May 29 Germantown Weekly

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Thursday, May 29, 2014

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COACH ‘COULDN’T BE PROUDER’

STANDOUT PERFORMERS

Houston Mustangs inish season second in state after two-year postseason ban. Page 13

MUS’ Harrison Williams wins the 110-meter hurdles as area athletes rule at state. Page 14

Germantown Weekly SCHOOLS

Diicult year draws to close Hopeful for better things next year By Jane Roberts robertsj@commercialappeal.com 901-529-2512

KAREN PULFER FOCHT/THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL

It’s a bittersweet moment as Caroline Williamson, 19, and Wesley Baucum, 18, graduated May 21 in the chapel at Madonna Learning Center, which will be torn down to make way for expansion of the school at 7007 Poplar in Germantown. “It is just full of great memories,” said Caroline’s mom Elizabeth Williamson.

EDUCATION

A time for change Graduation mirrors transition of Madonna Learning Center

By Lela Garlington garlington@commercialappeal.com 901-529-2349

As parents snapped pictures of this year’s two graduates smiling in their bright red caps and gowns, the Madonna Learning Center held its last commencement exercises in the All Faith Chapel with its tiny stained glass windows and beautiful heart of pine wood paneled cathedral ceiling in Germantown. On May 22, construction crews began setting up to transform the private school by adding a multipurpose gym with a staging area, more classrooms including a preschool room, two playgrounds and a new administration suite. Workers will renovate the existing classroom building. The center, which caters to students ages 5 to 30 with physical and mental disabilities, is moving temporarily to Hope Presbyterian Church in Cordova until the project is inished within 12 months.

It is the center’s irst $10 million capital campaign in its 45-year history. The center moved to the former Church of Christ facility debt-free at 7007 Poplar in 1996. So far, the center has raised $6.4 million for the project. Just recently, two groups gave Madonna a $1 million challenge grant. If the center can raise another $1 million, it will match it. Sitting in her oice, the center’s executive director Jo Gilbert seems undaunted by the project. “Sister Mary Mark Graf always used to say, ‘We not only believe in miracles. We depend on them.’ So we live by that,” Gilbert said. “I know there’s a lot of prayers heading our way.” Her connection to the center runs deep dating back to when her brother was among the school’s irst students 45 years ago. As a youngster, she scrubbed the loors at St. James Catholic Church where Madonna

The political football that united Shelby County Schools died on the ield at noon last Friday when 140,000 students rushed into summer break. When they return in August, the county — perhaps less than magically — will have morphed from one major school system to eight, including the rapidly expanding Achievement School District. For Blount Smith, 77, who’s taught Latin 41 years in the same Bartlett High classroom, last week ended one of the most memorable, if not most diicult, years. “It’s been a very chaotic year. There were so many issues. We survived it, and we are going on to better things next year,” she said. “I am so delighted to become a Bartlett city schools employee.” The last obstacle, she hopes, is the possibility that she will have to claim 55 dependents on her federal tax withholding, the only way SCS can assure thousands of teachers in the suburbs — scheduled to get the equivalent of ive paychecks in one on June 6 — that they won’t go lying into higher tax brackets. Smith, who for obvious reasons mentors the entire Bartlett High staf, igured it would cost most of them a paycheck and a half to cover the withholding. “We are feeling better about it. Five paychecks in one lump sum raises your level of withholding quite a bit. Payroll did come up with a solution, and they did it very nicely.”

See MADONNA, 2 See SCHOOLS, 2

Inside the Edition

VOLUNTARISM

LIGHTEN UP, GRILL

Little Helpers collect items for Food Bank

Ignite your taste buds, keep your waistline by throwing some veggies on the grill.

Special to The Weekly

FOOD, 8

TEAM UP FOR ‘DRAFT’ Adoption fees lowered to $20 from June 1 to Aug. 31 as Humane Society takes part in nationwide challenge. COMMUNITY, 17

FASHION TO GO Entrepreneurs go mobile, bringing boutique business to customers. FASHION, 9 The Commercial Appeal © Copyright 2014

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The family volunteer group Little Helpers teamed up with Walgreen’s pharmacy in April to hold a monthlong food drive for the MidSouth Food Bank. Walgreen’s had drop-of bins at 19 of its locations throughout the area including Memphis, Cordova, Bartlett, Germantown, Collierville, Lakeland, Arlington, West Memphis, Horn Lake and Southaven. The Mid-South Food Bank helps hungry people in the 31 county service in West Tennessee, North Mississippi and East Arkansas. Little Helpers has been helping children help others since December 2010.

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The family volunteer group, operated by Tran Bui Smith, Kristen Terrell Landsgaard, Pat Mitchell Worley and Selena Silvestro, holds monthly service projects for children of all ages. The program is designed to help young people understand the value of volunteering, recognize the blessings in their lives, broaden their community perspective and feel the sense of accomplishment received from lending a helping hand. The ultimate goal of the program is to raise conident children who see giving back to the community as a normal aspect of their lives. For more information, check out Little Helpers on Facebook.

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In the News U.S. CenSUS

Memphis sufers substantial population loss Nashville poised to be largest city in state By Tom Charlier charlier@commercialappeal.com 901-529-2572

Memphis lost more than 1,000 residents between 2012 and 2013 and barely held its spot among the nation’s 20 largest cities, the latest census estimates show. The city’s population stood at 653,450 as of July 1, 2013, down from 654,556 a year earlier, ac-

cording to the estimates. While that was enough for Memphis to retain its rank as the nation’s 20th-largest city, Seattle was poised to move into that spot, gaining nearly 18,000 residents for an estimated population of 652,405. Memphis also is on track to be overtaken soon by Nashville as Tennessee’s largest city. Nashville, which had gained more than 20,000 residents between 2010 and 2012, added another 9,471 people for a 2013 population of 634,464, making it the nation’s

Germantown Police report

25th-largest city. The 1890 Census marked the last time Nashville was larger than Memphis. Memphis had shown modest population increases in 2011 and in 2012, when it annexed some 4,900 residents in south Cordova. Despite the population decline, some business leaders say Memphis is taking many of the steps necessary to ensure growth in the future. Phil Trenary, incoming president and CEO of the Greater Memphis Chamber, said recent school reforms and other improvements

should help the city build on its advantages in transportation and logistics. Trenary, however, said the city must get control of its budget, particularly where it involves the looming employee pension and retiree health care obligations. “If we don’t get our inancial house in order, we will not be able to be competitive,” he said. Already, Memphis residents and businesses face a combined city-county tax burden much worse than those in most other

cities, Trenary said, citing the example of an oice building in East Memphis that generates a tax bill twice as high as a similar one in Nashville. “We’re approaching one of the largest combined tax rates in the nation, and we’ve got to reverse that.” Elsewhere in the Memphis metropolitan area, Bartlett’s population grew by 3 to 58,226, the igures show, and Southaven was home to an estimated 50,997 people, an increase of 581 from the 2012 igure.

In brief

FitneSS FACilitieS

CO L L I E RV I L L E

MAY 19

Collierville Middle gets new principal

■ Someone damaged the door lock on the victim’s vehicle in the 2500 block of Brachton Avenue at 10:58 a.m. ■ Someone ran a sharp object down both sides of the victim’s vehicle damaging the paint in the 7800 block of E. Grove Court at 8 a.m. ■ Someone used victim’s personal information to ile fraudulent tax return in the 6600 block of Poplar Avenue at 1:50 p.m. ■ Someone took the victim’s utility trailer in the 1900 block of Wine Leaf at 2:41 p.m. ■ Someone entered unlocked vehicle and took baby stroller and cash in the 7600 block of Poplar at 5:10 p.m. ■ Someone placed a sign in the victim’s yard in the 7400 block of Neshoba Road at 5:27 p.m. ■ Oicers initiated a traic stop and arrested an adult male found in possession of a irearm without a permit at Hack Cross and Cross Village at 11:41 p.m. MAY 20

■ Someone threw eggs at the victim’s vehicle damaging the paint at Poplar and Miller Farms at 2:45 a.m. ■ Someone forced entry through a rear door and took a television and watch in the 8200 block of Beaufort Cove at 8:08 a.m. ■ Victim received a counterfeit check in exchange for items he had for sale on Craig’s List in the 7600 block of Foster Ridge at 11:10 a.m. ■ Someone forced entry into the victims vehicle by breaking out the passenger side window, taking her purse and it’s contents in the 2300 block of Turpins Glenat 5:41 p.m. MAY 22

■ Someone took the victim’s credit card from her purse in the 7600 block of Farmington at 4 p.m. ■ Someone made several fraudulent charges using the victim’s credit card in the 7700 block of Farmington at 4 p.m. ■ Someone took the victim’s cellphone in the 2100 block of South Germantown at 4:24 p.m. ■ Someone took the victim’s cellphone in the 2100 block of West Street at 4:26 p.m. ■ Someone took lowers/ plants from the victim’s front yard in the 8700 block of Three Chimney’s Drive at 5:58 p.m. ■ Oicers arrested male subject for assaulting his wife in the 3800 block of Forest Hill Irene at 6:40 p.m.

KyLE KuRLICK/THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL FILES

During an open house at the Kroc Center, Malik Tuner, 11, checked out the cardio machines. The facility is ailiated with the Salvation Army and competes with other not-for-proit itness centers such as the YMCA, as well as for-proit gyms.

Healthy competition As workout craze grows, lA Fitness plans health clubs in lakeland and Memphis By Thomas Bailey Jr. baileytom@yourappeal.com 901-529-2388

The exercise chain LA Fitness will spend nearly $10 million building two workout clubs in the Memphis area, according to recently pulled building permits. The development creates even more competition for for-proit and not-for-proit exercise facilities in the area. Memphis often tops lists that rank the nation’s obese cities, but that’s not stopping investors trying to cash in on the itness craze. The permits show the California-based parent company Fitness International is building a $4.96 million facility in Lakeland at 8864 U.S. 64. That’s just east of, and visible from, I-40. Another $4.88 million facility is being built on 6.8 acres near Winchester and Bill Morris Parkway, at 7630 Polo Grounds. Arizona-based Barclay Group is developing the 41,000-square-

foot health spa. The exercise chain is in growth mode. LA Fitness is also building an $11.9 million, 52,700-squarefoot club in Little Rock, according to the Arkansas Business Journal. “As far as a one-user, standalone building, this is pretty big for Lakeland,” said Jim Atkinson, Lakeland’s director of planning and administration. The Lakeland facility will be about 40,000 square feet on 5 acres. Lakeland has other itness businesses, but none are full service like LA Fitness, Atkinson said. The club will ofer a staf, pool, locker room and child care. That’s the kind of comprehensive service ofered by some other facilities, including the notfor-proits like the Kroc Center, a $31 million Salvation Army community center which opened last year in Memphis, and the YMCA, which has operated in Memphis nearly 160 years. “They kind of picked spots sort

of in between our service areas,” said Keith Johnson, chief executive of the YMCA of Memphis & The Mid-South. Asked if there are a enough customers to go around for all the area’s itness facilities, Johnson replied, “Do we have all the members that we have capacity to handle? No. Is there a large percentage of residents in the Memphis area that work out regularly? No.” But the YMCA system is “doing great,” Johnson said. “Next year will be our 160th year in Memphis so we’ve got to be doing something OK. We just added a branch last year in Oxford.” Unlike for-proit exercise clubs, the YMCA has a sliding-fee scale based on a family or individual’s ability to pay. “And there is so much more that we do,” Johnson said. “We’re the largest provider of child care in the Memphis area. The largest provider of swim lessons in the Memphis area. We work with a thousand teens a year. We’re probably the largest provider of day camp programs in the area,” he said. “We’re so much more than a gym.”

from 1 Meanwhile, SCS will pay health coverage premiums until Aug. 31 for teachers and principals in the 33 schools that are being turned over to suburban school boards July 1. At Cordova High School, principal Felicia Everson has just wrapped up hiring the 10 teachers she expects to need for 450 new students (a 25 percent gain) expected to pour into CHS from unincorporated parts of Bolton and Bartlett high attendance areas. “We have to be very strategic in determining what type of certification teachers have, based on what students need to graduate,” she said. To do that, Cordova High sent stacks of “course selection cards” to Bolton and Bartlett students and a smidgen of other families that will be zoned to CHS starting July 1. “We have most of the cards in from parents,” Everson said. “The others probably haven’t made a decision yet. We are try-

Auditions upcoming for ‘Oklahoma!’

The Collierville Arts Council will hold auditions for the upcoming musical production of “Oklahoma!” at the Harrell Theatre on June 7 at 1:30 p.m. and June 14 at 10:30 a.m. Callbacks will be June 14 at 1:30 p.m. Rodgers & Hammerstein’s “Oklahoma!” will be performed live on stage at the Harrell Theatre, 440 W. Powell, Sept. 12-21. Rehearsals for the production are expected to begin around Aug. 1. The production staf, director Jason Spritzer and musical director Tammy Holt, will be casting adults, teens and children ages 6 and up. Audition forms, a headshot and 16 bars from a musical will be needed. “Bye Bye Birdie,” winner of four Tony Awards and one of the most captivating musicals ever, will be presented by the Arts Council at the Harrell Theatre on June 20-29. The Commercial Appeal

THE

Provided by the Germantown Police Department

SCHOOLS

Arlington High vice principal Roger Jones III will be going to work as the new principal for Collierville Middle School starting in July. As vice-principal, Jones oversees curriculum and instruction and guidance services at Arlington. “Roger is an outstanding leader and person. He is knowledgeable regarding academic instruction and school administration and works to build meaningful relationships with students, parents, teachers, and the community,” said Collierville School Supt. John Aitken in making the announcement. Jones is a former assistant principal at Collierville Middle and a former teacher at Schilling Farms Middle in Collierville. He has a master’s degree in leadership and policy studies and a BS in education human development and learning from the University of Memphis.

WEEKLY ing to anticipate what they will be taking. We do have to do some guesswork.” Guess high, and she will have too many on staf. If she guesses low, Everson will be looking for teachers in the irst week of school. Meanwhile, there is no decision on what time the school day will start next year in SCS, although the board seems to be leaning toward keeping high schools at the earliest bell — either 7:15 or 7:30 a.m. Changing high school starts from 7 to 8 a.m. — the preference for the majority of families the district surveyed in early April — would require disrupting schedules at 106 schools. School board member Teresa Jones, who visited three high schools for breakfast this spring, says so few students show up on time, principals have to schedule non-tested subjects in the irst period. “Seven o’clock does not work. The feedback I got was kids still come at 7:30 or 8. They are either asleep and don’t get there or they miss most of it.”

Colleen Cole cheers on her students as they walk across the graduation stage. During the expansion of Madonna Learning Center, the school will temporarily operate at Hope Church.

Volume 2, No. 13 The Weekly, a publication of The Commercial Appeal, is delivered free on Thursdays to select residents throughout Germantown and Collierville.

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

KAREN PuLFER FOCHT THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL

MADONNA from 1 Learning Center moved after irst opening at Saint Peter’s Home for Children in Midtown in 1969. While work crews will save the stained glass and the paneled ceilings, the chapel will be torn down to make room for growth at the private school. “This is it for this building,” said the center’s board member Elizabeth

EXECUTIVE EDITOR

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

Williamson as she stood outside the chapel. “It’s the beginning of a whole new chapter. This is a hidden gem for the entire MidSouth area.” Williamson, whose daughter, Caroline, 19, graduated recently, is ready for a new chapter. “It is just full of great memories like the years of not being able to it another person in this chapel for the Christmas program,” she said. “I’m just illed with gratitude.”

While parent Carol Baucum is packing away plenty of memories of her son’s irst Christmas program in the chapel and now his graduation, she supports the building plans. “There wasn’t anywhere to grow,” she said. Now with the campaign, she added, “The future’s bright.” Gilbert knows the community and the parents will make the miracle happen: “Our school motto is ‘Together we can.’ And together we have.”

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

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T H E W E E K LY

In the News COLLIERVILLE

Town holds line on taxes amid flat budget Gives employees raise, fronts schools funding By Lela Garlington garlington@commercialappeal.com 901-529-2349

Collierville is holding its own this year with no property tax increase, a 3 percent raise for the town’s 450 employees and a relatively lat operations budget. Collierville’s proposed general fund operation budget for iscal year 2015 is $44.1 million

compared to last year’s budget of $43.3 million — an increase of 1.8 percent. The Board of Mayor and Aldermen met May 22 for a nonvoting work session to go over the town and school budgets. Town oicials will hold a public hearing on the budget at their June 9 meeting and will vote on it June 23. The budget calls for hiring ive new full-time workers — four in the Parks Department after the new Hinton Park is inished next year, and an IT

project manager for the Finance Department. The town expects to buy at least ive sport utility vehicles for IT, Police, Fire and Water departments, along with six trucks, a dump truck, a garbage truck, three patrol cars and an unmarked car for undercover operations. “We turned down a lot of requests for new employees and program changes,” said Town Administrator James Lewellen. “We’ll watch the numbers. We may have to ask for another

(development department engineering) inspector and the same thing with vehicles. We are trying to stretch it (additional personnel and vehicles) out for another year.” Collierville has budgeted $4.9 million in startup costs beginning July 1 for the town’s new municipal school district, funded from the additional halfcent sales tax the town has been collecting. Other suburban towns in Shelby County have taken similar actions to help the new municipal

school districts. In addition, Finance Director Jane Bevell said that until the bulk of the school district’s revenues come in late this calendar year, the town will be loaning the district $2 million in September to help with the district’s cash low and $507,819 in October to pay for the settlement costs due the Shelby County School system. Collierville oicials say the $2.5 million in loans likely would be paid back by the end of the school year.

AWARDS

Main Street Collierville awards presented to area businesses

Doug Dickens (right) and his son, Chris, are developing property east of Town Square in Collierville. Their properties will have the feeling of the town’s Historic District.

Collierville Weekly shares win in the publication category Special to The Weekly

KAREN PULFER FOCHT THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL

ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT

Infill projects stick to historic appeal, portend boom

May is Preservation Month and recently Main Street Collierville awarded area businesses who helped preserve and save historic places around town. The preservation awards opened with a proclamation by Collierville Mayor Stan Joyner, followed by a brief presentation by Shelby County Mayor Mark Luttrell. Afterword, awards were given out to local businesses. The winners are: Commercial signage: Applied Labels, Battleground Lacrosse, Cafe Piazza and Our Little Secret Heritage education: Morton Museum of Collierville History

John Stamps (left) presents Paul Jewell, marketing director for The Commercial Appeal, a certificate in honor of the newspaper publisher’s Collierville Weekly being one of the Main Street Collierville award winners.

Commercial renovation/investment: By Lela Garlington garlington@commercialappeal.com 901-529-2349

Just as the west side of Collierville’s Town Square is springing to life with the University of Memphis campus construction and the municipal school district oice renovation at the Historic High School building, the east side is popping with nearby inill developments and even a bed-and-breakfast in the works. Since 2008, seven new homes have been built, 21 home lots are for sale and two more projects are in the works for the east side. While that number may sound small, much of the new development is squeezing new homes in undeveloped or underdeveloped properties that are sandwiched between Town Square and the town’s industrial area. Natchez Place is the latest development that likely will go before the town’s Historic District Commission in June. Doug Dickens, his son Chris Dickens and John Ashworth are partners on the proposed Natchez Place. “That’s one of the most important parts of this business, creating sustainable neighborhoods and

that in turn means sustainability for the Square,” said Doug Dickens. Doug Dickens, former special projects vice president for Boyle Investment, has been developing inill projects since the early 1980s — irst in Midtown and now in Collierville, where both he and son Chris live in two of their newest inill digs. Dickens, who has 40 years of real estate development experience, helped create Memphis’ planned development ordinance in 1979. Inill development appeals to both father and son even with the challenges of working with irregular lot sizes or detention areas or ponds for water. “You get to create something special every time out of the box,” said Dickens, 70. Chris Dickens, 31, said development near the Square is attracting a mix of married and single professionals who are empty nesters and baby boomers at Washington Gates and Washington Street South. If approved, Natchez Place would be nine inill residential lots on almost two acres of wooded land at the corner of Washington and Mount Pleasant roads. Four houses would

front Mount Pleasant Road; three on Washington Street and the remaining two on Natchez. The proposed development on Natchez is across the street from two giant magnolia trees and the historic Elizabeth Parr home that Parr’s grandson, Hampton Parr, plans on turning into a bed-andbreakfast and event venue. Parr already has Stratton Heights, a 12-lot subdivision approved nearby. Under the town’s 2010 downtown plan, town oficials saw the need for more residential development within walking distance of Town Square. In 2010, there were 869 homes in the downtown area and town officials are predicting that it could handle 630 more homes. “We wanted to increase the number of households within a ive- to ten-minute walk to the Square to keep the Square viable,” said Town Planner Jaime Groce. With the latest projects, he added, “There’s a lot of synergy going on.” Because the Square is considered the town’s jewel, the downtown historic district encompasses 700 acres and includes streets north and south of Poplar. “We want our gem to be a nice setting,” Groce said.

Our Little Secret and Battleground Lacrosse Residential renovation: Carrington House, owned by Bart and Sharon Dahmer, 134 Walnut St., owned by the Kyle Armstrong family, Andrews Minor subdivision Event venue: Collierville Arts Council Supporting the district: First Tennessee Bank — Summer Concert Series, Ten-

nessee Department of Transportation, Hampton Parr for Stratton Heights Publication: Collierville Weekly, Collierville Life, Collierville Chamber of Commerce, At Home Magazine Downtown destination: Silver Caboose.

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Say Cheese! We asked kids:

What’s your favorite rainy day activity? “I put on my boots, grab an umbrella, go out and jump in the puddles.”

“I love to sit on the couch and read a book.” SARAH SWIMM, 13

KALEE HALE, 11

“I like to stay in the house and watch movies.”

“I enjoy walking in the rain and helping people out.”

ALYSSA KISER, 13

ZOEY CARRUTH, 9

“Sleeping.” LAUREN BAGGETT, 12

“I stay inside, watch movies and drink hot cocoa.” CAITLIN FORS, 13

“I play games and watch movies.”

“I like to stay indoors and play with my brothers and sisters.”

JOURNEY CUSTER, 12

BAILEY PATE, 9

PHOTOS BY KIM ODOM | SPECIAL TO THE WEEKLY


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« Thursday, May 29, 2014 « 5

Schools Achievement

Graduation a family afair for Andy Boucher By Peggy Reisser Winburne Special to The Weekly

Clinical pharmacy professor Brad Boucher will be among the faculty watching 672 new health care professionals get their degrees from the University of Tennessee Health Science Center on Friday. But he’ll have his eye on one graduate in particular. That’s because Andy Boucher, 26, the second oldest of the pharmacy professor’s three sons, will be graduating from the UTHSC College of Medicine during the ceremony. That happy moment for the father and son will be even more special because the elder Boucher will present the diploma to the younger. It’s not the irst time UTHSC graduation has been a family afair for the Bouchers, and it looks like it won’t be the last. Two years ago, Brad Boucher presented his oldest son, Alex, 29, with his Doctor of Medicine degree from UTHSC. Alex is now in his second year of an internal medicinepediatrics residency at the University of Minnesota, after which will come a fellowship in pediatric hematology-

oncology. Adam, 23, the youngest Boucher son, is a second-year pharmacy student at UTHSC and on course to graduate in two more years. “It’s not unheard of for faculty members to have children who graduate, but it is fairly rare to have that many,” said Liz Roemer, a senior administrative services assistant in the Oice of Student Life. She should know, she’s been organizing UTHSC’s graduations for the past 40 years. Brad Boucher, who also serves as associate dean for strategic initiatives and operations in the College of Pharmacy, has been a faculty member at the university for 30 years. He and his wife, Barb, moved to Germantown when he was hired, and they have raised the boys there. He feels strong ties to the area and the institution that brought them here. “I’m not an alumnus, but I’ve been here a long time,” he said. “I always felt there was just such a great atmosphere here.” He said he and his wife “feel incredibly blessed” that their three sons have been able to pursue their passion for

health care through the Colleges of Medicine and Pharmacy at UTHSC. “It is our hope that they will ind great happiness in serving others throughout their respective careers,” he said. Andy, who will do his residency in neurosurgery at Emory University in Atlanta, is among a graduating class of 411 women and 261 men from all six of the UT Health Science Center’s colleges. The class includes: 185 from the College of Allied Health Sciences, 74 from the College of Dentistry, 23 from the College of Graduate Health Sciences, 157 from the College of Medicine, 107 from the College of Nursing, 126 from the College of Pharmacy The 2014 spring commencement ceremony will be held at 1:30 p.m. in FedExForum. Since its founding in 1911, UT Health Science Center has educated and trained more than 56,000 health care professionals in academic settings and health care facilities across the state. Peggy Reisser Winburne is a media relations and communications specialist with the University of Tennessee Health Science Center.

Andy Boucher will graduate from University of Tennessee Health Science Center Friday. His father, Brad Boucher, who is a teacher at the school, will present his son the diploma.

SnApShotS

Collierville School Board member Mark Hansen and Bailey Station student Brook Burns listen intently as Jayden Cobb elaborates on her U.S. History Fair exhibit. Cobb presented the Civil Rights Movement of 1964.

BAiley StAtion

Fifth-graders present history fair projects By Katherine Perry Special to The Weekly

The exhibits and presentations at the third annual Bailey Station Elementary U.S. History Fair held recently wowed students, parents and distinguished visitors. Approximately 150 students in the ifth grade prepared and presented a unique aspect of American History through a visual display, written essay and oral presentation. According to ifth-grade teacher Kim Shepherd, who coordinated the event, students began working on the written portion of their projects in February and then added their visual displays in March. As visitors approached each display, the students, often dressed in period costumes, served as docents — ofering interesting facts and answering

visitors’ questions. Classes of younger students in grades K-4 used the history fair as an opportunity to learn more about American History. Visitors were given stickers, lags and reproductions of historical documents as souvenirs. The ifth-graders elaborated on their exhibits as parents, teachers, and administrators paused to observe their remarkable work. After touring the exhibit, visitors were invited to vote for their favorite project. Caroline Williams won irst prize for her presentation on Ulysses S. Grant. Winning second and third places, respectively, were Caleb Hopkins for his presentation on the Industrial Revolution and Christian Flynn for his Civil War project.

Briarcrest Christian School 2014 grads toss their caps in the air to celebrate their high school graduation on May 17 at Germantown Baptist Church. Bailey Station Elementary students enjoyed learning about the history of the Mississippi River and its impact on Memphis during their trip to the Mud Island River Park and Museum.

Katherine Perry is a teacher at Bailey Station Elementary.

Germantown High School IB juniors (from left) Frank Emelue, Analia Mireles, Nadir Noordin and Katherine Molinet were selected to attend prestigious enrichment institutes this summer. Emelue will be attending the Summer Writing Institute at Rhodes College. In addition to Governor’s School, Mireles will be participating in the Summer Conservancy Association program in Morristown, N.J. and Noordin is attending the University of Pennsylanvia’s Management and Tech Summer Institute. Molinet will be attending the Duke Institute Dynamic Systems and Chaos Theory at Duke University.

Student SpotliGht

Briarcrest’s Ella Williams enjoys piano and soccer Name: Ella Williams Family: Parents Bryan

and Amanda Williams, brother, Fenton, sister, Maddie Grace, dog Maggie School and grade: Second-grader at Briarcrest What do you like most about your school: We can

talk about God, sports and our music programs.

What is your favorite subject: Science What is your most challenging subject: Math What are some of your biggest accomplishments:

One of Briarcrest secondgrader Ella Williams’s goals is to run a 5K.

Playing the piano, being in the “The Best Christmas Pageant Ever,” soccer.

People would be surprised to know: I don’t like

What are some of your hobbies: Doing chemistry,

playing piano and soccer What are your goals for the future: Going to New

York, run a 5K. Person you most admire:

blueberries. What would you do if you were principal for day: I

would do science. What famous person would you like to meet: Eli

Manning

Mrs. Norris, my mom and dad.

What would you do with $1 million: Buy a water

What are your favorite movies, TV shows, books:

slide.

“Frozen,” “Call of the Wildman”

If you could change one thing in the world: I

wouldn’t do homework.

Christian Brothers High School 2014 graduate Dominic Volpe (right) was recently honored as Scholar-Athlete by the Memphis Chapter of the National Football Foundation and College Hall of Fame Memphis Chapter at Rhodes College. Presenting the award is CBHS alumnus John Barzizza, Class of 1966. The NFF is a member-supported, nonprofit organization dedicated to ensuring the future of amateur football at the local, state and national levels. Established in 1963, the Memphis Chapter of the National Football Foundation holds an annual black tie dinner that honors and gives scholarships to 11 high school and two college football players in the Memphis area based on athletics, academics and community service. Dominic is the son of Paul and Lauren Volpe of Germantown.


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fresh trades

Sunrise Salutes Our Veterans

Meet The Techs

Beautiful 2010 Honda Odyssey is ready to hit the open road! Leather, roof, backup camera, Nav., DVD - This van has it all! Come see Big Mike on the Pike to drive this 36K mile van!

4WD WITH ONLY 45K! Robert traded for this 2011 GMC Sierra 4WD. Super clean, 1 owner, locally owned truck. This GM Certiied truck looks great with brand new off-road tires!

AMERICAN HERO Sunrise wants to thank Nicol West for her business! She just bought a brand new 2014 Lacrosse from Jonathan Robinson at Sunrise Wolfchase. She is planning on taking a trip soon to go visit her son who is stationed in San Antonio, TX with the Air Force. Nicol also has two brothers who are retired from the Navy. Thank you Nicol and to your family for keeping us safe. We hope you are able to get down to Texas to see your son very soon!

NADA $25,425

SUNRISE PRICE: $23,988 #T24045A2

LEATHER AND A ROOF!! This 2008 Nissan Altima has it all! Terrell at the Pike took it in on trade. He said the previous owner took great care of it and it even has a squeaky clean CARFAX! NADA $12,950

SUNRISE PRICE: $12,425 #X11147A

LOW MILEAGE AND A LOW PRICE!! This 1-owner 2005 Mercury Grand Marquis was only driven on the weekends - only has 61K miles! Archie says it’s in mint condition. Come see him at the Pike! NADA $10,863

SUNRISE PRICE: $9,988 #T22250A

AMERICAN HERO Sunrise salutes Joshua Perkins! He has served in the Army for 13 years. A former drill sergeant, he is currently teaching ROTC at the University of Memphis. Originally from Ohio, he now resides in Arlington. Standing next to Joshua is his salesman, Lee Hobbs. Joshua just bought a brand new GMC Sierra. Sunrise wants to thank him for his business and for his 13 years of service. Congratulations on your new truck!

EVERY 2015 BUICK MODEL WILL COME STANDARD WITH A REARVIEW CAMERA.

LOOKING FOR GREAT MPG?

SAFETY AND TECHNOLOGY TOP THE LISTS OF IMPORTANT CONSIDERATIONS FOR BUICK CUSTOMERS.

This 2011 Chevy Malibu might be the one for you! Tracy at the Pike recommends this GM Certiied Car. LOADED - roof, wheels, and leather! NADA $17,225

MANAGER OF THE WEEK

« Thursday, May 29, 2014 « 6 7

SUMMER SERVICE TIPS For an enjoyable summer, have your vehicle go through our Multi-Point Inspection process. We will check your tires, belts, hoses, check for luid leaks, check your battery and ensure that your vehicle is road ready. Some things to consider:

NADA $24,450 #T22028B

T H E W E E K LY

Shop Talk

WANT A LOADED VAN?

SUNRISE PRICE: $22,999

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MG

Jeff Skittenhelm

GM SALUTESVETERANS DURING MILITARYAPPRECIATION MONTH 21 MILLION U.S.MILITARYVETERANS ELIGIBLE FOR GM MILITARY DISCOUNT DETROIT- From today until June 30, all active, reserve, retired and veteran military – regardless of separation date – can receive the General Motors military discount on Chevrolet, Buick and GMC vehicles. GM extended military pricing to the more than 21 million U.S. veterans from all service branches: U.S. Air Force, Army, Navy, Marines, National Guard and Coast Guard. “GM has supported the U.S. military for 100 years. From providing purpose-built vehicles in conlict situations to today’s support for veterans and returning military personnel, we continue to be their strong allies,” said Steve Hill, GM vice president of U.S. Sales and Service. “This discount is just one part of our ongoing salute to those who serve our country.” First offered in 2008, the GM Military Discount Program features pricing below suggested retail for eligible vehicles The military discount can be combined with most current incentives. USAA members are eligible for an additional $750 discount. Eligible consumers must take delivery by June 30, 2014. GM Chief Diversity Oficer and retired Navy Capt. Ken Barrett said the military discount is a measure of appreciation for those who have served. “Our support also includes signiicant employment and training opportunities for our currently transitioning military and signiicant philanthropic support for organizations dedicated to serving those who have sacriiced so much,” Barrett said.

1. Tires are your vehicle’s contact to the road. Your tires have wear indicators in the tread that indicate how much tread is left. An easy way to tell is to use a Lincoln Penny. If you can see the top of Lincoln’s head when you place the penny in the tread, you have less than 2mm of tread left & you need tires. We have Price Match Guarantee thru GM. Check with us before you buy tires. 2. Belts are what drive your water pump, air conditioner compressor, alternator and power steering pump, (unless you have the new electric steering). Have your belts checked for cracking or glazing. This can put you down without notice. 3.Coolant hoses are what carry your engine coolant from the radiator to the engine, heater and back. Swollen hoses are a danger of rupturing and causing you an overheating problem, possibly a damaged engine. Have them checked by our professionals to ensure a carefree and safe trip. Having your vehicle checked over before your summer vacation trip will give you peace of mind and a better vacation!

“Skit” lives in Southaven & has been married for 4 years. He has worked in dealerships since 1987 and has been at Sunrise since 2009. He was voted Tech of the Year by a national dealer group in 2003. He specializes in HVAC, electrical, trim, & hybrids. He is ASE Certiied-the highest training one can achieve as a technician. When Skit isn’t at work, you can ind him riding a motorcycle, traveling, working with wood, or spending time with his family. Come see him at the Collierville store!

Paul Swims Paul Swims, a native of Memphis, has been with Sunrise Wolfchase 10 years. Paul started out as a lube technician and then completed his GM and ASE training to certify pre-owned vehicles. He and his wife, Ashley, have 2 beautiful children, London & Bryce. In his spare time, Paul plays recreational softball & takes his ATV off-roading.

Kenny Branson

$

OIL

5

CHANGE

Kenny Branson is from Olive Branch,MS. He has been with Sunrise since 1990. Kenny is an ASE Master Certiied Technician. He is also GM Certiied in all skill groups. Like his coworkers at Sunrise on the Pike, Kenny is committed to the philosophy of “ixed right the irst time.”

SUNRISE COVINGTON PIKE 1800 COVINGTON PIKE

WOLFCHASE 8500 HWY 64

Must present coupon. Up to 5 Qts of oil. Does not include diesel or synthetic. 2010 and older model vehicles only. COLLIERVILLE 4605 HOUSTON LEVEE Good at any of the 3 Sunrise stores. Expires 6/03/14

Sales stars of the week

Learn more at gmmilitarydiscount.com and ChevySalutes.com.

LOOKING FOR A

GAS SAVER?

SUNRISE PRICE: $16,999 #X11155R

CHEVROLETS WITH 30 MPG OR BETTER

$

2,135

of BUILT-IN VALUE in every

CERTIFIED PRE-OWNED VEHICLE

Alan Ellis

• Exclusive 2-year/24,000 mile scheduled maintenace plan • 12-month/12,000 mile bumper-to-bumper limited warranty with $0 deductible • 172-point inspection and reconditioning • Vehicle history report • 3-month XM Radio and On-Star included • Courtesy Transportation • Roadside Assistance

My name is Alan Ellis. I am the Used Car Manager at Sunrise in Collierville. I have been in the automotive industry for over 25 years in the Memphis area. My wife, Dana Ellis, and I have been married for 23 years. We have 2 children. My son, Cody, works for the Memphis airport and my daughter, Nicole, is graduating from Olive Branch High School this week. I would like to invite all of my old friends and customers to come see me at the Sunrise Collierville location for the best deals around!

CAMARO IMPALA EQUINOX MALIBU CRUZE SPARK SONIC CRUZE ECO CRUZE DIESEL VOLT

30 31 32 36 38 39 40 42 46 98

MPG HWY MPG HWY MPG HWY MPG HWY MPG HWY MPG HWY MPG HWY MPG HWY MPG HWY MPG Combined City/HWY

www.fueleconomy.gov

Steve Farris, the new car manager

Russ Robinson, aka “The Buick Master”

Todd Myers, the new car manager

at Sunrise at Collierville, LOVES selling these trucks. Why? Because they sell themselves! This is a 2014 Chevy Silverado with the High Country package. This truck has the hard to ind all new 6.2L V8! “I wish I had 50 of these trucks in stock!” says Steve. “I can see why this truck won the 2014 North American Truck of the Year.” Come see Steve at Sunrise Collierville to see for yourself why we have the best truck on the road! See Steve for leases starting at $279/mo on the brand new 2014 Chevy Silverado*.

can’t understand why EVERYONE doesn’t drive a Buick! “Why not go out on a limb? Isn’t that where the fruit is? Never owned a Buick before- now is your time! With worry-free leases starting at $199/mo**, you can get 2 years of Onstar, XM Radio and all maintenance included!” Come experience the new Buick and see why Russ loves his Buicks so much at the Wolfchase store!

at Sunrise on the Pike LOVES the Acadias. In fact he loves them so much he bought one for his wife! Right now you can lease a new Acadia for as low as $259/mo* or buy from $30,991***. Make sure you ask about 0% as well! James Martin, seen in the picture with Todd, says “The Acadia is one of the safest cars on the road achieving the NHTSA 5-star award. Come see me on the Pike so you can enjoy the Acadia as much as Todd’s family!

Derek Dobbs

Danny Davis

Archie has been in the car business 34 years and has been at Sunrise on the Pike the last 22 years. He has been taking care of his customers for over three decades and has a very large, very loyal clientele. He has been married to his lovely wife Rena for 35 years and they have two children. Archie considered retiring from the business last year but felt he wouldn’t be happy not taking care of his customers. If you want to check out a new or preowned vehicle with a true professional, come see Archie at Sunrise on the Pike!

Derek has worked for Sunrise for 4 years. He has been married for 31 years, and has three grown daughters and a son in the 11th grade. He enjoys reading historical iction, bike riding, and cooking exotic spiced dishes. Derek says that this is a great time to be selling the best trucks and cars in the automobile industry. Come see Derek at Sunrise in Collierville for your best deals and recipes!

Danny was born and raised in Rosemark, TN. He graduated from Bolton High School. Danny is coming up on his second anniversary here at Sunrise at Wolfchase. When he is not “wowing” the customer with his great product knowledge, you can ind him spending time with his 3 daughters and son. Danny also spends his days off on the golf course for his weekly Sunrise golf contest. Come see Danny (the #1 Salesman for May) at Sunrise at Wolfchase!

Anniversaries

Sunrise Baker’s Dozen

New Arrivals

Archie Zellander

2004 CHEVY IMPALA LS #B61245B....................$4799 2008 KIA SPECTRA EX, 63K MI #W6829R ........$7999 2008 MAZDA 3 #U4526R ...................................$8999 2001 GMC YUKON XL #G50065A........................$8999 2005 PONTIAC G6 COUPE #W6818.....................$7999 2008 CHEVY TRAILBLAZER #Z56190B................$9999 2007 CHEVY IMPALA #U4507R ..........................$9999 2006 KIA SORENTO #M36357A ..........................$9999 2008 PONTIAC G6 #Z56633A..............................$9999 2003 CHEVY SILVERADO 2500HD 4X4 #G50030D2$9999 2004 FORD F150 4X4 #G40589A .......................$9999 2004 CHEVY COLORADO Z71 #W6814R ................ $9999 2008 NISSAN ALTIMA #X11132R ........................ $10950

Collierville

Covington Pike

Wolfchase

Mike Lindow, 8 years David Moore, 8 years Ricky Franklin, 8 years

Vince Ramirez, 7 years Paula Meek, 1 year Phillip Shelton, 1 year

James King, 12 years Butch Cohen, 11 years Robert Ashwander, 4 years

ET E M

FEDEX EMPLOYEES AWARDED #1 BY GENERAL MOTORS

General Motors awarded FedEx as “Supplier of the Year” for 2013. For a limited time only, all FedEx employees qualify for the same pricing as GM employees!

The Finance Team

Charity Wright - Finance Manager of the Week Charity was born in Tulsa, OK but moved to Collierville, TN in 1988. She now resides with her family in Bartlett, TN. In her spare time she enjoys spending time with her family including 4 dogs and a cat. She has been employed with Sunrise since April 2012. Charity loves working with customers to meet all of their inance needs. Come see Charity at Sunrise Wolfchase to see for yourself why she is the inance manager of the week.

FIND NEW ROADS COVINGTON PIKE 1800 COVINGTON PIKE • 901.372.8000

WOLFCHASE 8500 HWY 64 • 901.333.8000

COLLIERVILLE 4605 HOUSTON LEVEE • 901.399.8600

WWW.SUNRISEMEMPHIS.COM

*39 mos., 12,000 miles/year. Plus tax, tags, fees & doc, $2500 down cash or trade. All incentives applied. All prices plus tax, title & license. Prices include $499.50 doc fee. All prices, speciications and availability subject to change without notice. All rebates included in inal sales price. Not everyone is going to qualify for all rebates. Contact dealer for most current information. **24 month leases, 12,000 miles/year. Plus tax, tags, fees & doc, $2500 down cash or trade. All incentives applied. All prices plus tax, title & license. Prices include $499.50 doc fee. All prices, speciications and availability subject to change without notice. All rebates included in inal sales price. Not everyone is going to qualify for all rebates. Contact dealer for most current information. ***Prices plus tax, tags, fees. All incentives applied. All prices plus tax, title & license. Prices include $499.50 doc fee. All prices, speciications and availability subject to change without notice. All rebates included in inal sales price. Not everyone is going to qualify for all rebates. Contact dealer for most current information.


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Food DESSERT

Don’t forget the vegetables when you fire up the grill

Jennifer McCullough, owner of the Chef Jenn line of frozen dips and seafood cakes, likes to grill okra and mix it with corn for a salad. Jennifer Mccullough

susAn tusA/detroit free Press/Mct

As many people turn to healthier food choices, the grill is a natural choice for lighter fare like vegetables.

LIGHTER FARE By Jennifer Biggs biggs@commercialappeal.com 901-529-5223

W

ith Memorial Day behind us and summer right ahead, it’s time to clean up the grills and season up the steaks. Or ire up the smokers and crack a few eggs. Mike Harris of Memphis is a guy for whom food is a hobby. He spent his younger years working in restaurants before a 20-year career in information technology. When he retired, he attended the Arizona Culinary Institute. “I had more fun doing that than you could believe,” he said. “It was a great experience.”

From his early years in the kitchen, his education and his extensive reading about food, he creates recipes — truly — in his sleep. “I dream up recipes,” he said. “I wake up in the morning and type them up, then I start Googling to see if someone has already come up with it.” He’d heard of smoked eggs, so it was natural that he’d try his hand at this: Boil the eggs, cool them and crack the shells all around. Roll them in a seasoning of your choice and pop them in the smoker for about 30 minutes. “But the last couple of times I made these, I modiied it and made it into something better,” he said. “Have you ever heard of teasoaked eggs?” Harris’ rif on the classic that creates a marbled boiled egg uses a Southern favorite: Barbecue sauce. After boiling the eggs, he gently cracks the shells by tapping with the back of a spoon (the cracks create the pattern). He thins barbecue sauce with water, simmers the cracked eggs in it, then lets them

sit overnight to absorb the lavor. The following day, they go in the smoker for about 40 minutes. “When you take the cracked shell of the eggs, you have this beautiful, delicious, smoky egg,” he said. Of course, a burger, a batch of hot dogs or those big juicy steaks on a grill are loved by most omnivorous folks with access to hardwood charcoal. But as many people turn to healthier food choices, the grill is a natural choice for lighter fare. Fish and chicken have always taken to a touch of smoke, but vegetables do too. Jennifer McCullough, owner of the Chef Jenn line of frozen dips and seafood cakes, likes to grill okra and mix it with corn for a salad — and OK, OK, she adds a touch of bacon too. A grill basket is an excellent tool for small vegetables. The pans have large holes in the bottom and sides to allow the heat and smoke in the pan while keeping the vegetables securely away from the grates, and thus from the nearly unavoidable fate of a few escapees

falling on the coals and causing a smoky lare-up. Larger vegetables, such as slices of eggplant, fennel, even romaine hearts or baby bok choy, can go directly on the grill. But watch the heat; vegetables shouldn’t go directly over coals unless a recipe speciically says to put them there. When in doubt, don’t. Jennifer Dickerson, owner of Lux Culinary, is a chef, food stylist and food photographer who is also currently operating the Truck Stop food truck for Brewery on Tap. She’s not alone in cooking directly on the coals of her grill. While she’s preparing chicken on the grate, she puts ears of corn wrapped in aluminum foil directly in the coals. It’s part of a dinner that’s a family favorite: Grilled chicken with a white “barbecue” sauce. “I’m not really a fan of the traditional barbecued chicken,” she said. “It’s too sweet, too cloying.” Instead she makes a sauce that she both bastes her chicken with and serves on the side. “I always brine the chicken before I cook it,” she said. “It’s a basic recipe, a half-cup of salt and a half-cup of sugar to two gallons of water. Don’t leave the chicken in for longer than an hour or two, and add some rosemary and garlic, if you want, when you’re grilling it.” When the chicken is about half cooked, she starts basting it with her white sauce. “One you add the sauce, you can’t put the chicken over direct heat because it’ll burn,” she said. And be sure you have extra sauce. “When you serve the chicken, you dip that chicken in that sauce and it is so good,” she said. “When I start talking about, I start dreaming about it.”

Palates warming to unconventional ice cream flavors By Michele Kayal Associated Press

Coming soon to a freezer aisle near you — balsamic vinegar ice cream. Plus, hot sauce ice cream. And maybe even tomato. “You’re seeing the same kinds of trends in ice cream that you’re seeing in other foods,” says Peggy Armstrong, spokeswoman for the International Dairy Foods Association. “People are willing to experiment.” Just a generation ago, Americans mostly bought their ice cream at the supermarket in recognizable lavors that occasionally sported chocolate chips or a swirl of some kind. Today, regular old ice cream has been joined by boutique items such as gelato, sorbet and water ice, as well as an army of lavors that seem more at home in an Italian restaurant — opal basil lemon sorbet, anyone? — than in your local freezer aisle. Americans ate nearly 1.6 billion gallons of ice cream and other frozen dairy desserts in 2012. But traditional ice cream’s share of that market has been shrinking, edged out by specialty items such as frozen yogurt and gelato. In 2012, production of regular ice cream hit its lowest point since 1996, the Dairy Foods Association says, hitting fewer than 900 million gallons. Boutique scoop shops and artisanal producers have looded the landscape during the last ive to 10 years, introducing audiences to a wider range of lavors and textures. Cumin and honey butterscotch, salty vanilla, and pumpernickel are typical of Jeni’s Splendid Ice Creams, an Ohio-based producer that has gone national. Uber-hip Coolhaus, which has parlayed ice cream trucks and storefronts into distribution in 2,000 supermarkets, ofers Cuban cigar, spicy pineapple-cilantro and even fried chicken and wale ice cream. “The lavor we thought nobody would buy was balsamic ig mascarpone, and that’s the one we’re out of,” says Coolhaus co-founder Natasha Case about the company’s recent experience at a trade show. “All the buyers want that one. Two years ago, we were out of vanilla. That buyer at that show who does ive to 300 grocery chains wants to know what’s cool, whereas before they just wanted to know that you

JENNIFER DICKERSON’S WHITE SAUCE Makes almost 1 quart. INGREDIENTS

3 cups mayonnaise, preferably duke’s — Zest of 1 lemon — Juice of ½ lemon 2 heaping tablespoons horseradish ½ sprig rosemary, minced 1 tablespoon sugar 2-3 tablespoons white vinegar, to taste — salt and pepper, to taste DIRECTIONS

1 combine all ingredients, tasting to season. when grilling chicken, start basting with sauce when chicken is half-cooked, and remove to indirect heat. serve remaining sauce with chicken or

source: Jennifer dickerson

CHEF JENN’S GRILLED OKRA & CORN SALAD Makes 8 servings.

on vegetable grill basket, tossing a bit as it cooks. once veggies are inished (about 5 minutes, longer if you want the okra more browned) remove corn from cob. toss veggies with bacon and check seasonings. serve warm or at room temperature.

INGREDIENTS source: Jennifer Mccullough

1 ½ pounds okra 3 ears corn 8 slices bacon, cooked and crumbled 1 tablespoon creole seasoning 3 tablespoon olive oil — salt and pepper, to taste DIRECTIONS

1 slice okra lengthwise and toss in 2 tablespoons oil, salt and pepper and creole seasoning. rub 1 tablespoon oil on corn and season with salt and pepper. Place corn directly on grill and okra

GRILLED MEXICAN CORN Makes 8 servings. INGREDIENTS

¾ cup plain yogurt ¾ cup mayonnaise 5 tablespoons fresh lime juice 4 ounces cotija cheese, inely grated (1 cup) 4 teaspoons chili powder 2 teaspoons cayenne pepper 2 teaspoons ground cumin

1 teaspoon salt 8 ears corn, husks removed DIRECTIONS

1 Build a charcoal ire for direct grilling and preheat it to 450 degrees. 2 in a small bowl, combine the yogurt, mayonnaise and lime juice. in a separate bowl, combine the cheese, chili power, cayenne, cumin and salt. 3 grill the corn over direct heat, turning every 2 minutes until the kernels start to soften, 6 to 7 minutes. remove the corn from grill and apply a light coat of the yogurt mixture to each ear. 4 sprinkle each ear liberally with the cheese mixture and serve. note: this recipe is lightened up with yogurt; use all mayonnaise if you don’t care about the fat. source: “fire & smoke: A Pitmaster’s secrets,” chris lilly

could do vanilla well.” Vanilla remains supreme, Armstrong says, but the mass-market producers represented by her organization are branching out. At the association’s annual ice cream technology conference in April, producers showcased lavors such as Mexican-spiced chocolate and hot sauce ice cream. Ice cream lavors such as caramel popcorn, cofee-anddoughnuts, cotton candy and peanut butter s’mores also are destined for supermarket shelves. Though we are in an intense period of lavor experimentation, the desire to go beyond chocolate, vanilla and strawberry dates to the post-World War II era, says Laura B. Weiss, author of “Ice Cream: A Global History.” That’s when Howard Johnson, known for his roadside restaurants, tried to convince Americans to indulge in his famous 28 lavors. Among them: maple walnut, burgundy cherry and fruit salad. “This was really pretty revolutionary,” Weiss says. “Going beyond chocolate, vanilla and strawberry really began with Howard Johnson.” Even today’s most exoticsounding new lavors make sense on some level. Candied sweet potato, a lavor being explored by Parker Products in Fort Worth, Texas, has its roots in Southern sweet potato pie. Ice cream behemoth Haagen-Dazs recently launched tomato ice cream in Japan, as well as a carrot-orange lavor. And why not, says Jeni Britton Bauer of Jeni’s Splendid Ice Creams. “A lot of vegetables have a very sweet lavor,” she says. “Like corn. Even when you make it salty, it’s still sweet and milky.” The next revolution, ice cream watchers say, will be in creating more texturally sophisticated ice creams.

SALTED CARAMEL MALTED MOCHA ICE CREAM CAKE servings: 8 INGREDIENTS

2 ¼ cups all-purpose lour 1 ½ cups packed brown sugar ½ cup cocoa powder 1 ½ teaspoons baking soda ¾ teaspoon kosher salt 1 tablespoon instant coffee ½ cup ovaltine classic DIRECTIONS

vegetables.

MAtthew MeAd/AssociAted Press

A salted caramel malted mocha ice cream cake ofers a hint of the exotic taste sensations that are melting old ideas about ice cream lavors.

1 heat the oven to 350 degrees. coat a rimmed baking sheet with cooking spray and line it with kitchen parchment. 2 in a medium bowl, sift together the lour, brown sugar, cocoa powder, baking soda and salt. 3 in a measuring cup, whisk together the instant coffee, malt powder, water and vinegar. Add the oil, then add the liquid ingredients to the dry ingredients. whisk until smooth. 4 Pour into the prepared pan and bake for 20 minutes, or until a toothpick inserted at the center comes out clean. Allow to cool completely. 5 when ready to assemble, microwave the ice cream in 10-second increments until just slightly softened. flip the cake onto a cutting board. remove the parchment and trim the edges of to make a neat rect-

Malt mix 1 ½ cups water 1 tablespoon cider or white vinegar ½ cup vegetable or canola oil 1 pint cofee ice cream ½ cup caramel sauce — coarse or lake sea salt — fresh berries angle. cut the cake in half down the center (the short way), then cut each half in half again to create 4 even rectangles. 6 Place 1 piece of cake on a serving platter, then spread a third of the cofee ice cream over it. top with a second piece of cake, then spread another third of ice cream over that. repeat one more time, inishing with the last piece of cake. Place the assembled cake in the freezer to irm up for 20 minutes. the cake also can be tightly wrapped in plastic and frozen overnight. if so, let stand at room temperature for 10 minutes before slicing. 7 to serve, slice the cake into squares, then drizzle with caramel sauce. sprinkle with a few grains of sea salt and serve with berries. nutrition information per serving: 590 calories; 170 calories from fat (29 percent of total calories); 19 g fat (4 g saturated; 0 g trans fats); 15 mg cholesterol; 102 g carbohydrate; 3 g iber; 66 g sugar; 8 g protein; 540 mg sodium.


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Fashion MOBILE BOUTIQUE

Rihanna flaunts a torso-baring, two-piece dress as she arrives at The Metropolitan Museum of Art’s Costume Institute benefit gala.

Rolling retail

EVAN AGOSTINI INVISION

SENSE OF STYLE

Crop tops rate high on list for fashionistas By Barbara Bradley Special to The Commercial Appeal

PHOTOS BY BARBARA BRADLEY/SPECIAL TO THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL

Cyndii Jo Hartley poses with her Henny Penny Fashion Boutique during the recent South Main Trolley Night. The MEMMobile program will be bringing four more mobile stores to the streets soon.

Entrepreneurs go mobile, bringing fashion business to customers Food trucks have been such a hit, it was just a matter of time before fashion trucks got rolling in Memphis. The Henny Penny Mobile Boutique, a woman’s fashion store in a 30-foot truck, opened for business at the end of March and has been creating a stir everywhere it appears. Recently owner Cyndii Jo Hartley set up shop on South Main during Trolley Night and watched curious women lock in to fuss over the dresses, skirts and accessories and try things on in one of two dressing rooms. Hartley, a part-time hairstylist, said her business name is taken from the childhood nickname given to her by her grandmother. Soon, shoppers will be seeing four more new stores roll by, all ive the spawn of a small business incubation program called MEMMobile developed by the Mayor’s Innovation and Delivery Team, which helps small business people develop mobile retailing by truck or trailer. Three will sell fashion and one will ofer bicycle services and accessories. MEMMobile formally launched on May 8. Mayor A C Wharton and the new mobile business owners spoke. The new trucks in addition to Hartley’s are: ■ K’PreSha Haul of Fashion, owned by Kimberly Taylor, who also owns and operates K’PreSha men’s and women’s fashion boutique in Downtown Memphis. ■ Sache T-shirt Truck, which will offer customprinted T-shirts, launched by Eric Evans and John Sylvester,

BARBARA BRADLEY SENSE OF STYLE

co-owners of Sache Clothing and Design and Sache Salon on South Main, an edgy clothing boutique and hair salon that ofers fashion designs by Evans. ■ Thigh High Jeans, a business in which artists Ann Smithwick and Kerry Peeples create new jeans from old ones and embroider them with uplifting quotes. ■ The Bikesmith, is the irst retail business venture by bike enthusiast Jim Steffen, who will ofer bike accessories along with bike services and repair. He’ll do them where he’s parked or go to a customer’s home. “For me, it’s a creative way to bring the product to the customer. You’re not waiting on him to come to you,” said Taylor of K’Presha. “You’re not deined by a location.” Taylor and other truck owners said they plan to appear at various times at Tennessee Brewery Untapped, a series of events including music and craft beer sales at the old Tennessee Brewery Downtown in an efort to save the iconic building. The events will run until Sunday. Taylor said she plans more fashions from local cut-andsew designers. Hartley said she shops the Atlanta market, and looks for contemporary, easy-to-wear fashions aimed mostly at the 25 to 45 age

A shopper examines the fashions inside the 30-foot truck outfitted with two dressing rooms, shelves and rack.

group. Both retailers plan to keep items below $100. The Mayor’s Innovation Delivery Team raised private money to fund forgivable loans for the new truck entrepreneurs and dispersed about $75,000 among them, said Abby Miller, Delivery Team program manager. The retailers had to contribute at least 25 percent of the cost of starting the business, money that most often went to acquiring and outitting the trucks. Hartley said it was a challenge. “There’s no one to call to make that happen,” she said. Southern Automotive Accessories wired hers for electricity. “That was their irst fashion truck, for sure,” she said. Her father put in walls, ceilings, racks and shelves, and is now installing airconditioning. A sign company and graphic designer worked on the exterior. Sache’s truck will be arranged more like an ice cream truck, said Sylvester, with a large, long open window on the side where shoppers can view the merchandise. Sache plans to do silk screen printing

outside the truck as an entertaining way to educate people about the craft, he said. The Thigh High Jeans artists will operate from a 1972 Holiday Rambler trailer they bought on eBay. They think it suits their theme of recycled treasures. Hartley said she always asks permission before parking on the street in front of a store. Parking next to Hoot + Louise, new and vintage fashion store in the South Main District, seemed to attract more shoppers to both stores, she said. Parking at Wiseacre Brewing Company gave customers some extra entertainment. She sold fashion in the parking lot of Theatre Memphis and donated 10 percent of sales to the theater. Private individuals can work an angle too. She teamed with a homeowner friend for a Friday evening happy hour event in her driveway. The friend served refreshments, and received credit on merchandise, while pals and neighbors shopped. The evening was a hit, said Hartley.

If crop top sales hit the roof, blame it on Rihanna As pure media-bait, the torso-baring, two-piece dress she launted recently at The Metropolitan Museum of Art Costume Institute gala blew away the competition. It was one of those fashion moments that can sear a trend into the mainstream brain. Young fashionistas at Wolfchase Galleria are into it right now, said Star Hawks, professional stylist, designer and manager of Francesca’s. And while it’s easy to get it wrong, it’s also easy to do it right, she noted. The top comes in a big range of styles and pairs beautifully with spring’s trendiest pants and skirts. Many competitors in Memphis Fashion Week’s Emerging Designer competition this spring worked the trend, including mini-collection winner Tara Skelley, who wore it herself to the event, as a two-piece dress that showed just a sliver of skin. “In Memphis, you have to be aware of the setting you are in,” said Skelley. “You can’t get away with it in church or for work. But for Memphis in May (International Festival events), or a patio party or dinner, they wouldn’t give you a second look.” Skelley thinks many women could wear it as she did. But even the skimpy, bra-like, bandeau style she showed on the runway can work here. Pop a jacket over it (or a crocheted vest or sleeveless shirt), and it would it in anywhere you can wear sundresses and tank tops, she noted. Midrif tops are back, at least in part, because of rising waistlines. They’re perfect for all the highwaisted, flowing pants: harem, joggers, slouchy or palazzos and with high-waisted pencil skirts, and short, pleated tennis skirts. Girls at the mall love to wear them with “mom jeans,” said Hawks — the acid-washed, ’80s styles jeans with tapered legs. But she feels like hiding her eyes when she sees women in tight crop tops with leggings, a look neither tasteful nor modest. Ditto for exposed belly buttons. With high-waisted bottoms is “the clean and classy way to wear the cropped top,” said Hawks. “It should look efortless and not like you’re trying too hard.” You can peruse an astonishing variety at Charlotterusse.com and Forever21.com — everything from “boned” bustiers to tribal print swing tops to T-shirt racerbacks to strappy styles — most for $8 to $18. J.C. Penney has crop tops on sale now, including a pretty bandeau style in 11 diferent colors and prints for only about $6.

MEN’S FASHION

Untucked shirts are for casual occasions only By Lois Fenton Special to The Commercial Appeal

boyfriend insists on Q My wearing his shirts untucked on any occasion that does not include a tie, and a few when it does. He’s in very good shape, so it isn’t an issue of wanting to hide a gut, nor, truthfully, does this detract from his physique (to some extent it plays up that he has a good body and doesn’t need to launt it). The problem to me is that it just looks out of place and embarrassing. He can point to many a good-looking celebrity or even fashion magazine sporting his style. So, what I’m saying is: Agree with me, and tell him why he’s wrong! LAND’S END

Untucked shirts are strictly casual wear, and more suitable for a boy than a man.

not so sure about “out A I’m of place,” but it is important to consider whether we are dis-

cussing dressy or not dressy. My feelings about untucked dress shirts for any man old enough to be considered a “man,” and not a boy, are not at all positive. To me it is an unkempt, if not actually a sloppy, look. I see no reason for a man to walk around with his shirt hanging out unless it is one that is inherently casual, such as a Tshirt, polo shirt or a plaid. Even these look neater when tucked in. Almost every shirt that is not worn as a jacket looks more inished and reined when it is tucked into one’s pants. Essentially, the more formal the elements of your outit, the more often you should tuck your shirt in. Generally, if you’re in dress pants, a button-front dress shirt should be tucked. The look is sharper. When wearing dress pants, use a belt and tuck the shirt in nice and tight. You

don’t want anything as aging as a blousy shirt spilling out at the top. Keep in mind that an untucked shirt does not hide your belly. If a man thinks it is efective camoulage, he is wrong. Tucking helps deine the waist line and shape a man’s silhouette. It also gives a clean inish to his overall appearance. Still, if he is insistent, I will address this to him: If you are certain an untucked buttondown shirt is a cool look, here are a few guidelines. At the very least, realize that it is a casual style, not for dressy occasions. But doing it well is not that easy. ■ When it comes to wearing your shirt untucked, length matters. If the shirt is too long, it cannot look good. So what is the right length? It should hit above your hips and definitely not extend past them. At the same

time, it should be long enough so, when you raise your arms, your belly does not show. ■ Don’t let your untucked shirt extend below your jacket or sports coat. The key is to make sure the shirt does not hang below the bottom of the coat. (If your shirt is so long that it would show below your jacket, tuck it in.) ■ Most shirts are designed to be tucked in. A useful rule is, if a button-down shirt has a inished, squared-of bottom, it can be worn untucked in casual situations. If it’s cut curvy — long in front and back, short on the sides — it looks better tucked in. ■ Appropriate pairing matters. An untucked shirt is most logical with jeans or other casual pants such as chinos or corduroys. If you are too old for jeans, go back to my original answer, and don’t wear an untucked shirt.


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Community FRIENDS OF THE MORTON MUSEUM

In brief

Historic Preservation art, essay contest winners announced By Jennifer Casey Special to The Weekly

The Friends of the Morton Museum announced the winners of the irst Historic Preservation Art and Essay Contest. The theme was Collierville’s Historic Structures, and participants were encouraged to recognize the community’s unique history, develop an appreciation of that history and to promote the beneits of historic preservation. Essay winners were Andrew McLaren and Syndey Grace Prascak. McLaren is a sixth-grader from Incarnation Catholic School. His essay was “The Many Beneits of Preservation.” Prascak is a seventh-grader from Schilling Farms Middle School. Her essay was called “Preserving Collierville One Building at a Time.” Art winners included Casie Owensby and Court-

Casie Owensby watercolor painting, “My Parents’ First Home,” was one of the winners in the Historic Preservation Art and Essay Contest.

ney Wild. Owensby is a sixth-grader from Collierville Middle. Her watercolor artwork was called “My Parents’ First Home.” Wild, is a seventh-grader from Schilling Farms Middle School. Her piece was called “The Big White Church.” Entries are on display

Special to The Weekly

Town of Collierville employee James Hill with the public services department has received an “Unsung Hero” designation by Solid Waste Association of North America. Hill, employed in the solid waste division since 1998, was nominated by the TOC department. “It was my honor to have the opportunity to nominate my fellow employee,” director Bill Kilp said. “James is a model employee that is an example

Visit Farm Park during Germantown Charity Horse Show week, June 4-7, for demonstrations on a variety of equestrian sports topics. Watch show horses practice and train. Stop by the stable to view the equestrian history exhibit sponsored by the Germantown Museum Committee. Visitors are welcome from 9-11 a.m. For more information, call Michelle Johns at 901-757-7378 or e-mail mjohns@germantowntn.gov.

Jennifer Casey is with the town of Collierville Public Information Oice.

Farm Park Farmers Market opens June 5

the sanitation division. An employee who has rarely missed a day of work, he is prompt in the morning heading out to his routes without delay. During his employment, he has built a reputation for being reliable, friendly and always ready to lend a hand or volunteer for additional work when it is needed. Over the past 16 years, the department has received numerous letters and e-mails from customers in regards to the quality service Hill provides, often going above and beyond what is required.

and $172 for nonresidents, plus $123.57 for those needing a new uniform. Residents must provide a Germantown water bill as veriication of residency. A R O U N D CO L L I E RV I L L E

Next Sewing Guild meeting is June 5 The Collierville Sewing Guild meets on the irst Thursday of each month at Hobby Lobby, 950 W. Poplar at 10 a.m. The next

The Farm Park Farmers Market is a producer-only market ofering a variety of high quality local foods, produce, meant and arts and crafts. There also will be special programing, educational workshops and activities. The market is open June 5 to Aug. 28, from 5-7:30 p.m. Farm Park is next to the Cloyes Soccer Fields on Cross Country Drive. Overlow parking is available at Germantown Elementary.

Youth cheerleading camp sign-ups Register through June 13 for Germantown Youth Cheerleading for girls in kindergarten through sixth grade. The fee is $135 for Germantown residents

meeting will be Jun 5 and will have a demonstration of a table runner presented by s club member.

Movie night at Carriage Crossing

Every other Friday night, a free, family friendly movie will be shown at Carriage Crossing. Friday’s featured lick will be “Tangled.” The movie will begin at dusk and will be held at the Central Park roundabout.

The Step Up to Bosch Savings Event. Now Available at Now through May 31, 2014.

Fun in the Sun

at the Morton Museum of Collierville History’s Reading Room through July. For more information about the Friends or Morton Museum, visit colliervillemuseum.org.

Town employee Hill wins ‘Unsung Hero’ to others in his division.” The formal recognition will be acknowledged during the annual WASTECON 2014 August conference in Dallas. The 50 Unsung Heroes is a new SWANA recognition program giving SWANA members the opportunity to acknowledge individuals or groups in their community that are making a diference in the solid waste industry. Hill, a knuckle boom operator, began his career with the Town Public Service Department as a brush truck operator in

Equestrian Days at Farm Park

Kids ages 2-6 years old can create a “handprint ish” June 3 or a “sun mobile” June 10 during the Fun in the Sun event at 5 p.m. at the Kiwanis Pavillion in Municipal Park. Advance registration is required. To register, call 901-757-7375.

COLLIERVILLE

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Community SNAPSHOTS The residents of Apple Grove enjoyed visiting with the Lady Tigers volleyball players. The residents especially liked the demonstrations using a net. Taking part in the festivities are (from left) Michaella Moss, Veronica Zimmerman, Joyce Webb, Aleksandra Petronijevic, McKenzie Hayes, Lauren Hawkins, Alexis Wesley and Catlin Lilly.

Jim Holt, president and CEO for Memphis in May International Festival, spoke to the members of the Rotary Club of Germantown. Memphis in May hosts the city’s largest events like the Beale Street Music Festival, the World Championship Barbecue Cooking Contest and the Sunset Symphony. It also produces extensive education, international and economic programs for the city. Greeting Holt to the Rotary Club is club President Mable Barringer and Rotarian Jacek Dutiekwicz.

At the weekly meeting of the Kiwanis Club of Germantown, John Roskos was inducted into Kiwanis membership. Roskos is a branch manager for Paragon Bank. Inducting Roskos is Kiwanis president Steve Green and membership chairman Steve Jackson.

The Germantown Parks and Recreation Department beneited from proceeds raised by the Germantown Women’s Club with the sale of concessions at Festival of Fun and Fright. Club members present Germantown Parks and Recreation special events, programs and marketing coordinator, Michelle McDonnell, with a $869.97 donation.

At the recent Collierville Contemporary Club meeting, three new members were introduced. Attending the meeting are (from left) Thelma Pinckney, Beth Webb, Judy Kelsey, Nancy Bassett, Nancy Toms and Shawn Darnell.

The Collierville Women’s Club met at the country home of Jefrelyn Arterburn. The club members invited guests from the Contemporary Club. A brunch was served following the installation of new oicers. The Collierville Women’s Club oicers for the 2014/15 year are Gail Watson, president, Vee Mechsner, vice president, Hilda Collier standing in for secretary Barbara Smith, and Jeffrelyn Arterburn, treasurer.

The Germantown Women’s Club, through their annual fundraising events, presented Germantown Parks and Recreation and the Germantown Bobby Lanier Farm Park with checks totaling more than $2,000 in support of their exceptional programs. GWC remains committed to supporting these city gems.

Central Defense Security visited FedExFamilyHouse and LeBonheur Children’s Hospital to deliver Easter-themed treats to patient families and staf members in April. “We’ve truly enjoyed our partnership with FedExFamilyHouse and LeBonheur over the past 10 months, and have already begun planning the next initiative to show our appreciation of both facilities’ missions,” said Ken Moody, community relations director for Central Defense Security. Pictured at LeBonheur is Ken Moody, Chassity Pointer-Gibson of Collierville, Jerrica Love, Betsy Bauman, Jason King and Amy Ford.

Collierville Town Beautiful Commission selected Collierville Funeral Home as its business of the month winner. Jef Brandon (left) and Beth Bohon (right), both with the commission, presented the business of the month sign to Corey Hague, Tharen Haley and Linda Gilmer, all with Collierville Funeral Home.

Students and instructors from Studio T performed recently at the annual “Down To Earth Day” Celebration at Shelby Farms. Terry Rogers, with Shoemaker Financial in Germantown, formed the Studio T concept, naming it after his late grandmother. The program is a noncompetitive, positive dance team catering to kids from ages 4 to 18. It encourages positive expression, conidence building and, of course, keeping up with the coolest dance moves. Rogers instructs dance coaching in Germantown every week and occasionally in Forrest City, where he started the concept in 2006. At this performance, dancers showed their respect to Earth in the performance for the day called “The Earth is Our Dance Floor. Keep It Clean.” Currently, weekly classes are taught at the Germantown United Methodist Church’s Owings Life Enrichment Center on Thursdays. Call 901-753-3100 for more information on times and session dates.

Phil Cannon, FedEx/St. Jude Classic Tournament director, spoke to the members of the Rotary Club of Germantown about the upcoming event. He talked about the golfers who have already signed up. This year they are going to have Executive Women’s day and a John Rich concert on Tuesday. On Wednesday, they will have Pro-Am. St. Jude children are allowed to participate and act as honorary caddies. He said that they have 1,850 volunteers. There will be 156 golfers competing in the event. During the meeting, Cannon met with Rotary members Mable Barringer and Michael Mills.

Collierville Alderman Tom Allen, Alderman John Worley and Mayor Stan Joyner recently visited the Town 911 Dispatch Center. The tour was conducted by Collierville Police Department Lt. Mike Brashear with assistance from dispatcher Samantha Brown. The Mayor and Aldermen toured the Dispatch Center to see new furniture and consoles that were made available through a Shelby County 911 Grant. The Town purchased the equipment and was reimbursed with the 911 funds. The communications center personnel provide help during emergencies, often behind the scenes, as the single vital link to the public and our police oicers and ireighters. The police dispatch center responds to an average of 11,085 calls per month. The Collierville Beautiication Commission recently named the April business of the month and homeowners association of the month winners. Ray Sabino, president of the Planters Ridge Home Owners Association, Jon Ford, board member and John Naughton vice president accepted the award from commission members Jef Brandon and Beth Bohon.


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Prep Sports STATE SOCCER

Collierville falls just short in bid for AAA soccer crown By John Varlas varlas@commercialappeal.com 901-529-2350

PHOTOS BY MARK WEBER/THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL

Houston’s Jared Schmidt is tagged at second base by Farragut’s Duncan Pence last Thursday in the Class AAA title game in Murfreesboro. Farragut won 4-0, holding the Mustangs to three hits.

STATE BASEBALL

Houston forced to settle for 2nd By Michael Cohen mcohen@commercialappeal.com 901-529-2525

MURFREESBORO, Tenn. — Cullen Lynd swung hard and missed, another fastball from Farragut’s stud pitcher Patrick Raby foiling yet another Houston batter. It was the bottom of the seventh inning in the Division 1 Class AAA state title game, and the Mustangs needed a relative miracle in their last at-bat, what with Raby painting the corners at will and pinpointing his fastball like he was playing a video game. Lynd tipped his helmet low over his eyes as he walked back to the dugout, realizing that his career in a Houston uniform was just two outs from ending. And the man standing on the mound, the one committed to Vanderbilt, was the main reason why. Raby, a junior righthander, threw a beautiful game from start to inish. He tossed a complete game in Farragut’s 4-0 win over Houston, allowing just three hits and striking out six. With a fastball estimated between 87 and 89 miles per hour, he fooled the Mustangs all over the strike zone, mixing in enough of-speed pitches to keep them guessing.

Houston’s Wes Roberson scrambles for an infield hit against Farragut. “Couldn’t be prouder of any team I’ve ever coached,� said Mustangs coach Lane McCarter.

“It’s baseball,� Houston coach Lane McCarter said, “you run into a pitcher like that on a day like today and he was just better than us today. If we played the same game tomorrow, we might be on the 4-0 side of it.� The Mustangs qualiied for the state tournament for the irst time since receiving a two-year postseason ban for their part in a bench-clearing brawl during the spring of 2011. For the seniors, who were freshmen when the ight took place, this was their lone taste of Tennessee’s biggest stage, and they made the most of it with three straight wins to reach the title game. The inal game was decided by pitching. Raby’s brilliance was juxtaposed

with an average outing by Houston’s Connor Hayman, whose evening was spoiled by one forgettable inning. Farragut scored three runs in the top of the fourth, helped in part by a ielding error from Hayman. He misplayed a bunt back to the mound that put runners on irst and second. From there the Admirals reeled of two base hits and a sacriice ly to push the lead to 4-0, which was more than enough with Raby cruising. Still, McCarter implored his players to hold their heads high when the game was inished. They had hauled the program up from punishment purgatory, and for that, McCarter said, they will always be remembered.

“Couldn’t be prouder of any team I’ve ever coached,� McCarter, who led the Mustangs to a state championship in 2005, said. “Just getting back here sets the program where it needs to be again, and this is what Houston baseball is all about: playing for state titles.�

MURFREESBORO, Tenn. — They fought for every ball and every inch. They got down and dirty on a dusty ield that would have it in well in a John Steinbeck novel. But at the end of 80 minutes, all the Collierville Dragons soccer team had to show for its efort was its pride, and a secondplace trophy. Jimmy Wester scored with six minutes left to give Franklin a 1-0 victory over the Dragons in the Spring Fling AAA championship game at Siegel Soccer Park. The victory capped an undefeated season for the Rebels — who entered the game ranked second in the nation in the Student Sports top 50 — and gave them their second straight championship. Collierville, which hadn’t lost since falling to CBHS in the irst game of the season, ends the year with a school-best 19-2-3 mark. “Good teams have good players,� said Dragons coach Drew Hensarling, who after the game said that he would return to coach the team next season after previously announcing he would step down. “Great teams have great people. This team has come so far and the seniors have raised the bar for this team. I can’t thank

them enough. “We fought all year long ... we knew after the Christian Brothers game that we had a team of ighters. Teams from Memphis have that grit-grind spirit and that goes for the Grizzlies all the way down to a little team from Collierville.� Except for the last couple of minutes of the irst half when the Rebels were camped out in front of Collierville’s goal, the teams were even in the irst 40 minutes. Neither created much in the way of clearcut chances though, and Dragons defender and co-captain Marlow Payant summed it best as the players walked of the ield at halftime. “Not bad,� he said to his teammates. “But not our best.� Collierville had Franklin on its heels for good stretches after the irst and nearly opened the scoring in the 73rd minute when Stephen Cunnane went close. The Dragons won a couple of corners in the closing minutes and threw everybody forward — including goalkeeper Brady Thornbury — but the Rebels were able to hang on. “We fought and fought and fought,� said Hensarling. “Both sides were physical. We had some chances but they were able to put away a good opportunity.�

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14 » Thursday, May 29, 2014 »

T H E W E E K LY

««

MG

Prep Sports STATE TRACK & FIELD

MUS, Houston, Cordova’s Maat rule podium in West Tennessee solidarity By Jason Smith smithjas@commercialappeal.com

MURFREESBORO, Tenn. — Whether it was Cordova’s Molei Maat lashing the money sign on the medal stand like Johnny Manziel, Memphis University School’s Harrison Williams winning ive gold medals or the Owls and Houston High earning team state titles, Memphis-area athletes ruled the TSSAA boys track and ield state meets last Friday at Middle Tennessee’s Dean A. Hayes Stadium. And after the trophies and medals had all been awarded, the Division 2 state champion Owls, Class AAA state champion Mustangs and Cordova’s oneman team of Maat posed together in a show of West Tennessee solidarity. “It’s great to see West

Tennessee represented here,” Houston coach Aaron Martens said. “East Tennessee is known for their distance. We come out and we’ve got the sprints, the decathletes. There’s a lot of guys from West Tennessee that showed up, and it’s just fun to see that because they’re guys you want to root for.” Memphis-area boys won a combined 18 events to go with the team titles for the Owls and Mustangs, which included one of the most dominant individual performances in TSSAA track and ield history by Williams, who accounted for 50 of MUS’ 176 points. One year after scoring 48 points to help MUS to a third-place inish, the Stanford-bound Williams capped of his stellar prep career by winning the D2 decathlon with 7,114 points,

the pole vault (16 feet), the high jump (6-8), the 110 hurdles (13.79 seconds) and the 300 hurdles (36.40). His time in the 300 hurdles broke a 24-yearold state record of 36.58, and Harrison would have had another if TSSAA oficials hadn’t ruled that his time in the 110 hurdles was wind-aided. “There was a little bit of disappointment in the 110 hurdles because of the wind, but I just really wanted to get that state record in (the 300). It was my last race ever in high school so I wanted to end on a good note,” Williams said. Said MUS track and ield coach Bobby Alston: “He’s just a remarkable athlete. I just pray that in six or 10 years when he’s on the Olympic stand I get the chance to be there.” Williams’ junior team-

mate, Chris Davis, also scored big for MUS, which earned its ifth boys track and ield team state title and denied D2 runnerup Brentwood Academy (135.5) a state-record 20th. Davis won the D2 400 in 49.11. He was runner-up in the 200 by one-thousandth of a second. He was fourth in the 100 and third in the decathlon earlier this week. MUS’ 3,200 relay team of Pierce Rose, Clayton Turner, Carlton Orange and Terrell Jackson won in 7:59.57 and Orange won the D2 800 (1:52.11). Houston’s second-place inish in the 1,600 relay, the inal event, secured its irst boys track team title since 2005 and its second in school history. The Mustangs had led Brentwood by one point going into the race and edged the Bruins 68-63 for the title.

MARK WEBER/THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL

Cordova’s Molefi Maat (middle) leads the pack on his way to the 100-meter dash state title during the Spring Fling Class AAA track finals in Murfreesboro last Thursday.

Senior Wesley White swept the Class AAA 110 (14.25) and 300 hurdles (38.50). Houston’s 400 and 800 relay teams of Knox Cleveland, Malik Elion, Ethan Gibson, Noah Arrindell and Aaron Perry earned state titles in 41.81 and 1:27.28, respectively. “I was just hoping that nothing went wrong,” White said. “I can’t believe I just (swept the AAA hurdles).” The other standout individual performer last Friday night was Maat, a senior from Cordova who’s headed to Illinois. Maat

won the Class AAA 100 in 10.47, which would have been a state record (10.50) had it not been wind-aided, and the 200 in 21.38. “It was a real great day, not only knowing I had the fastest (100 and 200) times in AAA, but overall,” Maat said. Other winners were Christian Brothers in the 800 relay (1:27.96), Oakhaven senior Kederick Longstreet in the Class A-AA triple jump (44-7.75) and Southwind junior Jacob Patten in the Class AAA high jump (6-10).

STATE SOCCER

Champion CBHS

Memphis University School pitcher Hugh Fisher reacts after a strike out against McCallie in their Spring Fling Division 2 elimination game in Murfreesboro last Thursday. MARK WEBER THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL

STATE BASEBALL

McCallie pitcher shuts out MUS for D2-AA baseball title By John Varlas varlas@commercialappeal.com 901-529-2350

MURFREESBORO, Tenn. — The “if” game turned into an “if only” game for the MUS baseball team last Thursday. As in, if only they were facing a diferent pitcher. Elliot Dockery pitched a complete-game four-hitter to lead Chattanooga McCallie to an 8-0 victory over the Owls in the Division 2-AA championship game at MTSU’s Reese Smith Jr. Field. The Owls forced the game by beating McCallie 10-7 earlier in the day. The Blue Tornado entered the day undefeated in the tournament; MUS had come through the losers bracket to reach the inal. But Dockery, a senior right-hander, made sure McCallie wouldn’t lose twice, striking out eight. “He’s crafty,” said MUS coach Johnny Beard. “He was spotting up and using his curve ball. A lot of times pitchers can’t throw their curve for strikes consistently but he was.” Compounding the problems for the Owls (24-16) was uncharacteristically poor ielding. They committed ive errors, including three in the second inning, which helped McCallie score ive runs. Owls starter Blake Bennett, who gave up ive runs — four unearned — in three innings, took the loss. It was another frustrating inish for MUS, which has inished runner-up in four of the last ive years. “A lot of people had written us of about three weeks ago,” said Beard. “But we turned it around. This is the most unselish group of seniors I’ve ever coached and I have the best assistants in the state. “Our program is getting better. We’re not being taken lightly anymore.”

PHOTOS BY MARK WEBER/THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL

Celebration was in order after Christian Brothers beat Baylor, 1-0, in the Division 2-AA boys soccer game in Murfreesboro. Junior Chris DiPietro scored the only goal in the Brothers’ victory, which sent coach Rogerio Lima out with a championship.

KENNETH CUMMINGS/THE JACKSON SUN

Logan Newman pitches for Tipton-Rosemark Academy during the D2-AA championship game.

TRA FALLS TO USJ Having to come through the losers bracket proved just a little too much for Tipton-Rosemark to overcome as the Rebels lost to University School of Jackson, 8-4, in the Division 2-A championship game. “We had to ight our way back,” said standout senior Connor Alexander. Early on, it looked like they would. The Rebels (34-8) scored four runs in the top of the irst, with Logan Stewart and Jacob LaFosse driving in runs. But USJ sophomore starter Alex Garrett settled down nicely after that and held TRA to just two hits over the inal six innings after giving up three in the irst. And after taking a pair of must-win games against Battle Ground Academy and Knoxville Webb last Wednesday, there just wasn’t much left in TRA’s pitching staf. “We were saving one (pitcher) if needed for the second game,” said TRA coach Brad Smith. “But you can’t win the second one until you win the irst one. “But this is a special group. They competed their tails of; they battled and played their hearts out for the team and I appreciate them.”

Wave captures 2-AA soccer title; St. George’s falls By Michael Cohen mcohen@commercialappeal.com 901-529-2525

MURFREESBORO, Tenn. — For so long Christian Brothers High School had knocked at the Baylor School front door. With oodles of passes and beautiful possession the Brothers moved the ball efortlessly from the defensive third and through the midield, pushing toward the Red Raiders’ back line. But then, as if blocked by some invisible wall, each attack broke down right on the doorstep — poor passes, ineffective dribbling, of-target crosses. Again and again and again. Finally, with 12 minutes remaining, the force ield vanished. Chris DiPietro, a crafty junior, uncorked a low shot from the top of the box that was parried away by Baylor goalkeeper Colin Brewer. The rebound bounced to freshman Cole Cannon, who smashed the ball into a wide-open net. Cannon’s goal was the winner in a Division 2 Class AA championship game that inished 1-0. With CBHS dominating possession and Baylor counterattacking at every opportunity, the fans inside the Siegel Soccer Complex were treated to a physical, endto-end thriller. And when it was over, after the initial celebrations, the CBHS players had but one request for head coach Rogerio Lima: “Coach, can we get some water?” “Go get some water,” Lima shouted back. “I think you deserve it.” It was an emotional victory for Lima, who coached his last game

Dejected St. George teammates Vasili Doan (left) and John Hankes leave the field after losing to Battle Ground Academy, 2-0.

for the Purple Wave. Lima is taking a new job at Lausanne Collegiate School on June 1, and his sentiments poured out in a choked-up postgame speech. “This is the moment you’ll remember 20 years from now,” Lima told his players. “You’ll talk about it forever.” They responded with cheers.

EARLY GOALS TRIP ST. GEORGE’S Of to the side of the ield at the Siegel Soccer Complex sat a dejected group of players and a head coach who fed them nothing but the truth. They were outworked, he said, outplayed and outtoughed and thoroughly beaten by Battle Ground Academy. The 2-0 loss to Battle Ground Academy (19-1) was a disappointing end for coach Tony Whicker and his bunch from St. George’s Independent School. And though reaching the inal for the second

consecutive year was a great achievement, Whicker and his staf left the ield knowing their players had failed to answer the bell one last time. “We worked really hard to get to this point,” Whicker said, “and then when we got here, we stopped working. They beat us plain and simple.” The St. George’s defense yielded two goals in the irst 25 minutes, twice failing to clear away an initial shot. BGA seized both of the extra opportunities, with Alex Smith putting away a loose ball in the fourth minute and Daniel Brown doing the same 20 minutes later. Though the second half brought a more energized, more focused attack from St. George’s, the Gryphons lacked the interplay to break through the last line of BGA’s defense. Push after push was turned aside, and eventually the clock ran out.


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It th row, each column and 110 Arch types 64 Liberal-leaning leadership about 8 Crocodile-logo 104 Game with Skip Utah range ?8 48 6 Calvary 19 Jai alai basket 48 Springfield first course, 100 Bonito Tribune Content 64 Liberal-leaning 110 Arch types That mark our place; 8 Crocodile-logo 104Agency Game with Skip Utah range the reason why I did not me. the reason why I did not me. is a topic contem112112 Boat mover 66 relative shirtPlateau brand cards Street brawl es inscription 23 ___ Johansson, shirt say relatives is box aworth topic worth Boat mover 66Lyre Lyre relative brand cards 1 51 Street brawl 3x3 contains thecon and“You’d in the sky accept her friendship better childproof 7 Richard 1959-60 world area 73 Pitcher 102 water 113113 “BePossible silent,” 69 Kazan ofof accept her friendship each 9 Gratifying Gratifying 105 “—for for Outlaw” Fast, two-door “You’d better childproof platingplating as a church comCyofthe105 Cynic says that to survive in one “Be silent,” 69 Kazan 9 one “— Outlaw” 3 53 Fast, two-door The larks, still bravely as aonce. church without hurting her feelSummer heavyweight 49 Pour Hershiser contaminator same number only your house,” I advised. in music filmmaking 10 Month after avril (Sue Grafton autos“Alife, without hurting her feeltwo sentences: 10 50 yourfly house,” I advised. munitymunity that may end up en in music Month after avril 74filmmaking (Sue Grafton autos Place” you need singing, champion Numismatist’s Tailored that may 114103 Prefix with fit 71 52, Lighting to Flavius 11 Shortened book) 54 Fibula, e.g.(1) “I do not ings?ings? “I used to try that that withwith events ques- form Prefix with fit 71Hot-linked 52,expert? to Flavius 115114 11 in Shortened 4 55 Fibula, e.g. as a content point to be “I heard used to try 8 pan ___ Bums 25recall AAA the service 104 Barbra’s Scarce amid the Rocker John of aclassification wd. form 72 106book) Old sitcom boy Thai as a content point t — I Unfriend You, some of my children,” Louie tion.” 106 Old Rocker John 7277 Hot-linked of aPreinstalled wd. of boy 5 56 Thai pan(Brooklyn 27 sitcom Protestant “Great” birds 117115 “Funny Girl” guns below. shared with the congre— I Unfriend You, some of mythey children,” Louie Wallet wad address 12 53 Neighbor Taylor Writer shrugged, “but kept findBronx, N.Y. Dodgers denom. iPhone Marie Curie, 118117 co-star Wallet address 12 Neighbor Taylor (2) “The did it.” 6 Writer Sprite, e.g.wad 74 78 Ruthless Jersey Cityof We are the dead. Short 107cat Frequently, Huffington gationshared at somewith pointthe in co shrugged, “but they kept findBronx, N.Y. nickname) 30sonnets One who bugs e.g.: Abbr. 105 noire.g. ing ways to get back in.” Sprite, 74organization Ruthless City 107today’s Frequently, Huffington Cy was East, and West ledbrowser the gation at some poin 123118 “—:___ Miami” 13 Jersey Producer of in 58 Oxygen, e.g. daysing ago the future. ways to get back in.” 9 Suddenly Settingofset people?3NT. Dummy 80organization About 106 “The Hunter “—:area Miami” 13 58 Producer sonnets 8 59 Oxygen, e.g. Louie wasfelt kidding, I think. deuce against 124123 Hosp. 75 82 “NoGot joke!” Acrobat 108inKaput Portable bed of clubs Answer: Be honest with the future. We lived, dawn, strike 60 Montréal 31 Riddles with sick (Catalan Louie was I think. Hosp. area “No joke!” 108 Kaput 9 60 Portable bed Answer: honest with 125124 Part of TNT Commonly 14 Acrobat Bolshevism 111and Flowers Muppet with played low, Cy took the king and re- Côte 767584 But sunset when he waskidding, today’s dethis young lady. Be When 10 Novel ending suburb bullets “I’ll be right Landscape)” saw glow, Part tail? of TNT 76congested Commonly 14 Bolshevism Flowers 0 Muppet with 126125 Rocket Buthewhen he was today’s founder symbolizing a11 major sweet turned club. South won,Day forced outSt.-___ Cy’s thisher young lady. When clarer, found himself locked deRice dish a111 33 Christmas with you” painter Loved and were loved, you see at church, Rocketdir. tail? congested founder Compass symbolizing cavities a major sweet Dominates constancy tooth 12 Anklebones 62 Hard urging 85 Some distance 127126 107 Fertilizer hehand. foundLouie himself locked ace of diamonds, won the next15club and drive outclarer, — of his landyou seeto her atfor church, and now we lie ask to speak her a Send questions to 127 ingredient Compass dir. cavities 15 Dominates tooth 13 ___-Caps malfunction 34 three Compact races claimed. Heconstancy had diamonds, three out — of his hand. Louie landed at five clubs. He could have In Flanders fields. ask to speak to her for aaskharriette@harriettecole.com Send questions to moment. (candy) 63 Pear or 35 Positive 91 Marks (out) 108 Bit of stagnanthearts, two clubs and a spade. ed atup five clubs. He could quarrel bidTake 3NT atour his last turn sincehave Tell 14 Steal, as a quince principle 92 Depressedwater growth askharriette@harriettec moment. or c/o Universal Uclick, 1130 Walher that you reSECOND TRICK vehicle 64 Utah city 36 Versatile bean looking 109 Lucrative with the foe: he had two spade stoppers andsince bid 3NT at his last turn bed, nut St., Kansas City, MO 64106. or c/o Universal Uclick, 1 Tell her that you received her friend request Cy obviously recall of 65 the One of the 15 Chaucer 37 had Pith no helmet 95 Cover with Internet biz To you from only but hisstoppers choice and hefair hadclubs, two failing spade nut St., Kansas City, MO ceived her friend request work that prior to Gandhis 38Trick Voiced somenamely, the new shingles 111 War on Poverty events Two: hands we throw of five clubs was reasonable. only fair clubs, but his choice invokes the and opening Foot bone pleasure 96 She married prez auction lead. West’s66deuce The torch; be yours toLouie West led a heart, and book of Job, 39 Breeze 67 Indian Bobby on “The 112 What can open of five clubs was reasonable. Horoscope of clubs showed a four-card suit, so Difficulty level ★★★★★ hold it high. with “The” 40 Quote princesses Sopranos” files? won with the ace, led a spade West led a heart, and Louie South had three clubs. South’s bidding Horoscope 16 Tony-winning 42 Advantage, 68 Orphic hymn 97 Social welfare yeace break faith with us toIfhis and let ace, the jack won with the led aofspade showed at least five diaactress Judith withhearts “up” and four charmer org. By Jacqueline Bigarpuzzle Answer to yesterday's who die clubs ride. East took the monds. If South had six hearts, he would See BELOW for solutions to theseThis puzzles to his ace and letSOLUTIONS: theace jack of King Features Syndicate We shall not sleep, year you’ll feel empowSudoku is a numberBy Jacqueline Bigar three spade tricks for his side to go with and pondered his next move. have rebid the suit. With five diamonds, clubs ride. East took the ace King Features Syndicate though poppies grow. placing puzzle based ered and much more content a club and a diamond. HeInspired had a by choice ofsevlosing This year you’ll feel he might have preferred to play at diaMcCrae’s on a pondered 9x9 grid with and his next move. Aries (March 21-April by the end of summer. You will ip Quiz This week:Chess counting on defense. leads. If East led a spade, Louie monds. ered and much more eral given numbers. The poem, an American He had a choice of losing 19) ★★★ Make an e�ort to feel as if you can pull white would take the king, pick South’s pattern was surely 1-5-4-3. object toMichael, place the up Aries (March 21-April the end of summer. woman, Moina For the kids leads. IfisEast led a spade, Louie communicate what you feel. rabbitsby out of black hats. Be When Cy takes the king of clubs, he Questions and comments: Email Stewart at West’s queen ofto trumps numbers 1to 9 in the wore poppies honor thewith 19) ★★★ Make an e�ort to feel if you would take the king, pick up careful whatasyou wishcan for. pu If frs1016@centurylink.net must lead the king of spades. He sets up empty squares solose thatonly Reach out to someone you another and war dead.finesse She also began communicate what you feel. rabbits out of black West’s queen of trumps with care about. Tonight: Celyou are single, your social each row, each column a diamond to the selling poppies toace, raisemaking Reach out to someone you careful what you wis each 3x3 box con-lose another finesse and ebrate the first uno�cial schedule could become overfive.and A for diamond return or a only money the disabled careofabout. Tonight: Celthe same number youstarting are single, you weekend summer. aheart diamond to the ace,have making whelming this sumSudoku veterans ofby the Great War. lowtains East would only once. Thetodifficulty ebrate the20-May first uno�cial could becom (April 20) mer. If schedule This idea spread France five. A diamond return or a Taurus you are attached, you been no better. level of the Conceptis weekend of summer. andBut England and then whelming starting th ★★★★ Take today for you, low heart by East would have will be very active and busy in after a mull, East tabled Sudoku increases from to Canada and U.S, (April 20-May 20) nextmer. If you are attach whetherTaurus it is napping un- the ... the queen oftothe hearts. 12 months. TAURUS been no better. Monday Sunday. where it istook still aa tradition Louie the king but Take today der a★★★★ tree or visiting withfor a you, will beyou very active and understands well. But after mull, East tabled on Memorial Day. was locked in dummy. When friend. Tonight:it Your friends un- the next 12 months. whether is napping ... the queen of hearts. Sagittarius (Nov. 22he ledLouie a diamond, East rose but rally der around you. took the toking a tree or visiting with a understands you well Please email your questions Dec. 21) ★★★★ You could WHITE WINS A PIECE with the ace and led a third Gemini (May 21-June 20) was locked in dummy. When friend. Tonight: Your friends anniesmailbox@comcast.net, Hint: Just take it. be ready for a fun few days. Sagittarius (No heart. but West or write to: Annie’s Mailbox, ★★★rally You around are more upbeat he Louie led a ru�ed, diamond, East rose Peggy McKenzie, 529-2341, mckenziep@commercialappeal. you. Seize the moment, and Yo do overru�ed with the queen for Dec. 21) ★★★★ c/o Creators Syndicate, 737 com. Become a fanand of the on Facebook at facebook. than you have been in a with the ace ledMasection third Gemini (May 21-June what 20) comes naturally. Todown one. 3rd Street, Hermosa Beach, com/CAMemphisM; follow usWest on Twitter at twitter.com/ while, especially as you joinupbeat be ready for a fun fe heart. Louie ru�ed, but eday’s solution to Clue: X equals S ★★★ You are more night: Allow events to unCryptoquip CA 90254. As it happened, Louie could friends. memphismeditor. Tonight: Call it an in a Seize the moment, overru�ed with the queen for than you have been fold as they may. not have made 3NT. He would rd puzzle in what comes natura early night. down one. while, especially as you join have made five clubs against Capricorn Chess Quiz Whatnight: the Allow events As it happened, Louie could Cancer (June 21-July 22) y’s editions. most Easts: The queen of friends. Tonight: Call it stars an mean: (Dec. 22-Jan. fold as they may. not have made 3NT. Heto would ★★★★ Understand what is hearts was the only lead early night. ★★★★★ 19) ★★★★ 5-25-14 happening with a relative. clubs against beathave him.made Toughfive luck, Louie. WhatCatch the up Ca on Dynamic Cancer (June 21-July 22) What feels out of whack will most Easts: The queen of stars mean: news (Dec. with ★★★★ ★★★★ Understand what is change radically. Tonight: hearts was the only lead to 19)or a parent The New York Times Sunday Crossword | Oh, Who?5-25-14 with a relative.Positive★★★★★ up with a friend. beat him. Tough luck, Louie.Catchhappening YPTOQUIP: IF PEOPLE FEEL AS THOUGH Catch Dynamic older relative. ★★★ What feels out of whack Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) will news In fact, go out ★★★★ Average RTICLES SHOULD By Joe DiPietro /BE CELEBRITIES, IS change radically. ★★★★ You might wantTonight: to a par to brunch or Positive ★★ Edited ByYork Will Shortz The New Times Sunday Crossword | Oh, Who? Catch up withthat a friend. rethink a decision inTION LIONIZATION? Puzzle solutions invite older this ★★★ So-so volves someone else’s par- 22) Leo (July 23-Aug. person In over. fac / ACROSSBy Joe DiPietro 72 Beat ticipation. Tonight: A force ★★★★ You might want to ★ Average T o n i gtohbru t: PREMIER CROSSWORD SUDOKU 1 Pat Jack-in-theAnswer to yesterday’s puzzle ★★ Edited By Will75Shortz Difficult to berethink dealt with. a decision that inNow the fun BLACK FORCES MATE 4 Nosed around pulpit, e.g. Sudoku is a number-placing invite So-so Phil of “The “Sodivisions what?” Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept.else’s 22) parHint: Sacrifice the bishop. volves someone 9 9Univ. 7627 Finger-pointer begins. perso puzzle based on a 9x9 grid Amazing Bethird★ 14 12 Early 79 ___ City ★★★★ Check with a partner with several given numbers. CROSS 72 Beat ticipation. Tonight: A force Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. Race” agreeable To n century year (Baghdad area) Pat 75 29Jack-in-theThe object is to place the Difficult first; to this might not 18) ★★★★ beperson dealt with. Dallas sch. 17 Free (of) Allow greater 18Nosed Univ. in Troy, 81 Lie Now around pulpit, e.g. numbers 1 to 9 in the empty be in the same mood as you. 31 Buddy of 20 Poppy N.Y. 83 Irish mountain You will be Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. give-and-take. 22) divisions begin squares so that each row, “The Beverly yield back, 76 Finger-pointer 19Univ. Quarter climber? Tonight: Drop in on some more receptive to a loved Early third- sort 7986 ___ City ★★★★ Check with a partner each column and each 3x3 possibly Family Hillbillies” 21 Solitary Aquarius (Jan. friends. year (Baghdad one’s overtures. Tonight: box contains the same num20century LikeSeafood some nickname 32 Small area) 24 first; this person might not 18) ★★★★ Allow Univ. in Troy, 8187 Lie Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) Happily workers Canadian ber only once. The difficulty Peggy McKenzie, amounts restaurant at home. be in the same mood as you. give-and-take. Irish mountain 21N.Y.Edison’s blockhead You Turn aside fixturemiddle 83 33 level of the Conceptis Sudoku ★★★★★ You might be un529-2341, mckenziep@ (Feb. 19-March Quarter back,and climber? Tonight: Dropdealing in on somePisces name 8834 Suffix with zinc Endures 25 Stritch increases from Monday to commercialappeal.com. more receptive to usually kind when Family 22possibly Irish chemist? 868939 Victory 20) ★★★★ Know your limMex. May Become a fan of the Sunday. overtures. T with friends. others. Tonight: Chat its andone’s some nickname 24Like Irish arborist? goddess honor them. You neighbor 26 Deviate M section on Facebook Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) 87 Canadian 26workers Harvey of 90 Set crowd, on a one-on-one level with Happily at home. 41 Gorilla, for from team will find yourself in a less at facebook.com/ Hollywood maybe Edison’s middle blockhead ★★★★★ a dear friend. You might be unone the strategy 19 CAMemphisM. 27name China’s Where di�cult Pisces position(Feb. in your 8893 Suffix with zinc usually kind when21) dealing Zhou ___ Storting meets Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. Irish chemist? 89 Victory 20) Tonight: ★★★★ Know daily life. O� to yo a 28Irish How pastrami 94 goddess Light reddishwith arborist? ★★★★ Youothers. might Tonight: be more Chat TODAY’S CRYPTOQUIP: its and honor the barbecue. is usually brown horses Harvey of 90 Set crowd, on atoone-on-one inclined be upbeat if level you with will find yourself i ordered 96 maybe Irish dogsled IF PEOPLE FEEL AS Hollywood a dear friend. could get certain personal 29China’s Serenaded racer? 93 Where the di�cult position i THOUGH CHARGED 30Zhou “Scary 1979 Roman mattersScorpio completed. Tonight: ___Movie,” 99 Storting meets Bigar is at (Oct. 23-Nov. Jacqueline 21) daily life. Tonight: for one Polanski film PARTICLES SHOULD BE pastrami 94100Light reddishO� to★★★★ a barbecue. www.jacquelinebigar.com. You might be more 31How Love letters? Places for barbecue.

5-25-14

hearts was the only lead to beat him. Tough luck, Louie.

SUNDAY BREAK Amusement SUNDAY BREAK

SR

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Solution: 1. Rxd8! does it. If ... Rxd8, 2. Nf7ch regains the rook.[ShirovMaletin ’14].

Solution: 1. ... Re1! (threatens ... Rh1 mate). If 2. Rxd5, ... R(e8)e2 mate! [Al Mutairi-Rahman ’14].

CONTACT US

brown CELEBRITIES, IS THAT 32is usually Irish secretary? fuel horses 96101Irish dogsled 36ordered Targets for a Places for IONIZATION LIONIZATION? Serenaded racer? delivery panels Movie,” Roman 39“Scary One may take 991041979 Fall shade foryou onein 106Polanski Some film letters? 100 Places for 41Love Mists investment secretary? fuel 42Irish Bird on a bonds, for Canadian short for Targets for adollar 101 Places 43delivery All-human 107panels Band with the bridge? 1974 No. 1 hit One may take 104 Fall shade 44youBarely “The Night in bite 106 Some 46Mists When the day’s Chicago Died” investment done, Irish health 5 Burning 17 Still-life 45 “Tony n’ ___ 69 Bird on ato Donne 110bonds, for 47Canadian Irish algebra care worker? sensation? subject Wedding” 72 dollar short teacher? 112Band Irish with painter? 6 Calvary 19 Jai alai basket 48 Springfield All-human 107 the 51bridge? Missile 1131974 Do sometimes inscription 23 ___ Johansson, Plateau No. 1 hit Command 7 Richard of 1959-60 world area 73 called a Barely bite “The Night “A Summer heavyweight Pour There are maker Martin By Judith Gentle49Reader: table, even though there “natural” When the day’s Chicago Died” Place” champion 50 Numismatist’s 74 52 Noodges 114 Support Universal Uclick two attitudes thatn’individwas5noBurning cake knife. 17 Still-life Donne 110 45classification “Tony ___ 8 ___ Bums 25 AAA service 54done, Big to name in 115Irish “So health true” Someone suggested Irish algebra sensation? subjectuals and53universities Wedding” take (Brooklyn 27that Protestant Preinstalled 77 restaurant 116care Yardworker? filler, teacher? 112 Irish painter? 6 should Calvary 19 denom. Jai basket the 48iPhone Springfield Dodgers have been 78 Dear A there use of the title a alaitoward reviewsMiss Manners: maybe 113 Do sometimesnote saying, inscription 23 ___who Johansson, Plateau nickname) 30 One bugs browser 55Missile “Hard ___!” 117 Snorkeling friend of mine had a gradu“doctor” for those who “Display only, Command 79 Richard 1959-60 world 58 Setting area set called Suddenlyof people? 80 (nautical localea ation party for her child onvon another“A hold cake in kitchen.” strike 31 Riddles with Ph.Ds. 6049Montréal 82 Summer heavyweight Pour maker “natural” command) 118 Director Novel ending bullets Côte been 84 a56Noodges Thursday. ordered a Your10thoughts? having Digs of pigs She114 Sternberg Place” championOne is that 50suburb Numismatist’s Support 11 Rice dish 33 Christmas Day St.-___ 57BigWhen the 119“So Put upbe with 8 ___ Bums 25 AAA service classification name in day’s 115 true” very expensive cake to earned, it should be used, 12 Anklebones urging 62 Hard drive 85 done, to Denis 120 “___ not!” (Brooklyn 27 Protestant Preinstalled restaurant 116 Yarddesfiller, Gentle Reader: Perhaps the centerpiece not only 53 in professional 13 Dodgers ___-Caps 34 Compact malfunction 59reviews End of a game? of the denom. iPhone maybe (candy) Positive Pear orneeded for 91 sert table, by the signnickname) should have3530 said, situations 61“Hard Long, angrysurrounded DOWN One who bugs 63 when browser ___!” 117 Snorkeling Steal, a is for the principle 92 complaint 1 locale Ties all sorts of cookies, fruit, “Hands of;asthis identiication, especially 914 Suddenly people? 58quince Setting set (nautical vehicle 36 6460Utah city 63command) Irish 2 Director Problemvon in bed, strike 31 Versatile Riddlesinbean with Montréal 118 etc., to be eaten that night. A-list guests, not you.” academic positions, but 15 Chaucer 37 Pith helmet 65 One of the woodworker? for some 10 Novel ending bulletssome suburb Côte 95 Digs of pigs Sternberg work that 38 Voiced Gandhis to What Miss Manners inds also socially. 67 She Lie wanted the 3 cake Like some 11 Rice dish 33 pleasure Christmas Day 66 Foot St.-___ When the day’s 119 Put up with invokes the 96 70 just Part of a centerpiece bands with most be and is that your isbone not 12 curious Anklebones urging The other Hard driveto use done, tothe Denis 120 “___ book of Job, 39 Breeze 6762Indian dishwasher only not!” modest to beofeaten on the night of friend thought it — not socially, but es13 ___-Caps 34her Compact malfunction a game? with “The” that 40 Quote princesses 71EndCalifornia Western Positive 63Orphic Pear or Long, angry DOWN 16 (candy) Tony-winning Advantage, 97 the graduation, the followwould hold4235the pecially68not in hymn academic county or popularity guests 14 Steal, asJudith a principle quince complaint 1 4 Ties actress with “up” its seat Light quanta same ing Sunday. low opinion of thempositions, charmer because that

MISS MANNERS

Cake as decoration strikes guests as odd

inclined to be upbeat if you

could get certain personal Sudoku

matters completed. Tonight: O� to a barbecue.

Jacqueline Bigar is at www.jacquelinebigar.c

Sudoku Horoscopes 5-25-14

“Let’s shake!” 98 Eastern wrap: Prepare the Var. moment, and make choices that By Jacqueline Bigar SAGITTARIUS (Nov. first course, 100 Bonito King Features Syndicate work. 22-Dec. 21) HHHH You’ll say relatives wander into someone else’s Pitcher 102 Possible water5-25-14 LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Hershiser ARIES (Marchcontaminator 21-April 19) HHHH You’ll want to talk turf; you will be able to tell by Lighting 103 Tailoredvarious HHH the response you receive. The 69 “Let’s You’ll shake!”encounter 98 Eastern wrap:about how a situation seems expert? 104 Barbra’s to be developing. Your choices nature of your reaction might situations that will“Funny surprise 72 Prepare Var. “Great” birdsthe Girl”you, first course, 100them. BonitoThe Marie Curie, co-star might be diferent because of surprise you. An apology could but you can handle say relatives e.g.: Abbr.of dealing 105 ___ noir efort with certain an increased sensitivity. You be necessary. 73 Pitcher 102 Hunter Possible water About 106 “The might not be worth could have difficulty telling CAPRICORN (Dec. 22Gotscenarios sick (Catalan Hershiser contaminator “I’llit.be right Landscape)” Be willing to bypass what someone that you changed Jan. 19) HHHH You might 74 Lighting 103 Tailored with you” work. You seem painter expert? 104 Barbra’s doesn’t to sense your mind about a matter that want to move in a diferent diSome distance 107 Fertilizer 77 “Great” birds “Funny Girl” is important to him or her. what is going on with a family rection, if possible. In the next races ingredient 78 Marie Curie, co-star Marks (out) 108 Bit of stagnantVIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) few weeks, a friend or loved one member. e.g.: Abbr. 105 ___ noir Depressedwater growth TAURUS (April will be playing devil’s advocate 80 About 106 20-May “The Hunter HHHH A situation is likely to looking 109 Lucrative 82 Got HHHH sick (Catalan 20) You might want become complex. Unexpected to anything you come up with. Cover with Internet biz 84 “I’ll be righta controlling Landscape)” new shingles 111 War on Poverty towith bypass situa- news could have a loved one Understand that this person you” She married prezbepainter tion that seems to getting or close partner feeling out of will be doing you a favor. 85 Some distance112 What 107 Fertilizer Bobby on “The can open Sharelevel your ★★★★★ perspective. you down. Your sensitivity will sorts. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. races Difficulty Sopranos” files?ingredient 91 Marks 108 Bit of Social welfare point to(out) a new direction. If stagnantyou Keep communication open and 18) HHHH You might want to 92 Depressedgrowth org. Answer to some yesterday's puzzle head down that path, water expect a luid. request feedback from a

vehicle 36 Versatile bean 64 Utah city looking 109 Lucrative Irish 2 Problem in bed, Sudoku is a numberLIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) creative person. This person is reaction from someone There was nofor cake selves. level of education 15 Chaucer 37 Pith helmet 65 One of thebeing 95 strong Cover with Internet biz woodworker? some placing work that 38 Voicedassumed, some new shingles 111with. War on Poverty HHHH Youpuzzle couldbased feel pres- used to thinking outside the will have to deal knife the it Gandhis need not be you Lie anywhere 3 near Like some on aby9x9 grid with sevthe pleasure Foot bone 96 She married(May prez 20) Today’s Cryptoquip Chess Quiz Part ofShe a thought bands with sured a developing situa- box, and can grasp what you GEMINI 21-June cake. people Dearinvokes Miss Manners: My expressly66 mentioned. eral given numbers. The book of Job, 39 Breeze 67 Indian Bobby on “The 112 What can open dishwasher only modest future sister-in-law just You might want tothe escape Weigh the pros and tion.object would get the hint, espeare doing. Perhaps he or she will Obviously,princesses your pro- HHHH Difficulty level ★★★★★ is to place with “The” 40 Quote Sopranos” files? California Western else’s demands. ofwelfare responding in a certain someone cially since she had an- graduated come up with an even better with her Ph.D. spective sister-in-law numbers 1 to 9 in the De16 Tony-winning 42 Advantage, 68 Orphic hymn es- 97 cons Social county or popularity actress with “up” charmer org. You could be overworked tach and gain some empty squares so distance that other in She told path.Answer Take a stand, if need be. p meJudith to call her pouses the irst-named ap- way. to yesterday's its seatcake to be 4 eaten Light quanta each each column thisrow, person. Think another room along with “doctor,” but I was always proach. And she is covered and tired, but trust yourself to from PISCES (Feb. 19-March Sudoku is a through numberand each 3x3carefully. box con-Conmore come through in the end. You a decision other goodies. told that if you don’t work by two rules: placing puzzle based 20) HHH Tension will build tains the same number on a 9x9 grid with sev- at home, to the point at which your options. Someone took a plas- with someone directly in ■ Address people as might consider going back on sider only once. The difficulty given numbers. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.Theyou will want to tiptoe around tic fork and stabbed the their ield, that doesn’t ap- they wish to be addressed. a recent decision. Ask yourself leveleral of the Conceptis object is to place the a certain person. You could be 21)Sudoku HHHH A close loved one centerpiece cake when ply. ■ Try not to annoy your whether this would be wise. increases from numbers 1 to 9hearin the quite withdrawn until you gain Monday Sunday. willto appreciate CANCER (June 21-July 22) or partner no one was looking. Some Is that true? I under- relatives unnecessarily.

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Chess Quiz

HHHH Accept the fact that you need more privacy if you ever are to accomplish anything. A boss WHITE WINS A PIECE could be diicult. Relax Hint: Just take it. with the

squares so that a new perspective. Allow your ing from empty you. Focus on getting each row, each column a project and completed. Youbox might each 3x3 con- penchant for of-the-wall ideas be a bundle ofthe nerves because to emerge. You could be walktains same number CONTACT US of a recent conversation. only once. The difficultying into new territory.

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16 » Thursday, May 29, 2014 »

T H E W E E K LY

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Community GERMANTOWN

Annual junior fishing rodeo set for June 7 Special to The Weekly

Creative Aging members recently presented the second annual Games Day event at the Memphis Jewish Community Center. Helping with the festivities are Game Day chairwoman Julie Goodman (left), Creative Aging executive director Meryl Kleinm, Creative Aging assistant director Terrie Kirksey, MJCC senior adult coordinator Jennifer Roberts and volunteer Patti Elster.

SENIORS

Creative Aging presents Game Day at MJCC By Terrie Kirksey Special to The Weekly

Creative Aging, a 10year old nonproit organization that brings the arts to life where seniors live, understands the value of improving and reairming life through the creative process. Its work enhances the social and cognitive health of older adults through arts engagement. And because research shows that mental activities, such as games and the magic of music can also keep the brain sharp, Creative Aging recently held its second annual Game Day hosted by the Memphis Jewish Community Center. The fun-illed afternoon included classic strategy games, laugh-out-loud party games, socializing with new and old friends and piano music by Creative Aging resident artist, Diana Stein. More than 100 diverse attendees, ranging in age from 50 to 90, illed three tables of mahjong players and many lively

groups of seniors playing Trivial Pursuit, dominoes, chess and other popular board games. Everyone was a winner at Game Day with a door prize for all thanks to our sponsors including CignaHealthSpring, Belmont Village, Edward Jones Agent Julia San Roman, Foxbridge, Home Instead, St. Peter Manor, The Gardens of Germantown, The Best Times, The Village at Germantown, Vista Care, and ZOUNDS. One lucky winner went home with a Coach wallet. And none of this would have been possible without the brain power of MJCC senior adult coordinator Jennifer Roberts and her mother and Creative Aging volunteer, Patti Elster who led a team of volunteers to make this fundraiser a success. For more information on Creative Aging or to volunteer, call 901-2723434 or visit creativeagingmidsouth.com. Terrie Kirksey is the Creative Aging assistant director.

A lifetime hunting and ishing license, plus a three-day, two-night vacation to Reelfoot Lake are two of the prizes on the line when the Germantown Parks and Recreation Department plays host to the 14th annual Tennessee Wildlife Resources Agency Mid-South Junior Fishing Rodeo on June 7 at Johnson Road Park in Germantown. Children ages 6-12 are eligible to ish in this free event. Noted Mid-South anglers Carl Graham of Corinth, Miss., and Ron Wong of Memphis, along with several members of the Memphis area chapter of Legacy Outitters will be on-site to help assist anglers. And it’s not unusual for TV personality Bill Dance to make an appearance at the rodeo. “I wouldn’t miss the rodeo for anything in the world,” Graham said. “It’s one of my favorite things to do every year. I just love to see all those kids catching ish and having fun in a wonderful family environment.” In fact, Graham, a former Collierville resident, said he plans a special prize for this year’s event. He said he will take the youth who catches the heaviest ish on a four-hour bluegill

ishing trip on Pickwick Lake. The park’s lake will be stocked with about 1,500 pounds of catish weighing up to three pounds, according to Dave Rizzuto, Carl TWRA Region 1 ishGraham eries biologist. Prizes will be awarded to the youth in each age group. Also, prizes will be drawn throughout the rodeo from registration forms. Larry Rea of Germantown, host of Outdoors with Larry Rea on Sports 790-AM and retired outdoors editor for The Commercial Appeal, will serve as the rodeo’s emcee and director. Dave Gabbard, information oicer for the TWRA based out of its Region 1 oice in Jackson, and Wong, a two-time winner of the St. Jude Bass Classic, will assist with emcee duties. Realtor Jackie Welch of Germantown again has agreed to fund the purchase of a lifetime hunting and ishing license to one of the rodeo’s participants. All Tennessee participants will be eligible to win this prize. The winner will be drawn from registration forms.

Also, the grand champion, along with his or her immediate family, will win a vacation at Blue Bank Resort on Reelfoot Lake courtesy of resort owner Mike Hayes, a longtime rodeo supporter. When asked if he’d host the rodeo champion again in 2014, Hayes said, “Put me down for the next 10 years.” Prizes will be awarded to the youngster in each age group with the most points — 10 for bass, seven for crappie, ive for catish, three for bluegill/bream and 1 for “other” ish. Door prizes are drawn from registration forms throughout the rodeo. No ishing license is needed. Each participant is responsible for their own rod, reel and bait. On-site registration will be from 7-9 a.m. with ishing from 9-11 a.m. Checkout is 11 a.m. Johnson Road Park is located behind Germantown Baptist Church. Signs will be posted on Poplar. Registration forms have been distributed throughout the Shelby Metro area. They should be mailed to: TWRA, 200 Lowell Thomas Drive, Jackson, TN 38301. For information, contact the TWRA Region I oice in Jackson at 731-423-5725 or Germantown Parks and Recreation at 901-757-7375.

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T H E W E E K LY

ÂŤ Thursday, May 29, 2014 ÂŤ 17

Community PETS OF THE WEEK | HUMANE SOCIETY

HUMANE SOCIETY

Adoption fees lowered to $20 as Rachael Ray Challenge starts By Katie Pemberton Special to The Weekly

The Humane Society of Memphis & Shelby County will host the “HSMSC Draft� at its facility on Sunday ofering dog and cat adoptions for just $20 and staying open from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. The “HSMSC Draft� $20 adoption event will serve as the kickof for HSMSC’s eforts in the ASPCA Rachael Ray $100K Challenge, which runs from June 1 through Aug. 31. HSMSC will compete against 50 other shelters nationwide for grant funding and has chosen “Team Up with the Humane Society� as its theme for the three-month challenge period. Participating shelters are tasked with increasing adoptions by at least 300 more than the same three-month period during the previous year and getting their communities involved. “A 300-adoption increase is indeed a major challenge for us, and that’s why we need everyone in the community to ‘team up’ with us to help us meet our goal of saving 700 lives this summer,� said Alexis Amorose, executive director of the Humane Society. “We invite you to come recruit your newest team member at the ‘HSMSC Draft’ with adoption fees of just $20!� Individuals and businesses who would like to help, but cannot adopt, can help in a number of other ways —

GIVING BACK

Adventure, purpose in meetings, Part 2

sponsor an adoption for $50, become a volunteer, become a foster parent, join HSMSC’s e-mail list, like the Humane Society on Facebook; follow on Twitter; follow on Instagram, share adoptable animals via social media or email “We are evaluated based not only on our adoption numbers, but also on how involved and engaged our community is during the process,� said Amorose. “So the more donors, volunteers, fosters, email subscribers, and social media followers we get during the three-month period, the better our chances of being awarded grant funds.� For more information, visit memphishumane.org, call 901- 937-3900 or visit the facility at 935 Farm Road. The reduced adoption fee applies to approved adopters only who have completed an adoption application and passed all screening processes. The ASPCA Rachael Ray $100K Challenge is a groundbreaking contest that challenges animal shelters across the country to come up with innovative ways to engage their communities and get more homeless cats and dogs into loving homes. For more information about the 2013 ASPCA Rachael Ray $100K Challenge, please visit aspca.org/100K. Katie Pemberton is the PR/marketing manager for the Humane Society of Memphis & Shelby County.

If you are looking to spark new ideas and foster collaboration among your team, provide a setting that will encourage activity and creativity. Last week we shared LLE APPEAL some ways to shake up your next meeting by taking it Jeremy C. of-site and Park adding adventure and purpose. This week, let us explore a few more ideas. For high-adventure, look to Team BRIDGES, where you can teambuild while rock climbing and balancing 40 feet above the ground. Their BRIDGES Challenge is a two-hour customized experience led by their internationally trained staf. It incorporates the AutoZone High Adventure Challenge Course and the Memphis Grizzlies Climbing Wall, which will literally take your meeting to new heights. Group outings can be scheduled Monday through Friday from 8am6pm and Saturdays from 8a-12p. Their BRIDGES Center is located at 477 North 5th Street. Visit www.teambridges.org or call 901-260-3775 for more information. Start your meeting day of at a Porter-Leath Head Start Center. Their team makes it easy and fun to play with the children. Simply have your team meet at Porter-Leath, stay for 30 minutes, an hour, or more, then head of to your meeting illed with renewed enthusiasm and perspective. Contact Rob Hughes at rhughes@porterleath.org for more information. If hosting a large event or limited on mobility, throw your attendees a musical curve ball with an original operetta. Contact Ned Canty at Opera Memphis (ned@operamemphis. org) and see why their 30 Days of Opera — a month long celebration featuring free public performances — has become a smashing success Jeremy C. Park is president of the Lipscomb & Pitts Breakfast Club. He is host of “The Spark� on WKNO-TV Channel 10 and the “Lipscomb & Pitts Breakfast Club� on KWAM-AM 990.

SHELBY COUNTY Å¿ÀĂ?Ă‡ĂƒĂŠÂż Ă ÂżĂ?ÂżĂ’Ă’Ă‡ĂŒĂ‡ÂŞ ¡¹ª Ă&#x; Ă&#x; Ă&#x; Ă&#x;ĂĄ

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KATHY COUNTS

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for Listing in Excess of $1,386,000 for the Month of April 2014

Special to The Weekly

259-8500 (Ofc) • 493-3701 (Cell)

Name: Sgt. Tibbs Age: 2 years Breed: Domestic long hair Description: Likes to purr, play and take catnaps.

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. 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.

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Congratulations!

By Jeremy C. Park

Name: Rover Age: 1 year Breed: Boxer mix Description: He loves Kongs and food puzzles, very smart.

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18 » Thursday, May 29, 2014 »

T H E W E E K LY

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The only PK–12th grade independent Baccalaureate World School in Tennessee preparing students for college and life in a global environment.

An International Baccalaureate World School

Congratulations to the Class of 2014! Limited spaces for the 2014-2015 school year are still available. Learn more about how to apply to Lausanne today!

The statistics for the 93-member class of 2014 include: 100% Acceptance rate to college 456 Acceptances to 169 different colleges and universities Matriculation to 62 different colleges and universities $13.4 million in Merit Scholarships 7 national merit scholarship finalists 2 national achievement scholarship finalists 8 national merit commended students 1 national achievement outstanding participant

2014 College Matriculation: Arizona State University Auburn University Babson College Ball State University Boston University Christian Brothers University College of Charleston Concordia University, Montreal DePaul University Elon University Emory University Fordham University Freed-Hardeman University Furman University Georgia Institute of Technology Hampton University Harvard College Hendrix College Howard University Louisiana State University Loyola University, New Orleans

Maryville University Massachusetts Institute of Technology Mississippi State University New York University Northwestern University Ouachita Baptist University Pennsylvania State University, University Park Purdue University Rhodes College Rice University Stanford University Stony Brook University The George Washington University The University of Alabama The University of Arizona The University of Georgia The University of Memphis University of Arkansas University of California, Berkeley University of California, Santa Barbara University of Chicago

University of Colorado, Boulder University of Kansas University of Louisville University of Maryland, College Park University of Michigan University of Mississippi University of Missouri, Columbia University of Oklahoma University of Pennsylvania University of Rochester University of South Carolina University of Tennessee, Chattanooga University of Tennessee, Knoxville University of Virginia Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Wake Forest University Washington University, St. Louis Wheeling Jesuit University Wingate University Yale University

admission@lausanneschool.com | 901.474.1000 | www.lausanneschool.com | Memphis, TN


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