2-year-old son, Sawyer
KNOW? DID YOU
The Insurance Institute for Highway Safety tested cars equipped with collision warning and automatic braking systems. The 2014 Chevrolet Impala was the only non-luxury car to earn the highest safety rating in new tests of high-tech crash prevention systems.
Lease payments as low as
$269/mo***
2014 GMC SIERRA 3 YEAR/36,000 MILE BUMPER-TO-BUMPER WARRANTY
HOW many?! “My favorite thing about my GMC Sierra? How easy it is to access the truck bed! New handles are built into the bedrails that accompany a corner step bumper. No need to keep opening the Jim Berkheimer, Salesman at tailgate!” Sunrise Collierville
GM sold 254,076 vehicles in April 2014, up 6.9% compared with a year ago.
and proud owner of a 2014 GMC Sierra
5 YEAR/100,000 MILE POWERTRAIN WARRANTY
We are proud to announce that Sunrise Covington Pike has been honored with the 2013 Mark of Excellence award from General Motors for superior sales and customer satisfaction.
“I just traded in my 2013 Sierra for a 2014. Wow, do I love the fuel economy! And inside the cab? Quiet as a library!”
2 YEARS SCHEDULED MAINTENANCE
“I love the free maintenance that comes with my new Sierra! For the next 2 years/24,000 miles, I don’t have to worry about oil changes or tire rotations!” Domink Huhn, New Car Manager at Sunrise Collierville and proud owner of a 2014 GMC Sierra
“I love everything about my new GMC Sierra, but mostly the plush interior! The attention to detail and premium materials make the Sierra a cut Frank Wallace, New Car Manager at Sunrise Wolfchase and proud above other trucks! The cooled seats are a owner of a 2014 GMC Sierra bonus in the Memphis heat!”
Terry Sullivan, General Manager of Sunrise Covington Pike, proudly accepting Mark of Excellence award from Art Zepeda, District Sales Manager for Buick-GMC
Steve Farris, New Car Manager at Sunrise Collierville and proud owner of a 2014 GMC Sierra
CELEBRATE “The OnStar RemoteLink app is one of the coolest
MILITARY APPRECIATION MONTH
features on our GM cars
WITH SUNRISE
and trucks.You never need to worry about
Did you know you can remotely start your GM vehicle from nearly
locking your keys in your
anywhere with the OnStar RemoteLink
car or losing track of your
app?* You can also locate the nearest
parking spot at the mall!
Sunrise store, schedule routine
With the touch of a
maintenance, and contact roadside
button, you can turn on
assistance quickly and easily. With the
the AC so your car is nice
helpful Find My Car feature, you can mark
and cool when you’re
parking spots and set parking meter
ready to leave. What a great feature to have in
alarms.
the Memphis summer! I If you want the most innovative way to
love to tell my customers,
connect to your GM vehicle, download the
‘If you have a signal on
free RemoteLink app today!
your phone, you have
*with factory-equipped remote vehicle start and a valid OnStar subscription
Questions about RemoteLink? Call Brett Sawyer,
During Military Appreciation Month, now all Veterans along with Active Duty, Reserves and Retirees – including their spouses – are eligible for the GM Military Discount. It’s the best Military Purchase Program in the industry. You’ll also get the security of 24 months/24k miles scheduled maintenance, warranties that cover powertrain, bumper-to-bumper and anti-corrosion, and ive years or 100,000 miles of roadside assistance with courtesy transportation. USAA members receive an additional $750 private ofer. Come see us today for more details!
access to your car!’”
New Car Salesman at Sunrise on the Pike
2003 Nissan Murano #S1342B........ $6975 2007 Kia Optima #W6762A................ $6999 2006 Pontiac G6 #G40547B.............. $6999 2004 Ford Explorer #M36390B....... $7999 2005 GMC Yukon #G40256A ............ $8799 2008 Mazda 3 #U4526R...................... $8999 2006 Chrysler 300 #X11082RA ....... $9850 2000 GMC Silverado #T22672A ...... $9975 2007 Toyota Camry #Z56351B......... $9999 2004 Chevy Colorado #W6814R .... $9999
SUNRISE SALUTES
Not just another button Originally developed as an airbag deployment notiication system on three 1997 GM models, OnStar has evolved to offer unmatched safety and security services. Today OnStar also provides everyday services like Turn-by-Turn Navigation, Hands-Free Calling and the RemoteLink Mobile App, leading to more than
439 million
why lease?
interactions– and counting. Over the last 16 years, OnStar has assisted in
By leasing a new GM vehicle, many shoppers are able to get more 191,000 Automatic Crash Response calls car for less money. he car’s monthly payments are typically lower because 94 million Turn-by-Turn routes 22 years of active Howard Morton Ater duty, Howard Morton you’re only paying for the future depreciation of that vehicle, not the actual sales 1 million Emergency Services delivered retired as a Chief Master price. 6.9 billion Hands-Free Calling minutes Sergeant from the U.S. Air Force. 581,000 Good Samaritan calls His military career consisted of loading Many leases last about two to three years. Since all GM vehicles have 3 to 4-year 213 million Vehicle Diagnostic emails missiles on B47 and B52 bombers, developing bumper-to-bumper warranties,** there are virtually no repair costs for the duration 5.8 million Remote Door Unlocks GAM and Hound Dog Missiles, and of the lease. In addition, all 2014 and newer GM vehicles are protected with 8.5 million RemoteLink Mobile App requests successfully launching the Minuteman 24mos/24k mile scheduled maintenance. 2.9 million Roadside Assistance responses Missile. His wife Linda had what many think is the toughest job in the armed 59,000 Stolen Vehicle Assistances If you enjoy having the newest high-tech features, forces--that of the military spouse. like adaptive cruise control and front park assist, Her sacrifces and strength allowed Mr. Howard Morton, pictured leasing would be a great option for you. Since you’ll get All new GM vehicles come with her husband to serve his country for here with one of the many 6 months of free OnStar.* a new car every few years, you’ll always have many dedicated years. Mr. and Mrs. vehicles he and his wife Already have an OnStar-equipped vehicle? Morton are two ine examples of what the latest and greatest technology and safety features. Push your blue button today and start have purchased from Sunrise Covington Pike.
make this country great! Our hats of to them both!
Robert Newton has been a GM technician since 1990 and started with Sunrise ive years ago. He is an ASE Certiied Master Technician as well as a GM Certiied Technician. His specialties are drivability, air conditioning, and light engine repair. If your check engine light is on, swing by Sunrise on the Pike and Robert will scan it for free!
getting all the beneits!
If you fall in love with your leased car and want to keep it, you always have the option to purchase it when the lease matures.
*if equipped with OnStar
Contact our “Lease Guru,” Mike Eanes, to see about a
2014 BUICK VERANO for only
$185/mo***
Mike Eanes Finance Manager at Sunrise Collierville (901) 399-8600 (ext) 113
5CHANGE
$ OIL
VALID AT ANY SUNRISE LOCATION. MUST PRESENT COUPON. UP TO 5 QUARTS OF OIL. DOES NOT INCLUDE DIESEL OR SYNTHETIC. 2010 AND OLDER MODELS ONLY. EXPIRES 6/12/14.
FIND NEW ROADS COVINGTON PIKE 1800 COVINGTON PIKE • 901.372.8000
WOLFCHASE 8500 HWY 64 • 901.333.8000
**New Buicks come with 4 year/50,000 mile bumper-to-bumper warranties. New GMCs and Chevrolets come with 3 year/36,000 mile bumper-to-bumper warranties. ***39 mos, 10,000 mi/year. Plus tax, tags, doc fee, and $2500 down. All incentives applied. Must have qualifying credit.
COLLIERVILLE 4605 HOUSTON LEVEE • 901.399.8600
WWW.SUNRISEMEMPHIS.COM
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Health & Fitness YOUR HEALTH
Calendar
RELATIONSHIPS
When clearing earwax, be delicate By Dr. Anthony L. Komarof Universal Uclick
Dear Doctor K: I have a lot of wax in my ear. Should I try to remove it? How? Answer: Earwax is created when the oily substance made by cells lining the ear canal mixes with dead skin and debris. Normally, the mixture slowly moves out of the ear on its own. But sometimes earwax gets blocked in the ear. Certain conditions make this more likely: ■ An especially narrow or curvy ear canal. ■ A skin condition, such as eczema, that is afecting the canal. ■ Excessive hair growth in the canal. ■ Cleaning your ears with Q-tip. This can push the wax farther back into the ear canal, where it builds up and hardens. ■ Wearing a hearing aid or earplugs. By collecting dead skin and debris, earwax helps clean the ear. It also helps prevent dryness and itching in the ear canal, protects the canal and eardrum from damage, and helps prevent infection. In many people, the earwax continuously oozes out of the ear canal and onto the skin around the ear, where it is washed away when you bathe or shower. However, when the wax does not seep out of the ear, it builds up inside the ear. If the wax buildup in your ear isn’t causing trouble, leave it alone. You need to remove earwax only if it causes problems, such as interfering with your hearing. To unblock the wax, try using an over-the-counter ear-cleaning treatment, such as Debrox, to lush out the wax. If this doesn’t work, or if you have a history of ear drum perforation or have had ear surgery, make an appointment with your doctor. Never try to dig out earwax with something like a Q-tip, paper clip or hairpin. That could push the wax farther into the canal or injure your eardrum. Also avoid ear candling. That’s when you stick a lighted hollow candle into the ear. In general, your best bet is simply to clean your outer ear with a washcloth. That makes it easier for the wax that’s deeper inside the ear canal to ooze out. Above all, don’t do something that will injure your ear.
No matter where each of them is on the road to making healthy lifestyle changes, “hopefully the couple is going in the same direction together,” says Dr. Donald Hensrud, medical director of the Mayo Clinic Healthy Living Program.
Supporter or saboteur? Partner’s encouragement is critical in starting, sticking to fitness program By Pamela Knudson Grand Forks Herald
GRAND FORKS, N.D. — One of the irst things Dr. Donald Hensrud learned when he began working with patients in the area of wellness and prevention is the futility of trying to change another’s behavior. “I realized quickly you can’t change someone else,” said Hensrud, medical director of the Mayo Clinic Healthy Living Program, Rochester, Minn. “Change is diicult for people. Some are ready; some are not.” For example, “one of the partners in a relationship may be held back from starting a itness program because he or she is not as ready,” he said. That person may even be threatened by his or her partner’s interest in physical itness, and try to undermine it. In his work, Hensrud has seen instances where one partner gives chocolate to the other — who’s trying to lose weight — in an attempt to derail that person’s progress. “We should be supportive of our partner’s eforts at self-improvement,” he said. “If one partner isn’t supportive, the other has to take a step back and relect. It may say something about the person who’s not giving support. “You have to realize that it might be someone else’s insecu-
rity.” In general, “we tend to resist change,” he said. “Our routine is safe. We like the status quo; it’s easier to do what we know, and maintain it, than to make changes — even if the changes are beneicial in many ways.” “If we’re comfortable in our own habits, and the other person is making changes, it may be viewed not so much as making an improvement but as ‘rocking the boat.’” Committing to an exercise program takes time and involves an emotional investment, Hensrud said. “Some people may feel that it’s taking time away from the relationship,” he said. “It’s good to look at the speciic reasons behind those feelings.” Support is critical in starting and sticking with an exercise program, whether or not you exercise together as a couple, he said. “Having the support of someone we really care about can make a big diference. It matters what people we care about say about what we do. “On the lip side, the lack of support can be very detrimental.” If your partner is not supportive of your itness goals, try to remain supportive of him or her anyway “to help them come along,” Hensrud said. “We all have diferent strengths and insecurities.”
He warns against adopting a “holier-than-thou” attitude, he said. And avoid taking a competitive stance with your partner. Instead, “you might say something like, ‘Do you want to come on a walk with me. I always feel better afterward.’ “Invite them and involve them to the degree that they want to be involved.” If you are the one who’s not supportive of your partner’s itness goals, “try to do some honest selfrelection,” Hensrud said. “You may need to look at your reasons. “Support goes along with respect, and we need to have respect for each other’s boundaries.” As an example, he pointed to the relentless campaign that some people levy to convince their partners to quit smoking which “always backires.” No matter where each of them is on the road to making healthy lifestyle changes, “hopefully the couple is going in the same direction together,” he said. Getting into an exercise program together “would be a plus,” he said. “Take baby steps. Start by walking ive or 10 minutes at a time, and then build up to longer walks.” Sometimes, couples “have different things that they like to do,” he said. “It’s great if it works out” that they can pursue physical itness activities together, but even if they have diferent schedules and can’t exercise together mutual support goes a long way. “Enjoying the journey together can be tremendously rewarding.”
Fitness events st. Jude Children’s Research Hospital hosts “Yoga Gives to st. Jude Kids”: 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Saturday at St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital Danny Thomas Pavilion, 262 Danny Thomas Place. Call 901-373-5051 or go to visit stjudeyoga.org. national Kidney Foundation of West tennessee 12th annual Kidney Walk: 9 a.m. Saturday at Rhodes College, 2000 North Parkway. 8 a.m. registration. Noncompetitive 1- to 3-mile walk. 901-683-6185. kidneywalk.org. 2014 Memphis Walk to Cure Arthritis: 9 a.m. Saturday at Shelby Farms Park. Walk features a threemile and a one-mile course. Pet owners encouraged to bring their dogs. 901-322-1517. memphiswalktocurearthritis. kintera.org. Heel to Heal 5K Run: 9 a.m. Saturday (rain or shine) at Advent Presbyterian Church, 1879 N. Germantown Parkway, Cordova. Registration $20, benefiting Advent’s mission work in Honduras. No strollers or pets allowed. adventpres.com. the navy 10 nautical Miler: 6 a.m. Sunday at Naval Support Activity Mid-South in Millington. $65 if you register on or before Wednesday, $80 if you register on day of Expo. No race-day registration. This is the first foot race measured in nautical miles. 901-874-5179. thenavy10nm.com. LUvWiG 5K Fun Run at the Memphis israel Festival: 11 a.m. Sunday in Audubon Park. $35/single, $65/2-person team, $120/4-person team, $35/ part of a team but registering individually, $25 for ages 10 and under. 901-218-1882. memphisfoi.org/5K-racewalk. html. Mid-south transplant Foundation Ride for Life: 2 p.m. Sunday. Memorial Park (at I-240) in East Memphis. 25-mile bike ride and kids 1-mile fun ride. $15/single, $25/2- to 5-person team, $10/1-Mile Fun Ride. midsouthtransplantrfl. racesonline.com
HeALtH events Mid-south Area Pulmonary Hypertension support Group: Thursday meeting at Bartlett Banquet Hall, 2758 Bartlett Blvd. Meet ‘n greet 6 p.m.; dinner, guest speaker Mary Alice Beebe at 7 p.m. Topic, “Insights on Sodium, Fluid Management & pH.” 901-463-8688 or e-mail BarbaraInMemphis@aol.com. Dry eye & Allergy screening at eyewear Gallery: 2-5 p.m. Thursday-Friday at Eyewear Gallery, 428 Perkins Ext. Dr. Warren Johnson, Dr. Do Nguyen, Dr. Burt Bodan. Call to schedule: 901-763-2020. TheEyewearGallery.com. Life Line screening — stroke and Osteoporosis screenings: Saturday at HeartLand Church, 385 Stateline Road, Southaven. Packages start at $149. Preregistration required. Call 877-237-1287. lifelinescreening.com. Women Helping Other Women — A breast cancer support group: 7 p.m. Tuesday meeting at Baptist Women’s Health Center, 50 Humphreys Blvd., Suite 23. Newly or previously diagnosed. Send health and fitness events to fason@commercialappeal.com.
APPAREL
Runners, let comfort guide shoe choices; research doesn’t back industry claims By Melissa Dribben Philadelphia Inquirer
PHILADELPHIA — Wondering about the best shoes to wear for spring running? Neutral? Minimalist? Stability? Motion control? Cushioned heel? Confused? Of course you are. Well, sports medicine specialists have good news. Stop worrying about fallen arches, overpronation, and putting your feet on a Paleolithic regimen. The latest thinking about how to choose the best running shoe is to let comfort be your guide. Since the 1970s, running shoes have evolved from puny slabs of rubber sewn to canvas shells into engineering feats rivaling 3-D-printed surveillance drones. Far beyond the latest Nike Flyknit Lunar 2 are plans for running shoes made of computer-generated molecules that will link to living organisms and conform to your foot’s
ever-changing needs. In the somewhat-lessdistant future are Google Bluetooth-enabled shoes that talk to you and tell you how your run is going. For now, runners have a hard enough time picking from hundreds of mute, inorganic options. “Historically, the push has always been to look at foot pronation,” said Bryan Heiderscheit, a professor in the department of biomedical engineering at the University of WisconsinMadison. Runners were told to wear shoes that would correct for the foot’s tendency to roll inward or outward, on the theory that this would correct biomechanical laws and prevent injuries to the knees and lower back. “But the best studies that have been done in the last 10 years,” said Heiderscheit, “have not substantiated that claim.” In 2010, the American Journal of Sports Medicine published a study of 1,400
Marine Corps recruits. Half the group was given shoes based on a careful evaluation of the shape of their feet. The control group’s shoes were chosen randomly. “Assigning shoes based on the shape of the plantar foot surface,” the authors concluded, “had little inluence on injuries.” When Heiderscheit tries to explain this to members of the running-shoe industry, he gets “pushback.” Not surprising, he said, considering that the $20 billion athletic-shoe market sustains itself on innovation. The idea that almost any shoe is ine if it’s comfortable is also apt to meet resistance from runners for whom theory has become dogma. Believers in barefoot running or minimalist shoes, for instance, are unlikely to be convinced. Both are fine, said Heiderscheit, as long as recent converts do not make the switch too abruptly.
Speaking from personal experience, Heiderscheit said, it is easy to get injured if you decide to toss your cushiony sneakers and immediately start racking up miles in a pair of barely-theres. It can take months to adapt, he said. He recommends exercises to strengthen muscles in the calf and foot and using the minimalist shoes for short, easy runs at irst. “You should feel so comfortable in a shoe that you could sleep in them,” said Jon Woo, a sports medicine specialist at the University of Washington in Seattle. Experts say that just as everyone’s feet are unique, so are their running styles. “There is no absolute biomechanical ideal,” said Heiderscheit. Still, Heiderscheit said, there are “laws” to avoid. “You don’t want to bounce too much. You don’t want to overstride. And the one thing we ab-
MELISSA DRIBBEN/PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER/MCT
Danielle Tolbert tries on a pair of running shoes in Philadelphia. Runners can choose from a broad range of shoe styles, from cushy to barely there.
solutely don’t want people to do is a hard heel strike — truly coming down on your heel with your foot pointed high in air.” Jeptoo, for the record, runs in Nike Zoom Streak 3s, a lightweight, breathable shoe with some sup-
port and cushioning. Online reviews of the shoe range from “I got huge blisters” to “Perfect!” If this proves anything, experts said, it is that the one true authority on which shoes are best is the runner who wears them.
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Food FOOD NETWORK
Rising ‘Star’ MATThew MeAd/AssociATed Press
Once you master the formula, feel free to try variations like Rocking Chair Lemonade (left) and strawberry lemonade.
SUMMER TREAT
Simple recipe assures great results for summer lemonade By Elizabeth Karmel
ROCKING CHAIR LEMONADE
Associated Press
Homemade lemonade is an essential taste of summer. But concentrates and powders simply won’t do. Luckily, great homemade lemonade is as easy as remembering a few numbers — 3-1-1-1. Three cups of cold water, 1 cup of lemon juice, 1 cup of sugar and 1 more cup of water to make the sugar syrup. The sugar syrup — also called simple syrup — is the key to perfect homemade lemonade. As anyone who has tried to sweeten iced tea knows, sugar does not dissolve well in cold liquids. But simple syrup — a blend of (typically) equal parts sugar and water that was heated briely to help the sugar dissolve — mixes beautifully into lemonade, iced tea or cocktails. When shopping for lemons for lemonade, buy large lemons that feel heavy and are squeezable. I always buy a couple extra. If I think I can get 1 cup of juice from 6 lemons, I buy 8. As soon as I bring them home, I soak the lemons in a solution of white vinegar and water to minimize any molding or rotting. Often, a bag of lemons with one slightly moldy lemon becomes a whole bag of rotten lemons overnight if you don’t do this. And you don’t have to stop at lemons; this is a great way to wash all fruits and vegetables. Before you juice them, soak the lemons in warm water, or microwave them for 10 seconds. The heat relaxes the juice pouches and makes it easier to extract the most juice from each lemon. Then, before you cut them in half, roll the lemons on the counter with your palm, exerting some pressure. This also helps get the juices lowing. Once the juice is strained of excess pulp and seeds, and the simple syrup is cooled, you are ready to mix your lemonade. This can be done up to 2 days in advance. Also, be careful not to add too much water. The lemonade should be slightly concentrated because the ice in the glass will dilute it.
Makes 6 servings. PhoTos By yALondA M. JAMes/The coMMerciAL APPeAL
INGREDIENTS
1 cup warm tap water 1 cup sugar 1 cup freshly squeezed lemon juice (about 6 lemons) 3 cups cold water 1 lemon, thinly sliced — Fresh mint leaves (optional) DIRECTIONS
1 in a small, heavy-bottom saucepan over low heat, stir together the warm water and sugar. Bring to a simmer, stirring, until the sugar has dissolved. increase heat to medium and bring to a boil. cook for 2 minutes, then set aside of the heat to cool. 2 once the syrup is cool, pour it into a 2-quart pitcher. Add the lemon juice and cold water, then stir well. garnish with lemon slices and fresh mint. serve over ice. Note: if you are concerned that the lemonade will be too sweet, start with ½ cup or ¾ cup of the sugar syrup, then taste before adding more. Strawberry lemonade: Purée 2 cups of cleaned, hulled fresh strawberries. if using a blender, press the purée through a mesh strainer to remove any large pieces of pulp. Add the strawberry purée to the lemonade recipe above, but reduce the cold water to 2 cups.
Once you master the base recipe, you are ready to try variations. My favorite is strawberry lemonade, but don’t stop there. Try any summer berry, honeydew melon, peaches and summer herbs. I use the rule of thumb that 2 cups of ripe fruit should yield more or less a cup of juice once it is strained. I use my juicer, but you can use a blender and a ine mesh strainer just as easily. elizabeth Karmel is a grilling and southern foods expert and executive chef at hill country Barbecue Market restaurants.
“I’ve traveled all over,” says Aryen Moore-Alston, 31. “My thing is international cuisine with a twist, and from the comfort of your own home.” Moore-Alston appears on the “Food Network Star,” which debuts Sunday on Food Network.
Memphian gets shot at big time on Food Network, hopes it opens doors By Jennifer Biggs biggs@commercialappeal.com 901-529-5223
When the call came from Food Network, Memphian Aryen Moore-Alston was excited but wary. At the end of 2012, the selftaught cook submitted a YouTube video to “Food Network Star” and was selected. “I signed the contracts, did everything,” she said. “But nothing happened. I never heard anything else.” In December, almost a year later, the phone rang. “They said, ‘Hi, Aryen. This is Food Network, and we want you.’ I said, ‘Yeah, that’s what you said last time.’ ” But this time it was for sure, and she had to move fast. The 31-year-old single mother had to quit her job as a contract technician for Apple and make arrangements for care of her 3-year-old daughter. A couple of weeks later, she was on her way to ilm the show that debuts Sunday at 8 p.m. on Food Network. The winner of the contest gets a show on Food Network and possibly stardom: The judges are Alton Brown, Giada De Laurentiis and Bobby Flay. It’s how Guy Fieri got his big break. “He’s everywhere,” Aryen said. “Can you believe he has his own Hasbro game?” That Aryen is a contestant is something that her mother, Karen Moore, says amazes her — and not because she doesn’t have conidence in her youngest daughter. Moore was an actress and her husband, Gary Alston, a musician. They raised their daughters in Naples, Italy, for most of their childhood, and they encouraged them to explore their artistic sides. Aryen was a dancer; sister Keisha, a singer. “I just knew I had artistic children, and we did everything we could to encourage them,” Moore said. “But I had absolutely no idea that culinary arts was something
we should have encouraged. Remember, when we left for Italy, there was no Food Network — it was just Julia Child. When we came back, everything had changed.” But Aryen, whose name is pronounced almost like the constellation Orion, took to cooking anyway. Her father liked to do it and she liked to help. “When she was 6 years old, we asked the girls what they wanted for Christmas, and Keisha told us what she wanted, then Aryen piped up and said she wanted a cookbook,” Moore said. “Six years old! Of course she got other things, too, but I guess she got a cookbook for Christmas every year after that.” When she was 11, Aryen wanted to surprise the family with a pancake breakfast. She awoke early and went to ask her dad if it was OK. It was his youngest child who found him; he’d died in the night because of sleep apnea. “After that, she sort of took over the cooking,” Moore said. “She liked to do it. It reminded her of him.” Sister Keisha Moore-Alston remembers her pineapple upsidedown cake. “That was one of the best things I ever tasted,” she said. “When she kind of took over the cooking, we just all started getting fat.” They stayed in Italy three more years. “During that time I’d say she really became a cook,” Moore said. “I had a woman who helped me with the girls and the house, and Aryen learned a lot about Italian cooking from her.” When they moved to Memphis (Alston and Moore met in Memphis, though neither is originally from here), the girls enrolled in Overton High School and Moore started working in real estate, public relations and television. When she graduated, Aryen went to Spelman College in Atlanta, and spent a year as a student in Japan. She graduated with a degree
Moore-Alston ofers a line of cupcakes called Sweet Potato Baby, sold to groups that use them for fundraisers, and each contains fruit or vegetables.
in computer science and Japanese studies. But neither particularly excited her. She was living in Los Angeles in 2007 when her mother called. “She came up with this idea for a show to spotlight homes for sale by cooking in them,” Aryen said. “The motto was ‘a house is not a home until you cook in it.’ So she had this idea for a cooking show, but I knew she wasn’t going to be the one doing the cooking. I said ‘Who’s going to cook?’ She said ‘You are.’ ” So she came back to Memphis and they ilmed a few shows — Moore thinks four — in 2008. She stayed here, where her mother, sister and boyfriend were, and went to work for Apple. And she cooked. Like she did in Italy, when she cooked for large groups of friends, she entertained people in Memphis. When her daughter started eating solid foods, Aryen naturally made everything from scratch. A favorite was a cupcake made with sweet potatoes. “That has to be my favorite thing that she makes, and it’s hard to pick something because it’s all so good,” Keisha said. “I never cook exactly from a recipe,” Aryen said. “I always add a little something to it.
OUTDOOR COOKING
Basic tools make backyard grilling easier By Noelle Carter Los Angeles Times
With the smells of charcoal and propane beginning to perfume backyards across the nation, now is the perfect time to take stock of your equipment. Whether you’re an old hand or are new to this most primal of cooking methods, proper tools count. Outside of the grill itself, here’s a basic list of all the tools you’ll need so you’re ready when your inner chef hears the call of the great outdoors. All of the equipment should be generally available wherever grills and grilling supplies are sold. They’re also available online. ■ Gloves: When you’re working over high heat, gloves and grill mitts are a great way to keep your hands protected from heat
and occasional lare-ups. Look for heat-resistant gloves that cover at least part of the forearm for maximum protection. Prices vary by type and material used, but generally $15 to $30. ■ Chimney: A gas grill is a wonderfully easy way to ire up the grilling season, but for real lavor, nothing beats cooking over charcoal — that is, as long as that great charcoal lavor isn’t ruined by the taste of lighter luid. For a quick, sureire way to light charcoal without having to douse the hardwood or briquettes with lighter luid, try a charcoal chimney starter. It’s simple to use: Crumple some newspaper and stuf it in the bottom of the chimney, then place the charcoal on top. Light the newspaper, and in 15 to 20 minutes your coals will
be ready for their moment. $10 to $15. ■ Tongs: Put the fork away. A good set of tongs will give you a much better grip on your steaks and vegetables, and you won’t have to repeatedly puncture what you’re cooking (remember, it’s already dead). When looking for tongs, reach for a pair of spring-loaded or lexible bent tongs as opposed to a pair joined by a swivel pin (similar to scissors or pliers), as they ofer more control. And consider size. Tongs range from as short as 6 inches to well over a foot in length. The shorter the tongs, the more control you will have. $5 to $10. ■ Spatula: Like a good set of tongs, a proper spatula is a must-have tool when handling foods on the grill. Standard metal spatulas are thicker and
work well when you’re lipping burgers and larger cuts of meat and poultry. For delicate items, consider a thin and lexible ish spatula. Consider buying a spatula with wide slats or holes; this allows liquids to drain while minimizing surface contact with food so it doesn’t stick to the spatula. $10 to $20. ■ Grill basket: If you plan to grill small or delicate items such as cut vegetables or fish, consider investing in a grill basket. Perforated open baskets help to keep smaller foods from slipping through the racks, and closed mesh baskets keep delicate foods from crumbling as they’re grilled. Baskets are available at cooking supply stores and where grilling supplies are sold, as well as online. $15 to $20.
KirK McKoy/Los AngeLes TiMes/McT
Having the right tools makes summer grilling easier.
■ Thermometer: When cooking meats or any items for which food safety is a concern, a dependable thermometer is a must. It can give a quick veriication when you want to be sure of the temperature on a chicken breast or steak. Many digital thermometers have probes attached by wire to the temperature gauge so the probe alone can be left in a larger cut of meat as you check its progress. Remember to clean the probe between
each use to prevent crosscontamination; $5 for a simple dial thermometer to $30 or more for a digital thermometer with a remote probe. ■ Grill brush: A basic grill brush is all you need to keep your grill and racks in working order. Simply heat the grill on high after cooking to char any stuck foods and sauces, then run the stainless steel bristles of a cheap grill brush over the mess to clean it of. $5 to $10.
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Schools SCRIPPS NATIONAL SPELLING BEE
Tupelo speller almost reaches Scripps finals C’ville champ trips over ‘uliginous’ By Michael Collins collinsm@shns.com 202-408-2711
NATIONAL HARBOR, Md. — It wasn’t stage fright that kept Maria Kaltchenko of Tupelo, Mississippi, out of the inals of the 87th Scripps National Spelling Bee. It was a computer test. Two tests, to be precise. Maria, a seventh-grader at Tupelo Middle School, spelled lawlessly during the bee’s four rounds of oral competition, ighting of nervousness and ac-
ing words “pointelle” and “xerophthalmia” from the stage of the annual contest. By the end of the bee’s sixth round last Thursday afternoon, Maria she was one of 31 Kaltchenko spellers still in the competition. But her hopes of going on to compete for the title of champion speller ended when the 12 inalists were announced and she failed to make the cut. The inalists were determined by their overall scores on the two computer tests and the four rounds of onstage spelling. The 12 inalists had an overall score
of at least 62; Maria’s was 47. The second computer test was harder than she expected — “probably 10 times harder than the irst,” said the 12-yearold, who had worried that she’d get so nervous that she’d lub her words on stage. Maria earned a trip to the national contest, held just outside of Washington, by winning the Mid-South Spelling Bee back in March. Maria’s mother, Svetlana Kaltchenko, and her two brothers, Michael and Nicholas, watched from the audience as Maria strolled across the stage four times and easily spelled words that many people could not even pronounce.
“It was nerve wracking,” said her mother, a violinist and orchestra teacher who grew up in Moscow. In the ifth round last Thursday, Maria stood in front of the microphone, hands folded in front of her, and slowly spelled “pointelle,” which is a design in the shape of chevrons on a fabric. In the sixth round, she correctly spelled “xerophthalmia,” which is a dry, thickened, lusterless condition of the eyeball. Though she failed to make the inals, Maria said she was thrilled to get as far as she did, and hopes to return to next year. To get ready, she said she’ll probably spend more time studying root words.
STUDENT SPOTLIGHT
SNAPSHOTS
Mary-Addison Wolfe loves math and wants to be an actress Name: Mary-Addison
ite TV show is “Good Luck Charlie.” My favorite series is Magic Tree House.
Wolfe School: Briarcrest third-
People would be surprised to know: I am really
grader What do you like most about your school: I receive
interested in the Titanic. What would you do if you were principal for a day: We
a great education.
What is your favorite subject: Math What is your most challenging subject: English What are some of your biggest accomplishments:
would start out with math, we would do science next, then eat lunch. Then we would go outside and read and then math.
On a math test I got 40 questions right.
What famous person would you like to meet: I
What are some of your hobbies: I like to work on
math, play outside, read and write plays. Goals for the future: I want to be an actress. People you admire: I most admire my parents because they encourage me.
First, however, she wants to relax. “I am drained,” she said. The next stop on her itinerary: A two-week family trip to Russia. Dwight Moore Jr., an eighthgrader at Central Day School in Collierville, was eliminated from the competition in the third round when he got tripped up on “uliginous,” which means growing in wet or swampy ground. Dwight incorrectly spelled the word “uligenous.” Dwight said he knew he was in trouble as soon as the pronouncer gave him the word. “That was the only one I didn’t know,” said Dwight, who earned a spot in the national bee by winning the Memphis-Shelby County Spelling Bee in February.
Briarcrest third-grader, Mary-Addison Wolfe, likes her school because she’s “receiving a great education.”
would like to meet William Shakespeare.
On May 9 Tara Oaks third grader Meredith Dai (right) was named as the school’s artist of the year. Each year, the school recognizes artistic talent by framing a student’s artwork for display in the Tara Oaks Artwork Gallery. During a special ceremony, Tara Oaks art teacher Barbara Fry unveiled the framed artwork.
Braxton Hart, a fifth-grader at Sycamore Elementary, was awarded top honors for the Accelerated Reader program for the fifth year in a row. It was another record year for him with 2,295 points. He also received the Presidential Education Award for Outstanding Academic Achievement.
What would you do with $1 million: I would add stuf
Ryan Ferguson recently signed a National Letter of Intent to play lacrosse at. Lincoln Memorial University in Harrogate, Tenn. He was joined by Scott and Teri Barber and Avery Barber.
to Briarcrest. Favorite movies, TV shows and books: My fa-
If you could change one thing in the world: I would
vorite movie is “Teen Beach Movie.” My favor-
make sure boats and airplanes would not crash.
UNIVERSITY OF TENNESSEE AT MARTIN
Area students inducted into Honor Society of Phi Kappa Phi By Kelly Hatley Special to The Weekly
Joseph Zitynar of Cordova and Greer Bell Crocker of Germantown were recently inducted into the Honor Society of Phi Kappa Phi at the University of Tennessee at Martin. Membership is based upon academic achievements and exemplary character. Those eligible include graduate students in the upper 10 percent of their class, seniors in the upper 10 percent and juniors in the upper 7.5 percent. Also eligible are faculty members who possess outstanding academic, research, creative and service achievements. An internationally respected honor society, Phi Kappa Phi is the oldest and most selective organization that recognizes and promotes academic excel-
BAILEY STATION ELEMENTARY
Students participate in Field Days By Katherine Perry Special to The Weekly
University of Tennessee at Martin students Joseph Zitynar of Cordova and Greer Bell Crocker of Germantown were inducted into the Honor Society of Phi Kappa Phi.
lence in all ields of higher education. The society was founded at the University of Maine in 1897 and currently has chapters on the campuses of more than 300 colleges and universi-
ties in the United States, the Philippines and Puerto Rico. Kelly Hatley is the University of Tennessee at Martin university relations publications intern.
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Students from prekindergarten through ifth grade enjoyed fun illed days of games and challenging activities during Bailey Station Elementary’s recent Field Days. Coaches Cheryl White and Brian Mitchell coordinated the programs to celebrate the end of the year and encourage an
active lifestyle for all students. “We place great importance on healthy lifestyles here at Bailey Station, from eating nutritious foods to keeping our bodies active,” says White. “For us, ield day is just another example of how we celebrate those healthy choices.” Parents and grandparents joined in the fun by cheering, volunteering
and providing water for the participants. The ifth graders ran the stations for grades kindergarten through fourth and did an awesome job. Students loved the games and contests, such as the marble water dip and target challenge. Many of the students said it was the best ield day ever. Katherin Perry is a teacher at Bailey Station Elementary.
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Say Cheese! In honor of Best Friends Day on Sunday, we asked area residents taking a pottery class at Singleton Community Center in Bartlett to tell us a little bit about their best friend.
“Linda Cole of Bartlett has been my best friend for 24 years. She’s loving and generous.” CAROL KABAKOFF of Collierville
“Ellen and I have been best friends for 24 years. We do everything together.”
“Sharon is truly my best friend. She listens to me and never criticizes.”
SHARON WALKER of Brighton
ELLEN SAVOY of Mason, Tenn.
“My best friend is Gena Granger of Memphis. She looks for the positive in people.” MONICA CLIFTON of Bartlett
“My best friend, Forest Goldberg, has been there for me, no matter what I need.” DENISE GRAHAM of West Memphis, Ark.
“My best friend, Debbie Stephens, lives in Germantown. She is ... thoughtful and takes care of everybody.” JODIE GIBSON of Bartlett PHOTOS BY KIM ODOM | SPECIAL TO THE WEEKLY
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Pets FORGEY DOG PARK
PETS OF THE WEEK GERMANTOWN ANIMAL SHELTER
HUMANE SOCIETY
Name: Santa Claws Age: 3 years Breed: Maine Coon mix. Description: Loves going on walks with his harness.
Name: Shenzi Age: 1 year Breed: Boxer mix Description: Sweet disposition; loves people.
Name: Missy Age: 7 years Breed: Australian shepherd/spitz mix. Description: Missy has some spunk.
Name: Tails Age: 1 year Breed: Domestic short hair Description: Likes other cats.
The Humane Society, 935 Farm Road, is open 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Tuesday-Friday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday and 1-5 p.m. Sunday. Germantown Animal Shelter, 7700 Southern, is open 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday-Friday and 9:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday.
SEND US YOUR PET SNAPSHOTS Share pictures of your furry friend, scaly sidekick, winged wingman and more in the pages of The Weekly. E-mail JPEG images 1-2 MB in size to Matt Woo at woo@commercialappeal.com. Include your name, your pet’s name, the city in which you live, and any special facts about your pet.
MILLSTONE MARKET & NURSERY
New, returning members invited to register by June 30 Special to The Weekly
Dog owners who are interested in membership at Forgey Dog Park are invited to register at the Germantown Parks and Recreation oice before June 30. The oice is open weekdays, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. New and returning members must complete an application and sign an insurance waiver, provide proof of residency and a copy of current pet vaccination records and view a ive-minute presentation. Resident member fees are $40 for the irst dog and $10 for each additional dog. Nonresidents pay a slightly higher fee to use the park. Membership is required for access to the area. Forgey Dog Park, located at 1665 Riverdale Road, is open to members from dawn to dusk, 365 days per year. Members
Catherine King of Germantown visits the park regularly with her two retrievers, Jake and Sadie.
enjoy a secure, fenced area where dogs can socialize with others. Germantown Park Rangers monitor the area where there is plenty of open space for dogs to run and jump. Large and small breeds have separate spaces to enjoy. Long time member Catherine King of Ger-
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mantown visits the park regularly with her two retrievers, Jake and Sadie. “Without space to run and others to play with, I’m not sure we would ever have any peace at home,” said King. For more information, contact Germantown Parks and Recreation at 901-757-7375.
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Community Collierville
Sunset on the Square Concert Series kicks of Special to The Weekly
Main Street Collierville will present the 23rd annual Sunset on the Square Summer Concert Series starting Thursday. Opening entertainment of the series will feature the Rhythm Rockets Band. The ive piece band features Lonnie Davidson. They will be rocking out R & B
tunes, classic rock and soul hits. Bryan Hayes and the Retrievers will perform June 12, the AIMS Gang will play June 19 and Six Degrees will perform June 26. Josh Threlkeld will play July 10, Sandy Carroll will perform July 17, the Wolf River Rednecks will play July 24 and the last concert will feature the Def Tonz on July 31.
The concert series is sponsored by title sponsor First Tennessee, Co-sponsor Town of Collierville, Entertainment sponsor John Green & Company Realtors, Concert sponsor Allstate Insurance-Rod Lovelace, community partners: Andy B’s Family Entertainment Center, Baptist Hospital, The Commercial Appeal-Collierville Weekly,
Kaz’s Main Street Garage, State Farm Insurance- Preston Carpenter and the Twentieth Century Club. Picnic in the Park sponsor- The Farms at Bailey Station and cup sponsors: Achill Computer Services, Barrios Financial Services, The Brooks Collection, Café Piazza, Collierville Insurance Agency, Curtis Printing, Joyce McKenzie of
Crye-Leike Realtors, Superior Auto Body of Collierville, Our Little Secret Med Spa on the Square, Lasting Expressions, State Farm Insurance- Joe Sarrio, Pepsi, and YoLo. The concerts are from 7-9 p.m. No pets or alcohol allowed. For more information, visit mainstreetcolliervile.org or its Facebook page.
rACe for the Cure
YMCA At SChilling fArMS
Komen grant winners share $510,000
Healthy living tips on tap at expo
By Lela Garlington garlington@commercialappeal.com 901-529-2349
Oicials with the Memphis Mid-South ailiate of the Susan G. Komen Race for the Cure reached their goal and handed out more than a half-million dollars in grants recently to help local programs provide breast exams and mammograms for those who cannot aford them. For the irst time, the October race was held at a new site — Carriage Crossing in Collierville, rather than Saddle Creek in Germantown. “There are more than 1 million women in the Mid-South and one in eight women could be diagnosed with breast cancer in her lifetime,” said Elaine Hare, executive director of the local ailiate. “We are proud to share with our community how our grantees will have the greatest impact in serving uninsured or underinsured women in our 21-county service area.” The grant winners for the $510,000 include: ■ Alliance Charitable Foundation, through the Alliance Healthcare System — $15,000 in Marshall and Benton counties. ■ Baptist Medica l Group, Memphis Breast Care — $20,000 ■ Baptist Memorial
Hospital for Women — $130,000 ■ B apt i st Memo rial Hospital-DeSoto — $60,000 for DeSoto, Marshall, Tate and Tunica counties. ■ Church Health Center — $30,000 ■ Julie B. Baier Foundation, Inc. through the Mroz Baier Breast Care Clinic, PC — $90,000 ■ New Bethel M.B. Church, through its Surviving, Thriving, AfricanAmericans Rallying Support — $7,500 for breast health education sessions, monthly breast cancer support group meetings and funding for screening mammograms for those who are inancially eligible ■ Methodist Healthcare Foundation — $50,000 Regional One Health — $100,000 ■ Urban Health Education and Support Services — $7,500 for education, support and awareness to primarily African American and underserved women who are newly diagnosed breast cancer patients, survivors and/or have relapsed. This year’s race is set again at Carriage Crossing on Oct. 25 in Collierville. The shopping center is just of Tenn. 385 and Houston Levee Road exit. For more information, visitkomenmemphis.org.
By Tish Lewis Special to The Weekly
The YMCA at Schilling Farms recently hosted its Healthy Living Expo in the gym. Vendors ofered information on a variety of topics including itness and nutrition, Medicare, assisted living and home-care options, inancial information, and more. The Mid-South Line Dancers, led by instructor Answorth Robinson, performed several line dances to help promote the upcoming Livestrong at the YMCA Line Dance Jam on June 21, from 3:30-5:30 p.m. at the YMCA at Schilling Farms. There was a cake and plant walk, as well.
Answorth Robinson, instructor, leads the Mid-South Line Dancers in a dance at the Healthy Living Expo. Alma Jean Fittes talks with Joyce Quintrell at the Page Robbins Adult Day Care Center booth.
Tish Lewis is the community program director for the YMCA at Schilling Farms.
gerMAntown
Applications accepted for education commission Special to The Weekly
Applications are now being accepted for the city’s Education Commission. Residents will serve one-year appointments, which begin July 1. Current commission members interested in continuing to serve are asked to complete an application, along with those applicants who have not previously served. The Education Commission studies ways to deal with educational is-
sues of general community interest. Commission members award a Teacher of the Month and Youth Excellence winner each month during the school year. Battle of the Brains, a math and science competition for students from Germantown and Houston High Schools, and the an-
nual Education Celebration are also arranged by the commission. Applications are available online at germantown-tn.gov/commissions or at the information desk inside Municipal Center, 1930 S. Germantown Road. Applications are due July 1. Completed
forms may be returned to the city of Germantown, ATTN: Dotty Johnson, City Clerk, P.O. Box 38809, Germantown, TN 381830809. For more information, e-mail City Clerk Dotty Johnson, at djohnson@ germantown-tn.gov or call 901-757-7251.
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Outdoors FISHING
No reason to panic over Kentucky Lake crappie woes Anglers here in the MidSouth take a very serious approach to their crappie ishing. When the fishing’s good, they take vacation time, leave work early and brave all sorts of nasty weather just to make a few extra casts. When it’s bad — which isn’t very often — they want to know right away what the problem is and what should be done to ix it. Crappie ishing enthusiasts on Kentucky Lake showed remarkable patience in 2013 when the spring spawning run wasn’t as good as it had been in previous years.
BRYAN BRASHER OUTDOORS
But then when the ishing seemed to decline even more this spring, they started searching for answers. A public meeting was held May 28 at the Henry County Fairgrounds to discuss the situation with various members of the Tennessee Wildlife Resources Agency and Tennessee Fish and Wildlife
Commission. While some suggested drastic measures like lowering the lake’s creel limit from 30 to 20 and raising the minimum length limit from 10 inches to 11 or 12, the conservation oicials basically said they believe Mother Nature needs time to right the ship on her own before extreme regulatory help is considered. “We think what was to blame more than anything for the drop-of this year was the extremely cold winter and even the cold spring that we had,” said TWRA chief of isheries Bobby Wilson, who attended the meeting. “It threw everything of by
about three weeks, and that could mess things up for the whole year. It’s not that it’s going to be delayed three weeks and then everything just goes back to normal.” Some of the folks who attended the meeting had other suggestions for why the ishing’s been tough. Some wondered out loud if the growing number of Asian carp on the lake could be part of the problem, while others pointed toward the drought conditions that have plagued the region the past ive years. Longtime Kentucky Lake ishing guide Steve McCadams said some
are also wondering if increased ishing pressure on the lake in recent years could be partly to blame. “A few years back, they lowered the creel limits in Kentucky from 30 to 20,” McCadams said. “They’ve done the same thing on some of the lakes down in Mississippi — and now, a lot of folks from Missouri and other places who were visiting those states are coming here because it’s closer and they can still keep 30 ish. That has a lot of people concerned.” It certainly makes sense that increased ishing pressure could have left fewer crappie to go around for the anglers
who’ve enjoyed Kentucky Lake at its best, and it might eventually be smart for the lake to conform to the same rules as other nearby lakes in similar situations. But at the same time, local guides like McCadams and other business owners who depend on the lake don’t want an overreaction to discourage out-of-state tourism. Changes might be necessary, but it’s too early to make that call. A couple of subpar years just don’t warrant a long list of knee-jerk reactions for a lake that has featured a lot more good than bad for a long, long time.
Calendar
CATFISH KING Mississippi angler Phil King is a master at finding massive catfish By Bryan Brasher brasher@commercialappeal.com 901-529-2343
COUNCE, Tenn. — When 82-yearold angler Rheuben McGee boarded Phil King’s 24-foot SeaArk below Pickwick Landing Dam on May 26, he told King the biggest catish he’d ever caught weighed a modest 12 pounds. King, a longtime catfish guide and winner of numerous major tournaments, took that as a challenge. He set out trying to put McGee on the catish of a lifetime — and by the time they left the water around 9 p.m., they had boated one cat that weighed 12.5 pounds and two that weighed more than 20. “I’ve spent a lot of time out here bumping bottom for catish, and I’ve caught a lot of them,” McGee said. “But I never caught any really big ish. That’s what we were hoping to get on today.” McGee and his son, Jimmy, who both live near King in Corinth, Miss., came to ish with the famed catish guru because of his reputation for catching big ish. He rarely goes without catching at least one big cat, and he knows how to ind them during any season. Right now, he’s targeting catish in the post-spawn phase. “A lot of the catish have just inished spawning, and you’re catching ish that are just coming of the beds,” King said. “The ish that I’m catching from deep water right now are all scratched up with scars that are scabbing over. That tells me they’re just now coming of the beds, and there’s a certain way you have to ish for post-spawn catish that are just getting back into their regular feeding habits.” A DELICATE APPROACH After a harsh winter that saw the surface water temperatures on Pickwick dip into the 30s for the irst time since 1988, King expected the blue cat spawn to happen a little later than it has in years past. But when he went out looking for blues in deep water during April and early May, he found they had already moved shallow to spawn much earlier than usual. While that threw a kink into King’s typical springtime routine, it’s made for some excellent ishing during this valuable portion of the year when school has just let out and daytime temperatures are still relatively mild. But a delicate approach has been necessary for catching catish that are still a little ragged after the rigors of the spawn. “The females we caught Tuesday night were still slick and in pretty good condition except for the weight loss and egg loss,” King said. “But the male ish are really beat up, and they’ve lost about a third of their body weight. Their tails are all beat up and cut up, and they look pretty rough.” Since post-spawn ish have usually gone long periods without eating, King said it’s important to downsize your bait.
DEER MANAGEMENT
MSU Deer Management Workshop: June 13-14 at Heartland Church, 385 Stateline Road, Southaven. Topics will include camera survey setup, deer nutrition, food plots, deer habitat, deer ecology, harvest management, predator management, camera survey picture analysis, deer harvest data analysis, aging deer and wild pig management. Registration will begin at 8 a.m. each day with the program lasting from 8:30 a.m.-5 p.m. Cost is $95 per daily workshop or $180 for both. Register online at cfr.msstate.edu/workshops/ deer2014. EDUCATIONAL
Live Fish Feedings: Every Saturday and Sunday at 1 and 4 p.m. at Bass Pro Shops in Memphis. Learn about fish kept in the aquarium at Bass Pro. Contact: 901-213-5800. YOUTH FISHING RODEOS
BRYAN BRASHER/THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL
Longtime catfish guide and tournament champion Phil King (left) helps Rheuben McGee of Corinth, Miss., hold the 12.5-pound catfish McGee caught Tuesday evening below Pickwick Landing Dam. They landed two more catfish in the 20-pound range before their five-hour trip was over.
PHIL KING’S CAREER
Corinth, Miss., resident Phil King is recognized by many as one of the top catfishing guides in the country, and he’s won numerous major catfish tournaments with lots of big cats like this one.
“In a normal situation, we use some really big baits because we’re trying to catch really big ish,” King said. “But in a post-spawn situation, the catish don’t always feel like eating a whole lot. If you use too big a bait, they might just grab the end of it and then let go as soon as you pick up the rod to set the hook.” One of the 20-pounders King and the McGees caught May 27 bit a one-inch piece of cut bait. “Think of a person who just lost 50 pounds in a short time,” King said. “That person is likely to be a little weak and probably won’t feel like eating a whole lot. It’s the same way with catish.”
LOOKING TO FIND POST-SPAWN FISH Unlike crappie and bass — two species that move slowly back toward deep water after
spawning in the shallows — King said catish don’t waste any time making their way back to the deep-water structure they call home for most of the year. He uses a Humminbird 1199 depth inder with a 10-inch screen to identify big ish — and there’s no water on local isheries he considers too deep. “In a smaller river, ‘deep water’ might mean 20, 25 or 30 feet,” King said. “But on the Mississippi River, it might mean 60, 70, 80 or up to 100 feet. The Tennessee River has some 70-80 feet water, and all of it holds big catish.” Besides searching for deep water, he also looks for dramatic structural elements along the bottom. “The bigger the structure, the better for big cats,” King said. “Instead of a slow, sloping drop-of that tapers from
Besides building a reputation as one of the top catfishing guides in the country, Corinth, Mississippi, resident Phil King has won a long list of major tournaments, including the 2007 and 2009 Bass Pro Shops Big Cat Quest events on the Memphis portions of the Mississippi River. During that 2007 event, King and his partners became the first anglers to land a 100 pound-plus catfish in an organized event with a blue that weighed 103.10 pounds. His website at h2ow.com/ catfish/ features tips and tricks to help anglers catch more and bigger catfish.
40 feet to 70 feet over a half a mile, I prefer one that goes immediately from 40 to 70 feet.” King said he looks for all types of structure — ledges, drop-offs, boulders, sunken brush, standing timber, etc. — and he uses the side-scan and down-scan features of his Humminbird unit to actually distinguish between “good” ish in the 20-pound range and “really good” ish in the 40- to 60-pound range. “The electronics we have available today really are amazing,” King said. “If I’ve got my unit on 4X or 6X zoom and I lay my hand next to the screen and see an arc the size of my little inger, that’s a good indication there’s a 40- to 50-pound ish I just rolled over. “That takes a whole lot of the guess work out of searching for big ish.”
Lakeland Youth Fishing Rodeo: Saturday from 7-11 a.m. at Harvester Park Lake, Lakeland. Contact: Bristol Roberts at 901867-2717. West Tennessee NWTF Jakes Fishing Rodeo: Saturday from 9 a.m. to noon at Lake Graham, Access Area 2, Cotton Grove Road, Jackson, Tenn. Contact: David Johnson at 731-695-2109 T.O. Fuller State Park Youth Fishing Rodeo: Saturday from 9-11 a.m. at T.O Fuller State Park Wildlife Enhancement Area, Memphis. Contact: Michael Champagne at 901-543-7581. Villages of Bennington Junior Fishing Rodeo: Saturday from 8 a.m. to noon at Bennington’s Park, Memphis. Contact: Abdullah Hassan at 901-859-2917. Meeman-Shelby State Park Annual Kids Fishing Rodeo: Saturday from 7-11 a.m. at the Meeman-Shelby State Park Nature Center, Millington. Contact: Samantha Cox at 901-876-5215. Tipton County Youth Fishing Rodeo: Saturday from 7:30-11 a.m. at First Baptist Church, Covington, Tennessee. Contact: Jake Yoes at 731-446-2422. Haywood County Youth Fishing Rodeo: Saturday from 8-11 a.m. at Hatchie National Wildlife Refuge, Tanner Adams Pond, Brownsville, Tenn. Contact: Rob Colvin at 615-483-5213. 23rd Annual Reelfoot National Wildlife Refuge Youth Fishing Rodeo: Saturday from 7 a.m. to noon at Reelfoot National Wildlife Refuge, Walnut Log, Obion County, Tenn. Contact: Tara Dowdy at 731538-2481. Steve McCadams Casting for a Cure Fishing Rodeo: Saturday from 7-11 a.m. at Carroll Lake, McKenzie, Tenn. Contact: Lance Rider at 731-234-6093. Mid-South Jr. Fishing Rodeo: Saturday from 7-11 a.m. at Johnson Road Park, Germantown. Contact: Dave Rizzuto at 731-423-5734. Jackson/Madison County Youth Fishing Rodeo: Saturday from 9-11 a.m. at Muse Park Lake, Jackson, Tenn. Contact: Sandy McDiarmid at 731-425-8316. Inman E. Pettigrew Memorial Youth Fishing Rodeo: Saturday from 7:30-11 a.m. at Whiteville Lake, Whiteville, Tenn. Contact: Charles Morrow at 731-225-3114. Herb Parsons Lake Kids Fishing Rodeo: Saturday from 7-11 a.m. at Herb Parsons Lake, Fisherville, Tenn. Contact: Damon Boyce at 901-277-8657. City of Bartlett Children’s Fishing Rodeo: June 28, 6-9 a.m., at Appling Lake, Bartlett. Contact: Debbie Morrison at 901-385-5589. FISHING TOURNAMENTS
Bass Pro Shops Big Cat Quest Catfish Tournament on the Mississippi River: June 14 in Tunica, Miss. Entry fee is $200 per team. A third team member can fish for $50 as long as person is between 12-17 or 65 and over. Visit bigcatquest.com. Kids First Adult/Child Team Bass Tournament on Pickwick Lake: June 21 at J.P. Coleman State Park. Entry fee is $25. Visit kidsfirstfishing.com. Kids FLW Tour on Kentucky Lake: June 26-29 in Paris, Tenn. Daily weigh-ins on flwlive.com.
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Most experts use transfers. 12 tricks. citing if you are in a SOLUTIONS: See BELOW for solutions to these puzzles declarer and allow a more I understand how South felt, but not Sudoku is a numberPlease don’t put evidence ★★★★ You’ll notice how en- you are single, you will meet They make thebased stronger hand Aries (March 21-April 19) flexible auction. Still, Cy might involving communic every play problem can be resolved with placing puzzle in front of him,and forcing ergetic you are. You’ll also many, many people this year. declarer a more make hearts. Heallow plays cold numbers. If you lose a makable Questions andChess comments: Email Stewart at on a 9x9 grida with sev-low ★★★★ You’ll notice how Your en- social you circle are single, you him tofour confront situaip Quiz on how others seem widens, andw flexible auction. Still, Cy might frs1016@centurylink.net from ontothe first club. pick up eral given numbers. The slam, the psychological damage to your tion hedummy is trying deal ergetic you are. You’ll also many, many people For the kids to be ready to go. Tonight: the possibility of meeting thet He plays low object is tohearts. place thecashEastmake wins with the ten, with in hisfour own way. pick up on how others seem Your social circle wid Happily at home. right person becomes higher from dummy the numbers 1 to 9on in thefirst esThe two spades (not best) andclub. very best thing you to be ready go. Tonight: theIfpossibility of mee empty squares so that (April to20-May East wins with the ten, after July. you are attached, leads aistrump. Cy ru�s his lastcash- Taurus Sudoku can do encourage your PJJC LN LKHUI SZNRL each row, eachand column Happily at home. person become spade in dummy takes all and 20) ★★★★ Make the most the tworight esget two (not best) of you connect on a son to hisspades family into 3x3 box Taurushours, (April 20-May butand oneeach of his trumps, pitchJuly.you If you a leads a trump. Cyconru�s his last of the daylight when counseling. deeper after level than areare used tains the same number ing the queen of clubs from Explain that it is for the spade in dummy and takes all 20) ★★★★ Make the most the two of you conne you feel empowered. Make to. LEO always draws out the only once. The difficulty dummy. children’s sake. are but of They his trumps, pitchof the daylight hours, when a point of meeting a friend. deeper level than you best in you. LKSL YNUBJMARV HFJ levelone of the Conceptis Dummy is left with the A-from truly su�ering. ing theincreases queen offrom clubs Tonight: Maintain a low Make to. LEO always draws Sudoku you feel empowered. K-6-4 of diamonds and ace of Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. dummy. Monday to Sunday. profile. a point of meeting a friend. best inYou’ll you. want to clubs.email Cy has Please your a questions toJ-3 of 21) ★★★★ Dummy istrump, left with the A- Gemini (May Maintain 21-June 20)a low Tonight: anniesmailbox@comcast.net, diamonds and 9-5 of clubs. P S Y O J P L J M B S O . schedule some quality(Nov. oneK-6-4 of diamonds and ace of Sagittarius ★★★★ You could be conor writecan to: Annie’s Mailbox, profile. East keep fivea cards. IfJ-3 of on-one time with a loved clubs. Cy has trump, 21) ★★★★ You’ll w c/o Syndicate, 737 about a(May purchase, heCreators saves four diamonds and cerned Gemini 21-June one 20) today. Take a walk in WHITE HAS A CRUSHER CONTACT US diamonds and 9-5South of clubs. 3rd Street, Hermosa Beach, schedule some qual solution to the bare king of clubs, which makes maintaining Hint: Set up a lethal pin. the countryside. Tonight: East can five cards. If ★★★★ You could be conCA 90254. Peggy McKenzie, 529-2341, mckenziep@commercialappeal. takes the ace ofkeep clubs and wins on-one time with I S Lin J M - Z M S H U J B ! your cerned budget an even abigger rdPpuzzle about purchase, he saves four diamonds and Go for some exotic cuisine. com. Become a fanthe of the M section on Facebook at facebook. the 13th trick with nine. If concern. one today. Take a Tonight: Keep the the bare king of clubs, which makes maintaining CapricornT com/CAMemphisM; follow usSouth on Twitter at twitter.com/ instead East keeps only three Chess Quiz Whatthe the countryside. y’s editions. mood positive. day’s Cryptoquip Clue: H equals I takes theCy ace of clubs diamonds, takes the and A-Kwins your budget an even bigger (Dec. 22-Jan. memphismeditor. stars mean: Go for some exotic c (June 21-July 22) 13th trick with the nine. If Cancer andthe ru�s a diamond. Dummy concern. Tonight: Keep the★★★★★ 19) ★★★★ 6-1-14 ★★★★ You might want to Ca instead East keeps only three is high. WhatOthers the want mood positive. Dynamic get moving early, especially diamonds, Cy takes the A-K (Dec. stars mean: to take the ★★★★ Cancer (June if you’re meeting up 21-July with 22) and ru�s a diamond. Dummy rei ns. 19)Be The New York Times Sunday Crossword | Change Of6-1-14 Program ★★★★ You might toPositive★★★★★ YPTOQUIP: ALL I CAN SEEM TO THINK people. Tonight: Make want it is high. Dynamic smart Other and ★★★ moving early, especially your get treat. to ta Y IS THAT ICE SHOW I SAW let this hap★★★★ Average By Dan WONDERFUL Schoenholz / if you’re meeting22) up with Leo (July 23-Aug. rei ns pen, rather Positive Edited By Will Shortz The York Times Sunday Crossword | Change Of Program solutions it ★★ ’MPuzzle SONew SKATER-BRAINED! ★★★people. Make it Tonight: OK to takeMake a than getsmar into So-so ★★★ treat. lazy your day or two. You will a testy situalet th By Dan Schoenholz / relax and Leoenjoy (Julyyourself. 23-Aug. 22) ★ Average PREMIER CROSSWORD SUDOKU tion.Tonight: pen, Answer to yesterday’s puzzle ACROSS Western ★★ Edited By Will77Shortz Difficult Schedule around ★★★plans Make it OKdinto take a WHITE HAS A CRUSHER Sudoku is a number-placing Dinnerthan for 1 Part of a followers? So-so Hint: An “interference” theme. ner. Tonight: likeYou it. will puzzle based on a 9x9 grid 6 Hunger New version rainbow 80 23Wire service lazy dayAsoryou two. two. a test with several given numbers. signals of a musical 7 Blanket inits. Virgo (Aug. relax and23-Sept. enjoy 22) yourself.Aquarius★(Jan. 20-Feb. tion.T 14 Rear admiral’s 7781 24 Some lapses The object is to place the 7 Outfit Impressive CROSS Western Difficult ★★★★ You might bearound more dinSchedule plans 18) ★★★★ Mellow Dinn out a rear 83 25 Like manyJaffe 8 ofSteered Writer numbers 1 to 9 in the empty Part a followers? willing to go along with sevner. Tonight: As you likelittle it. today. You could have 19rainbow Invader ofof 1066 80 27 men’s tiesSt. — a clear Mount squares so that each row, Wire service two. eral friends’ requests. Make mini-project that you might 20Blanket Comment Grant Wood 9 Wood-upon 85 29 Thrifty each column and each 3x3 inits. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Aquarius (Jan. heading off portrayal? yourself available. Tonight: need to complete. damaging person box contains the same numCONTACT US Rear admiral’s 81 Some lapses ★★★★ You might be more 18) ★★★★Tonight: Catch ___ “The ”21rear pest Diamond Mellow ber only once. The difficulty Peggy McKenzie, Not to be found. 8388 30 Like many Accept a dinner invitation. (surf) Canterbury willing to go along with sev12 Drake or unitties level of the Conceptis Sudoku 529-2341, mckenziep@ Invader of 1066 men’s little today. You coul Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) 22 Like Dre farmland Tales” inn (Feb. 19-March Knock for increases from Monday to commercialappeal.com. eral friends’ requests. MakePisces Comment upon 8589 31 Grant Wood mini-project that yo ★★★ You might be more 20) ★★★★ 23 Stoners’ Yemeni 16 Sorts a loopport You could be Become a fan of the Sunday. heading off portrayal? yourself available. Tonight: memoirs? 90 Wrapped (up) need to complete. 21 Leaf-eating 32 Oregon’s aware of the importance of M section on Facebook involved with a suddenT 8891 “The Notwith to beanfound. 25Catch ______ New Conciliatory insects capital dealing older rela- change,Accept a dinner inv at facebook.com/ (surf) Canterbury and you’ll see that it Guinea gesture 22 Scolded 36 Tell tales Libra Join (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) CAMemphisM. tive. Tonight: friends. farmland inn Pisces (Feb. 19 26Like Freud disciple 92 Tales” Kitchen has the potential to be prof★★★ You be more Stoners’ 89 Yemeni port Alfred drawer? Scorpio (Oct.might 23-Nov. ★★★★ co itable. 20) Tonight: Get You a head 9093 Wrapped (up) 27memoirs? Coaches Some sites for awareYou of the importance of oninvolved 21) ★★★★ could be in start with a tomorrow. ___ New 91 Conciliatory 28 Leverage sightseers dealing withyou an want older rela- change, and you’ll se a position where Guinea in divorce 94 gesture Eke ___ living tive. Tonight: Join friends. to take charge of a project. negotiations? Maltreated Freud disciple 9297 Kitchen has the potential to b Tonight: A must(Oct. appear30Alfred Mixologist 99 drawer? Having trouble Jacqueline BigarTonight: is at Scorpio 23-Nov. itable. Get 32Coaches Went from slowing down? 93 Some sites for ance.21) ★★★★ You could bewww.jacquelinebigar.com. in start on tomorrow.
Today’s birthday
KEND ZLE TIONS
Solution: 1. Bg7ch! Kg8 2. Ba2! If ... Qxa2, 3. Qxe8 mate [SenguptaRaes ’14].
Expectant mom irked by nickname for child
S V V moms, H but FS U toPhave J J children? C LN LKH U I theS hotel Z Nbill R Land received “those” I seriously can’t handle the Gentle Reader: Why it comes out to X amount nickname while Natalie is some people think they are per person. Include your Today’s Cryptoquip just baby. L Gentle Na little B SReader: O HCorP Lbeing K Scharming L YtoNdistribU B J address, M A Reven V if you’re H F sure J ute congratulations to peo- that they already know it. recting the behavior of ple of whose circumstanc- The message, after you well-meaning friends and es they are ignorant, Miss state how happy you were V will F SHthe U Manners PPJ SJ CYcannot L imagine. NO JL PK toLHhave I them PV K N HYbe among JU M BSattend, SZ N O Ris. La family hardest to resist right now, As a response from child- business transaction, and but you must — especially less people, she suggests there is no shame in being if businesslike it. F give P Lsomething NU M SA HR V HNyouB ’ want CS Ohelp from PH Nthem PK IS SL Llike,JY“I’ll M - BZ JM Uabout J H B ! J during the irst few dii- my father your good wishcult and sleep-deprived es” or, “I’m afraid I’ve lost E-mail questions to dearmissToday’s Cryptoquip Clue: H equals I 6-1 manners@gmail.com. months. my mother.”
a position where you want
to take charge of a project. Sudoku
Tonight: A must appearance.
Jacqueline Bigar is at www.jacquelinebigar.c
Sudoku 6-1-14 Wedding site 100 Fancy Engine booster wheels, Tropicana Field familiarly team 101 “... so long W.W. II invasion ___ both shall 6-1-14 site live?” TightWedding spot in site 102 Part an 68 100 of Fancy well. A discussion in private will By Jacqueline Bigar South Florida? 69 Engine booster old military wheels, King Features Syndicate ___ Hawkins give you more information. 73 Tropicana Field alphabet familiarly Day 103 Big band’s LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) team 101 “... so long Correct booking 74 W.W. II invasion ___ both ARIES (March 21-April 19)shallHHH Sometimes you underTaedium vitae 104 Pops site live?” HHHH Make 105 timeComes to reach out estimate the efect you have on View from Lake to pass, 76 spot in you old-style 102 Part of on an Como others. Therefore, you’ll make toTight someone deal with SouthofFlorida?106 “Star old military Relatives Wars” a point of being very dramatic. a regular basis. Tension might 78 ___ Hawkins turtles furballalphabet build around a107money matter. Day 103 Big band’s Trust that you don’t need to Neon frame? Others, present an exaggerated form Optimism surround 79 Correct seemstoto booking Stirred Ovid 81 vitaeor108 Pops Spare In104 member. of yourself. Refuse to become a Taedium roommate family In a View hurry 111 End un filmto pass, 82 from Lake 105of20-May Comes critical of someone. TAURUS (April Govt. securities 112 Puncture Como old-style VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) 20) HHHH Yourpreceder imagination Left open84 Relatives of 106 “Star Wars” You level might wonder what could go nearly HHHH mouthed, sayhaywire, 113 visiting Mme.’s cousin turtles furball Difficulty ★★★★★ Rent every except107 theOthers, one that is needed to follow through on 86 Neontopic frame? Wedding sight to the moment. a long-term commitment. You 87 isStirred pertinent to OvidAt-
Horoscopes
Dec. 21) HHHH You might ind that taking the lead could entail far more responsibility than you had originally thought. Loosen up, and stay on top of a project. Others might be withholding what they know. Make it a point to open up when others reveal some information. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHHH You could have dificulty letting go of a problem. You might feel as if you have to shake a friend or loved one just to get to himyesterday's or her to listen to you. Answer puzzle 89 tempts Spare to discipline 108your In mind could be even more detail- It is possible that this person is Sudoku is a number93 might In a hurry 111take Endaofperun filmoriented than usual.based Confusion not as relaxed as you originally fail. If you can, placing puzzle 95 Govt. securities 112 Puncture on ato9x9 grid with sevseems surround a partner. sonal day. You will feel refreshed believed. Chess Quiz 96 Left openpreceder eral given numbers. The22) LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. soon enough. mouthed, say 113 Mme.’s cousin Difficulty level ★★★★★ AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. object is to place the How you deal with a 18) HHHH You might want GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHHH 98 Rent numbers 1 to 9 in the 99 HHHH WeddingPressure sight onesquares could change builds on the loved to move forward. Get some-p empty so thatradiAnswer to yesterday's because of thecolumn confusion one’s support by sharing your homefront. A partner, fam- cally each row, each Sudoku is a numbereach 3x3 con-based surrounds thisbox person. You thoughts and by incorporating ily member or roommate could thatand placing puzzle tains the same number to be very clear in become demanding, or a prob- might want on a 9x9 grid with sev- some of his or her feedback. Chess only once. The difficulty communication. lem involving yourQuiz home might your given numbers. TheOptimism seems to surround a leveleral of the Conceptis SCORPIO (Oct. become more obvious. Don’t is to23-Nov. place the personal issue. Sudokuobject increases from numbers 1or tohigher9 in the A boss expect to accomplish a lot with 21) HHHHH PISCES (Feb. 19-March Monday to Sunday. squares that 20) HHHH You might want up couldempty be cheering yousoon, this issue looming over you. each you row,might eachthink. columnto open up a discussion about CANCER (June 21-July 22) despite what and each 3x3 box con- a key decision. The more feedHHHH Listen to news more Give up a newfound level of tains the same number WHITE A CRUSHERcould CONTACT US fussiness, and open up to a back you get, the stronger you openly. YourHAS perspective only once. The difficulty Hint: Set up a lethal pin. Consider possichange, and you also might have loved will become. You also will make Peggyone. McKenzie, mckenziep@commercialappeal. level of 529-2341, thethe Conceptis of aSudoku long-term trip a a better a more active interaction as a re- bility decision. com. Become a fan of thewith M section on Facebook atSomeone facebook.you increases from orientation. sult. The experience might make fun keep reaching out to seems to com/CAMemphisM; follow us on Twitter at twitter.com/ Monday to Sunday. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22- be unavailable. you feel more sure of yourself as memphismeditor. Solution: 1. Bg7ch! Kg8 2. Ba2! If ... Qxa2, 3. Qxe8 mate [SenguptaRaes ’14].
MISS MANNERS
Solution: 1. Rd5! If 1. ... Rxd5, 2. Qf8 mate! If 1. ... Qxd5, 2. Qg7 mate! Or if 1. ... exd5, Qxd8 mate!
black to red, 105sightseers Like radon Leverage say among in divorce 94 Eke ___ all living 33negotiations? Home with a gaseous 97 Maltreated view elements Mixologist 99 Having trouble 34 Whinny 108 Popped up Went from slowing down? 38 Sound in a hot 109 “Appointment black to red, 105 Like radon tub in Samarra” among all 41sayMallard relative novelist TODAY’S with CRYPTOQUIP a 44Home Berth 110gaseous Cobbler’s elements 45view Theater heirloom? ALL I CAN SEEM TO THINK ABOUT TODAY IS THAT WONDERFUL ICE SHOW I SAW Whinny 108 opening 113Popped Bet up in a hot I’M 109 “Appointment YESTERDAY. SO 46Sound Dumbstruck 114SKATER-BRAINED! Aplomb 11 Star of reality 31 “The Tempest” 48 Big name in 68 tubduo? Samarra” 115in“Spamalot” TV’s “The Girls spirit barbecue grills 69 relative novelist 50Mallard Moolah writer and Next Door,” 33 Hieroglyphic 49 With 47-Down, 73 51Berth Blemished lyricist 110 Cobbler’s briefly symbol angry 52Theater Admit (to) 116heirloom? Forward 12 Immodest 35 “___ Love,” 50 Building needs, 74 53opening Calculus 117Bet Heavens 113 display 1987 informally calculation 118Aplomb Clear-cuts, e.g. Dumbstruck 114 13 Star Oscarofnominee LL“The CoolTempest” J hit 5448NotBig straight 11 reality 31 nameup in 76 55duo? Makes the 119 Off course 115 “Spamalot” for “The 36 Stylist’s goop 57 Tolerated connection TV’s “The Girls spirit barbecue grills Moolah writer and Wrestler” 37 fit 5849Focusing 56Blemished Zero-star movie DOWN Next Door,” 33 ___ Hieroglyphic With 47-Down, 78 lyricist 14 Highlight 38 Rest stop problem, for 57Admit Balkan capital 1 Not on briefly symbol angry (to) 116 Forward 15 Double takes? convenience, short 79 59 Judith ___ Beach, Fla. point 12 Immodest 35 for “___ Love,” 50Ferrell’s Building needs,Is By Dear 60 Miss Manners: Miss Manners is afraid Calculus Martin117 Heavens 16 Gutter site short 81 61 Susan of “L.A. 2 Singer Jones display 1987Gregory informally and Jacobina Martin there a tactful, or at least that17you must to calculation 118 e.g. One with a come 39 1956 cheerleading 82 Law” 3 Clear-cuts, Hang (over) 13 with Oscar nominee LL Cool J hit 54partner Not straight upto Universal home away Peck role on way the 119 course terms socially acceptable, the idea that 62Makes Tale Uclick of 4 Off Saturated for “The 36 “Don’t Stylist’s 57“S.N.L.” Tolerated from home be goop 84 connection to Focusing your friends will be 40 nickmetropolitan 5 Samsung your child 37 a___ fitarticulate 18 Wrestler” Crime-fighting ___!” 6358Dealt (with) Zero-star movie DOWN religious smartphone Dear Miss Manners: My named that it was pleasure whether you4238like Rest stop problem, for 86 Eliot Confronts 64 Ayour musical Balkan capital Not on10-Down, 14 Highlight diversity? With husband and 1I6 are ex- it or15 to reserve and pay for their Revenge be Double takes? will convenience, short 20not. Extra: Abbr. 43 Certain backmight be on 87 Beach, Fla. point 67___ Word before or certain punch 16 Gutter for short 60one Ferrell’s 24 however, Actresssite ___when your scratcher 89 pecting our irst in yours, hotel rooms in advance (as Susan “L.A. 2 7 baby Singer Jones afterof“down” Marshy Dawnwith Chong 45 “The 65 Neighbors of book93 17 One a 39old 1956 Gregory cheerleading a70Law” month. We have named was required by the becomes 3 Hang (over) daughter Yam or turnip lowland 26 home Mentored, Rapture of Navajos 95 away Peck role partner on 71 They’re big in 8 Features of Tale of 4 Saturated her Natalie, but my best enoughfrom ing service) — to home come up 40 with e.g. Canaan” 66 Sale site,but that 96 “Don’t be “S.N.L.” barns many kids’ metropolitan Samsung friend has been5 referring now that the event is over, nicknames for everyone 29 Crime-fighting Celebrated author maybe 18 a ___!” 63 Dealt (with) 72religious Huskers’ place mats smartphone 30 Eliot Poe poem, with pre-nice 98 to her as Nat Nat, which I herself. it would67really be if 42 Reynolds Confronts 64Popular A musical targets Legal10-Down, hearing diversity? 6 9 With “The” 47 See 49-Down marathon meal 99 20 Extra: Abbr. Manners: 43 Certain backmight be onyou? Dear Miss hate. It ’13, makes me cringe everyone reimbursed 75Word ’12 before or now 10 See 6-Down or certain punch 24 Actress scratcherWhile $100 one What is the___ proper reevery time she does it. for one perafter “down” 7 Marshy Chong 45 “The son is not65 Neighbors of to How do I ask herlowland not to sponseDawn to someone who a lot, it starts Yam or turnip 26 Mentored, Rapture of Navajos They’re big in 8 Features of call my baby that without wishese.g. my husband or me add up when you’ve Today’s Cryptoquip Canaan” 66 Sale site, had to barns manyMy kids’ a happy Mother’s or Fasounding too mean? people. 29 Celebrated authordo it for several maybe Huskers’ says to leave place mats Write husband it ther’s when we were 30 Day, Poe poem, with Reynolds Gentle Reader: 67 Popular pre- to targets 9 Legal hearing “The”with the ability 47 See 49-Down them, saying marathon that youmeal have alone and not be one of not blessed ’12 or ’13, now 10 See 6-Down
16 » Thursday, June 5, 2014 »
T H E W E E K LY
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Faith FARMINGTON PRESBYTERIAN
Volunteers needed for Mexico mission trips By Linda Bourassa Special to The Weekly
Farmington Presbyterian Church is seeking volunteers to participate in one of three mission trips to Mexico’s Yucatán Peninsula. Trips will take place June 17-25, July 8-15 and July 15-22, 2014. Partnering with the Yucatán Water Harvest Mission and the Mexico Cistern Ministry, volunteers on each trip will build cisterns to provide clean drinking water to families in rural areas of Mexico. “In areas with little or no clean drinking water, these cisterns are literally a lifesaver,” said Todd Luke, associate member of the Campechano Presbytery in Mexico and leader of the cistern-building mission project. “The cisterns are low-tech to en-
sure their longevity, and each one can provide up to 15,000 gallons of clean water annually.” Since the Presbytery of the Mid-South began participating in these trips in 2002, Mid-South volunteers have built more than 30 cisterns, which provide clean water to hundreds of people throughout the Yucatán Peninsula. This year, participating churches include Farmington Presbyterian, First Presbyterian Brownsville, Cordova Presbyterian, Germantown Presbyterian, Balmoral Presbyterian, Trinity Presbyterian — Martin, First Presbyterian Blytheville and Evergreen Presbyterian. Additionally, student groups from the University of Memphis, Rhodes College and The University of Tennessee-Martin will
send volunteers. The cost of the trip is approximately $1,500 per person, which includes airfare, lodging and meals. Of that cost, $400 will go toward building materials for the cisterns. Additionally, as part of the program, families receiving cisterns help cover the cost by working on cisterns for other families. Some churches, including Farmington Presbyterian, are making partial scholarships available for participants, who must raise $600 toward the trip before applying for a scholarship. “Farmington strives to give back to our local community daily through outreach, educational and other programs,” said Rev. Rebecca Luter, pastor of Farmington Presbyterian Church. “These mission
Members of the Farmington Presbyterian group from the last mission trip to build cisterns, included (from left) Jenny Howell, Bonnie Blair, Jayme White and Rosanne Crocker.
trips give us an opportunity to reach beyond our comfort zone in the MidSouth to help people who lack even the most basic of needs — clean drinking water. Of course, we re-
Funds raised for mosquito nets to ight malaria in Africa fretland@commercialappeal.com 901-529-2785
CrossRoads United Methodist Church in Collierville is raising money for mosquito nets as part of an international project to combat malaria. Gabriel Unda Yemba, a bishop of the United Methodist Church in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, is visiting Tennessee and spoke last Sunday at the church. The bishop’s wife and daughter died of malaria, said Birgitte French, pastor of the church. Malaria “can be prevented by sleeping under mosquito nets,” she said. “We’ve raised over $500 in our little church to help that.” There were 207 million cases of malaria in 2012 and an estimated 627,000 deaths, according to the World Health Organization. Ninety percent of malaria deaths happen in sub-Saharan Africa with pregnant women and young children being at the highest risk for the mosquito-borne disease. The “Nothing But Nets” campaign was sparked in 2006 with journalist Rick Reilly’s column in Sports Illustrated in which he called on people to help save lives by making donations for mosquito nets through the United Nations Foundation. The do-
Combs at 731-780-1800 or visitfarmingtonpres.org/ loating9.php Linda K. Bourassa is the president of Blue Moon Inc. Marketing & Public Relations.
MILLSTONE
CROSSROADS UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
By Katie Fretland
ceive much more than we give as we come to personally know our brothers and sisters in an impoverished area of the world.” For more information or to volunteer, call Andy
MARKET & NURSERY
Millstone Market & Nursery is the premier source to make your home, yard and garden bloom. Our nursery has the largest selection of plants in the Memphis area year round. We also specialize in landscape design and installation. Our showroom has a unique selection of imported furniture, home décor items and gifts.
nations are used to buy and distribute bed nets that are treated with insecticide. In April for World Malaria Day, Kathy Calvin, the United Nations Foundation presiGabriel Unda dent, said the mortality Yemba rate for malaria has decreased by 48 percent for children under 5 years old and by 42 percent for all ages over the last 10 years, but a child continues to die of malaria every minute. The United Methodist Church is a founding partner of the global project. “We lost many, many people,” Yemba said. “In my family, I lost my wife, I lost my child. We thank so much the program.” French and her husband, Niels, met when they were both missionaries in South Congo. She arrived in South Congo in 1983 from Copenhagen, Denmark, where she grew up. He was raised in the Congo by missionary parents, attended Nebraska Wesleyan University in Lincoln, Neb., and returned in 1985. They were married in 1987 and were missionaries for 13 years in Congo, Algeria and Kenya. For more information, visit nothingbutnets.net.
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GERMANTOWN BAPTIST
First ‘Moms Track’ VBS ofers opportunity to be creative By Beth Reed Special to The Weekly
Beginning this year, Germantown Baptist Church is making a significant investment in moms throughout vacation Bible school week. Church members recently announced the launch of the VBS “Moms Track.” Moms Track ofers a new enrichment opportunity each day for the mothers of VBS participants, June 9-13. Moms can release their inner creativity on
Monday in Art Class led by Kim Rasche. Guests can enhance their overall sense of wellness on Tuesday as instructors Tonya Walters and Karen Chaney lead a seminar on itness and nutrition. Explore the beneits and uses of essential oils on Wednesday with Kim Moss. Solve the daily dilemma of dinnertime with a workshop on Meal Planning Thursday, led by Jacky Lawler. Moms can rejuvenate and refresh their spirit on Friday during a fellowship time led
MY ANSWER
Be patient when God answers in His way By Billy Graham Tribune Content Agency
Q: I prayed and prayed that God would heal my grandmother, but He didn’t. She was old and in poor health, but I’d always depended on her. Why didn’t God answer my prayers? — M.F. A: We don’t always know
why God doesn’t answer our prayers the way we think He should. I think of Job’s cry when he mistakenly thought God didn’t hear his prayers: “Why do
you hide your face and consider me your enemy?” (Job 13:24). Yes, you prayed that your grandmother would be healed, and apparently she wasn’t. But listen: she was! She is in heaven — and all her weaknesses are gone! Thank God that your grandmother is free from all her earthly ills. Send queries to “My Answer,” c/o Billy Graham Evangelistic Association, 1 Billy Graham Parkway, Charlotte, N.C., 28201; call 1-(877) 2-GRAHAM, or visitbillygraham.org.
by Beth Reed. Moms Track meets daily during VBS week from 9-10:30 a.m. Meet in the Grand Lobby each morning of VBS. From there, guests will be greeted and escorted to the day’s adventure. vacation Bible school is open to children ages 4 through ifth grade. To register your children for vacation Bible school, visit germantownbaptist. org/vbs. Beth Reed is the director of Women’s Ministry at Germantown Baptist.
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ÂŤ Thursday, June 5, 2014 ÂŤ 17
Business PRESCRIPTION FOR CARE
Insurers, pharmacists team up for patient awareness BlueCross BlueShield of Tennessee. C h at t a n o o g a - ba s e d BlueCross selected a Des Moines, Iowa company founded by pharmacists, OutcomesMTM, to step up the medication therapy management. The program serves high-risk patients with Medicare Advantage coverage. At high risk are those people with three or more chronic health conditions with a number of medications. Medicare Advantage, which has private companies deliver Medicare benefits, has required medication therapy management since 2007, King said. BlueCross, with some 80,000 patients in the program, previously used telephone calls for medication
By Kevin McKenzie mckenzie@commercialappeal.com 901-529-2348
As a pharmacist at a Fred’s Super Dollar store in Bartlett, Bryan Benton knows about drug interactions, side efects and potential savings that patients illing prescriptions may not know. With a Medicare and insurer-driven practice known as medication therapy management, front-line pharmacists like Benton are being tapped to play a more hands-on role in providing higher quality and more eicient health care. “It truly is a team and pharmacists, we have not used them to their potential,� said Sonya King, pharmacy director for
for the program. At chain pharmacies like Fred’s, a Memphis-based retailer, the revenue for providing the service lows to the company. For independent pharmacies, it goes to the pharmacist, King said. Benton said he contacts covered customers by phone or at the counter. Usually he asks them to set aside about 30 minutes to visit JIM WEBER/THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL
Pharmacist Bryan Benton fills prescription orders at the Fred’s Super Dollar store pharmacy in Bartlett. Benton also visits oneon-one with customers to educate about their medications.
therapy management, but has “stepped up our game� with the goal of higher quality care, she said. OutcomesMTM, which serves dozens of companies like BlueCross, pro-
G’town library director loves his job, fishing boro library. M o s t s atis f ying career moment: Ev-
Director of the Germantown Community Library, 1925 Exeter Road Hometown: Harrisburg, Ark. Family: Wife, Caprisha, daughter, Chloe Civic involvement: Civitan Club, Exchange Club, Lions Club, Cordova Church of Christ First job: Student worker in the basement of Arkansas State University Jones-
eryday loving what I do. Career advice: Serve!
Daniel Page
S e r v e ! Serve!
Hobbies: Fishing — I’m not any good at it but there’s nothing more relaxing than ishing and catching nothing.
People would be surprised to know: I don’t read very
What is the last book you read: Encounter in Rende-
accessible information for everyone.
with me more than anyone else.
Anywhere with water.
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Logistics/ Transportation
Thursday, June 5, 2014
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Trucks, SUV’s and Vans
Class A CDL Training
Customer Service Positions
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Logistics/ Transportation
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AutoNation Honda Mendenhall
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Garage Sales
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BARTLETT OLE BARTLETT VILLAGE ANNUAL GARAGE SALE Near Stage Rd and Bartlett Blvd -- just behind Antiques Gallery. SATURDAY, JUNE 7th, 7 am to 1 pm. George Foreman Grill, Roomba Teeter hang-up, 8'x10' wool rug, old trunks, dishes, jewelry, mirrored medicine cabinet, KIDS TOYS and clothes, movies, CDs, king-full comforters, sheets, Sharp 19"-24" TVs, interactive TV games, lamps, ceiling lights, old wooden baby furniture, mens t-shirts (XL), ladies suits (size 2-4), Hockey equipment! RAIN DATE JUNE 14th.
Store and Restaurant Equipment
392 955
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Automobiles For Sale
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BUICK ‘01 LeSabre Limited, low miles, $7991 incl $499 doc, excl ttl. #1U265550. 877-562-4314
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Cadillac ‘12 Escalade PlatiBUICK’11 Lacrosse, num, diamond white, dual white/tan lthr, s/rf, 29K mi, exhaust, loaded, Certified! like new, factory certified. $59,989 inc $499 doc+ttl 25837 #14978A. Alex, 901-288-7600 Keino Spring, 901-301-4912
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Low price High qlty since 85 ´2 Indoor Showrooms´ 75+in stockmiles as low as 622 Most in factory warranty, w/100Kextended warranty Mendenhall available 15,000 + Happy Clients! LEXUS ‘04 LS430, tan, All trades welcome, under 100K mi, hurry you Excellent finance rates know it won’t be here long! w/approved credit. See Keith Dial, 901-218-9105. Sales • Service • Bodyshop Please View LINCOLN MKX, white, 1700 miles! Ask for Keith 2965 S. 3RD 901-332-2130 Dial, 901-218-9105 for NISSAN ‘12 370Z, 3K miles, deal & details. auto, custom show car! White & Bad To The Bone! #25835. Steve Harris, TOYOTA ‘08 Highlander 901-288-4946 Hybrid, super nice, $20,991 includes $499 doc, excl ttl. #82008195. 877-562-4314 VOLVO ‘96 960, drives AutoNation Honda great, cold air, $3991 includes $499 doc, excl ttl. Mendenhall #T1096751. 877-562-4314
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HONDA ‘08 Pilot EXL, local Memphis 1 owner SUV, black w/tan leather, LOW mi, sunroof, $18,988 incl $499 doc, excl ttl. 901-761-1900
CUSTOMER APPRECIATION DAY HONDA ‘08 Pilot EX-L, On June 7th Wiemar's 45K miles. #25836. Jewelry is holding a CusBrett Hubbard, tomer Appreciation Day. 901-761-1900 There will be great deals inside and outside the store! Scoops Ice Cream will be serving Ice Cream JEEP ‘12 Wrangler Sabetween 1 p.m. and 3 p.m. hara, leather, loaded, Come in on the 7th and ask $33,991 incl $499 doc, exc ttl. Mandy for your FREE #CL236081. 877-562-4314 GIFT!! Wiemar's Jewelry AutoNation Honda 7525 Highway 64 Memphis, TN. 38133. HURRY IN!
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Automobiles For Sale
HONDA ‘07 CRV EX-L, HONDA ‘08 Fit, a must see, leather, loaded, $13,991 ingreat MPG, $10,991 incl cludes $499 doc, excludes $499 doc, excl ttl. ttl. #7C039826. 877-562-4314 #8S072181. 877-562-4314
GAS RANGE Commercial, like new 36’’ 6 burner w/ Mendenhall grill/backsplash/oven, FRENCH BULLDOG Pups $750 . (901)756-7382 or see at BUICK ‘03 Regal, leather3 females AKC reg health VFW, 2600 Elvis Presley. n-roof, low miles, $6991 inguarantee. $2000 will hold cludes $499 doc, excludes with deposit. ttl. #31161717. 877-562-4314 Call 870-945-2233. Trucks, SUV’s
Local/Regional liquid, dry bulk & flatbed carrier in a small family atmosphere GORDON SETTER Puppies, Sire and Dam both where you can be HOME have AKC junior hunter tiMOST NIGHTS along w/competitive pay, safety tles. The pups will be excellent family companions as & referral bonus, paid well as hunting companorientation, holidays & ions, great with small chilvacations, retirement dren, other pets. Prettiest plan and group medical bird dog on the planet!!! available. Requires 2 yrs exp., good MVR, Class A w/ $700. Call Jim 501-250-4021 tank endorsement & willing to get HazMat within 60 days. Must live w/in 45 mi. of Memphis. Call Sidney or Larry at 1-800-264-9031. Hiring for Local Position OLIVE BRANCH, MS Affordable Benefits Class A CDL w/2yrs OTR CALL DANCOR TRANSIT @ 866-677-4333
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Mendenhall
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FORD ‘08 F250 Lariat 4x4 Powerstroke Diesel, only CHEVROLET ‘13 Malibu, 63K miles, white & tan. See white/tan lthr, sunroof, 15K Dial for a deal & details. miles. #25785B. Brian Keith Dial, 901-218-9105. Thompson, 901-208-7255
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If I could change one thing in the world: Open easily
7700 Poplar Ave., Suite 216 • Germantown, TN 38138
CL1
FORD ‘09 F250 Crew Cab CHEVROLET ‘00 Prism, Lariat 4x4, Navigation, priced to sell, cold air, $34,991 incl $499 doc, exc ttl. $2991 incl $499 doc, excl ttl. #9EB18317. 877-562-4314 #YZ418346. 877-562-4314
DRIVER-TRAINING
Ofice: 901.754.0800 Cell: 901.870.4181 Fax: 901.435.0638 tbunnell@crye-leike.com http://tammybunnell.crye-leike.com
Favorite vacation spot:
CLASSIFIED Administrative/ Clerical
Life Member Multi-Million Dollar Club
Favorite film or TV show:
Person you admire and why: My wife. She puts up
/
much.
sham Forest: The Inside Story of the World’s Best Documented UFO Incident Anything that cause my daughter or wife to squeeze my arm.
LLIERVILLE APPEAL
Tammy Bunnell
vides software that pharmacists like Benton use to identify the customers who arrive at their counters and receive the extra care. The pharmacists have been specially trained
BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT
Name: Daniel Page Business/location/title:
and bring all of their medications, including overthe-counter drugs. In addition he spends about an hour studying their prescription lists and histories beforehand. He’s looking not only for trouble spots, like drug interactions and disease interactions. He’s looking for cost savings where a lower-cost drug may be available.
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18 » Thursday, June 5, 2014 »
T H E W E E K LY
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Collierville Chamber of Commerce Chamber General Membership Meeting Wednesda , Ma 14 – Ridge a Countr Club University of Memphis Head Football Coach Justin Fuente was the keynote speaker at the May General Membership Luncheon at Ridgeway Country Club. A very energized, loyal University of Memphis audience welcomed Coach Fuente. Coach Fuente’s passion was evident throughout his message. Over 185 members, elected oicials and guests thoroughly enjoyed meeting Coach Fuente and enjoyed being able to participate in a brief Q&A. We are proud of the University of Memphis and the football program! As part of the agenda, the distinguished H. R Houston Leadership Award was presented by Jef Martindale, President; and, Terry Dean, Director of Leadership Collierville. Leading up to the surprise announcement, Martindale read the criteria and some excerpts from the submitted nomination form about the recipient. hen, the surprise announcement was made – Da e Nelson was named the recipient of the distinguished H. R. Houston Award. A humble Dave Nelson was greeted by his family as he approached the podium to accept the award. Congratulations to Dave Nelson on this well-deserved honor! He is a dynamic leader with the perfect combination of entrepreneurship, proven leadership, philanthropy, and a great sense of humor, with a true love of our town, nonproits and community mixed in between. Long-time Chamber member Collierville Funeral Home was our meeting sponsor.
Thirty-four Teams ‘Golfed Fore Progress” …. In the Collierville Chamber FedEx | First Tennessee | Carrier Corporation Memphis National Golf Classic
Monday, May 19, 2014, was the perfect day for golf…one hundred thirty-six golfers played in the annual event at Memphis Save the Date: June 11 General Membership Meeting. We will welcome National Golf Club.
University of Memphis Head Basketball Coach Josh Pastner as our keynote speaker. Info: 901-853-1949
MEMBER ORIENTATION BREAKFAST As a way to say thank you and welcome to our new members, he Collierville Chamber hosted, Breakfast & Business, What’s In It For You - a member breakfast, to educate existing and new members on the return of investment on their membership. Testimonials were made by fellow members, fellowship and networking was at its best among fellow members,Chamber board members and Chamber staf ! Our Chamber Boardroom was full of excitement and positive energy! Man thanks to our sponsors: Chick-il-A, Donut Hutt, Costco and Hampton Inn – Collierville.
RIBBON CUTTINGS Grill Gas E press - he Collierville Chamber of Commerce recently held a ribbon cutting for our new member, Grill Gas Express. Grill Gas Express is the leading propane tank delivery service eliminating the hassle of propane reills in Memphis and the Mid-South. Pictured cutting the ribbon is owner, Jason Jordan; Collierville Chamber Ambassadors; Bonnie Allman, Ambassador Chair & Board Member; Fran Persechini, Chamber President & CEO; Becky Hammond, Chamber Membership Director; Michael Meindl, Paradigm Business Images and chamber board member. Visit .grillgase press.com Culpepper Place of Collier ille Assisted Li ing – he Collierville Chamber of Commerce celebrated the grand opening of Culpepper Place of Collierville with a ribbon cutting ceremony. Culpepper Place of Collierville has been providing exceptional senior living for over 50 years with locations in Missouri and Arkansas. his is their irst location in Tennessee and they are excited to bring their rich heritage for providing senior living to the seniors and their families of Collierville. Pictured cutting the ribbon, are owners John and Susan Foster; Director Tim Johnson; residents and staf members; Mayor Stan Joyner, Chamber President Fran Persechini; Chamber board member, Greg Cotton; and chamber ambassadors. .culpepperplace.net Roto-Rooter, Plumbing and Drain Ser ices have been a household name since 1935. he Collierville Chamber oicials and ambassadors, along with Shelby County Mayor Mark Luttrell and Pierre Landaiche, Vice President, General Manager Memphis Management Group, celebrated with Lee & Liese Leonard, independent owners and operators since May 2011 of Roto-Rooter Memphis, in their re-grand opening festivities to celebrate their new location in Cordova. hey service Shelby County and many other surrounding counties in the mid-south. .rotorooter.com Chamber elcomes Mercedes-Benz of Collier ille – Mercedes-Benz of Collierville celebrated the irst of TWO grand opening events on hursday, May 8, 2014. Collierville Chamber oicials, Collierville elected oicials, Mercedes-Benz owners, employees, vendors, friends and partners gathered to oicially open Mercedes-Benz to Collierville. Look for their second family community event on June 14. .mbcollier ille.com
he Chamber would like to thank our Title Sponsors: FedEx;First Tennessee;Carrier Corporation; and, Memphis National Golf Club; Platinum Sponsor: Philips Emergency Lighting; Gold Sponsor: IPS Corporation; Beverage Cart Sponsors: Triumph Bank and Abra Auto Body & Glass; Holein-one sponsors: Landers Ford and Travel Leaders; premier player gift sponsor: First Tennessee; Putting Green sponsor: ServPro; Driving Range Sponsors: BMH-Collierville, MCR Safety and Contemporary Media; Closest to the Pin sponsored by Mercedes-Benz of Collierville; Longest Drive sponsored by he Sedona Group. Out of the 18 holes, 11 had selected sponsorships where our members could engage the golfers in a variety of fun activities ranging from corn hole toss, dressing like a lady, stopping by for grilled hot dogs, tasting Moe’s and Donut Hutt, just to name a few. A S Barbaro, Amodeo Chiropractic Clinic, Costco and Pepsi Beverages Company provided the beverages for our players. Chick-il-A provided breakfast for our morning light. Surprise player in the morning light was Mike Miller! Lots of happy golfers went home with amazing silent auction items. Every player received a special door prize, enjoyed networking with other business professionals and elected oicials; had a great lunch, beverages all day and lots of fun throughout the day! Many thanks to Golf Chairmen Cheryl & Jerry homas with he Sedona Group and Greg Cotton with Cotton Law Firm and to our entire golf committee, volunteers, sponsors and contributors who worked tirelessly for many months planning this successful event. Presented by the Collierville Chamber of Commerce, the event beneits on-going business and economic development programs of the Chamber. Each year, the Collierville Chamber ofers a Drive for $$ for Leadership Collierville to beneit Leadership Collierville. For a small donation golfers had the opportunity to drive their ball on hole 2 from 175 yards from the green. It was a win-win for the golfers and Leadership Collierville. hanks to everyone who participated—monies raised go directly to the programs of Leadership Collierville.
SAVE THE DATE Monda , Ma 18, 2015 - the best kept golf secret… the ord is out! Don’t be left out! Mission Statement: he mission of the Collierville Chamber of Commerce is to provide quality services and programs to its membership and to provide business leadership for the entire community in the vital areas of economic prosperity, education, and quality of life. Vision Statement: he vision of the Collierville Chamber of Commerce is to be the leading advocate for growth and proitability of the business community and to promote corporate citizenship. Guiding Principle: Our Unity Creates Community
.Collier illeChamber.com |
.Collier illeExpo.com