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Win Tickets to Widespread Panic!

Win tickets to see Widespread Panic at Mud Island Amphitheater Wednesday, October 15th!

We’re giving away a pair of tickets each week until the show. Each week is a different drawing and each week the tickets get better! Enter as many times as you like, as often as you like. Winners will be notified by email on the morning of each drawing.

Here are the dates for the weekly drawings:

5th Row 9/10 – 9/16 Drawing on 9/17.
4th Row 9/17 – 9/23 Drawing on 9/24.
3rd Row 9/24 – 9/30 Drawing on 10/1.
2nd Row 10/1 – 10/7 Drawing on 10/8.
1st Row 10/8 – 10/12 Drawing on 10/13.




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Special Sections

The 1939 Pure Oil Station on Front Street

c869/1242669446-pure-station-1935.jpg In the September issue of Memphis magazine, I tell the compelling story of the little green cottage on South Front Street, which opened in 1939 as a Pure Oil Station (above). The building went through many owners over the years, and is now the property of a nice fellow named Kris Kourdouvelis, who lives next door and uses the old gas station for storage.

Yesterday I received an email from a Memphian named Kenneth Pasley, whose uncle was the original owner of that station. Here’s what Kenneth had to say about it:

“I worked at that station for my uncle, William Willingham, from 1956 to 1966, when I graduated from CBU. My uncle Bill owned the station from about 1938 to 1970, when he retired and closed it. During the war, Bill’s younger brother Tommy left school early every day and ran the station. When Bill returned home from France, in 1945, Tom spent time in the Army Air Corps, then moved to Walls, Mississippi, and opened a Pure Oil Station on Highway 61, just north of Twinkle Town Airport. Henry Halbert may have owned the little station in question before Uncle Bill, but he did not own it after 1938. Henry Halbert ran the Pure Oil Service station at 836 South Third (Third & Iowa), when my other uncle, Reggie Willingham, went into the Army Air Corps. Reggie took the station back over when he returned from the war. Henry then went on to open “Halbert’s Auto Supply”.

Thanks for the additional information, Kenneth.

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Opinion Viewpoint

Charley Reese Says Goodbye

This is the last Charley Reese column, as the author is retiring.

Years ago, the first time I saw my friend Brother Dave Gardner after he had survived a plane crash, the comedian smiled and said, “The devil like to got me.” That’s a good explanation for my last trip to the hospital.

I’ve been running a footrace with piled-up years and bad living habits, and they have pulled even and will soon be ahead …

Read Charley Reese’s last column.

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Opinion Viewpoint

Bianca Knows Best … And Helps the “Other Woman”

Dear Bianca,

I have the hots for a married man. We met in Arkansas at a rock show. I was visiting to see my friend’s band play, and the married man is also in the band. I had no idea he was married, and so we made out a little bit.

And then I saw the ring. The dumb-ass wasn’t even smart enough to hide it. He admitted that he was married and apologized profusely. We were both pretty buzzed, so we chalked it up to drunken fun.

He called me a week later and said he was coming to Memphis with his band and wanted to meet, just as friends. I was planning on going to the show anyway, so we hung out a bit on completely platonic terms.

That is, until I got drunk again. Then I wanted to make out, but he pushed me away. He said he really needed to be loyal to his wife. I cried and ran out of the bar. That’s when I realized I really like this guy. They’ll be back in Memphis for another show next month. He wants to hang out again. What should I do?

— Almost The Other Woman

Dear Almost,

I have a hard time believing your cheatin’ crush really wants to remain loyal to his wife. If you guys began your friendship with a make-out session and he still wants to hang out, it seems more likely that he’s really just coming back for seconds.

When he pushed you away, maybe he was a little more sober than you. I bet he’s just waiting for the opportunity to get too drunk to make rational choices so you guys can suck face sans the guilt.

So, you can meet up with him again and feed him shot after shot to encourage bad behavior or you can stay at home and be responsible. How would you feel if some girl made out with your husband (if you had one)?

Dating (or sleeping with) a married man can lead to major complications. If things get serious, he’ll have to keep you hidden away, so forget about shacking up or settling down with the guy. And just imagine the drama that could ensue if he ever comes clean with his wife.

Your best bet is to call this guy and tell him you’ve got alternate plans. Don’t tell him your true feelings. Just make up something. If you tell him you’ve got a crush on him, he may admit his feelings too. Then you’re back at square one. (And here’s another good rule to follow: Don’t make potentially life-changing decisions while drunk.)

Got a problem? Bianca can solve it. Send advice queries to bphillips@memphisflyer.com.

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Opinion Viewpoint

Next Up: The Fairgrounds Project

Get ready for the revival of the great Memphis football stadium debate.

On September 9th, representatives of Fair Ground LLC, the partnership chosen to redevelop the Mid-South Fairgrounds, will make its presentation to the Memphis City Council …

Read the of John Branston’s take on the Fairgrounds.

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Opinion Viewpoint

Karl Rove and the Blue and Red

The Globe and Mail explains McCain’s strategy for dividing America into rural (red states) and urban (blue states) areas under Karl Rove’s playbook. The concept was written about as the urban archipelago during the last election (or was it the one before?) and the idea was that it wasn’t a contest between red or blue; it was a contest between cities and rural areas …

Read more from Mary Cashiola’s “In the Bluff Blog.”

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From My Seat Sports

FROM MY SEAT: Weekly Top 40, U of M-Style

The University of Memphis has been playing football since
1912, and the program has had its share of struggles, suiting up plenty of teams
that were, if not down right sorry, quite forgettable. But not since 1924 had
the Tigers given up more than 40 points in each of their first two games.
(Hendrix College and Arkansas College outscored Zach Curlin’s boys by a combined
score of 100-0 a few weeks before President Calvin Coolidge was re-elected.)
Then came the start of the 2008 season: Ole Miss 41, Memphis 24 and Rice 42,
Memphis 35.

While the opening loss at Oxford may have been
disappointing to head coach Tommy West, his team, and the growing legion of
Tiger fans who’ve come to embrace this era of Memphis football, the late-game
collapse against Rice Saturday at the Liberty Bowl carried the kind of
heartbreak that can shape a season. Having emphasized the character of his
recruits for eight years now, West will see if the current team is staggered by
the loss to an Owl squad it should have beaten, or inspired by what could have
been.

The manner by which an apparent win was given away — Rice
scored three touchdowns in the last seven minutes, including a game-winning
69-yard interception return — was eerily similar to gut-wrenching home losses to
Cincinnati in 2002 (a season finale that cost Memphis a winning season and bowl
game) and to Arkansas State in 2006 (a crusher followed by five consecutive
losses). Behind the arm of rookie quarterback Arkelon Hall — his 373 yards
passing against Rice is the fourth highest single-game total in Memphis history
— the Tigers took a 35-20 lead over a Rice team that had lit up SMU with 56
points in their opener a week earlier. Alas, it’s the pass intercepted by Chris
Jammer and returned for Rice’s final touchdown that will stand out from Hall’s
first performance at the Liberty Bowl.

This was a bigger game, in some respects, than the more
ballyhooed opener at Ole Miss. With an expressed goal of contending for the
Conference USA championship, the Tigers need to beat the likes of Rice (picked
by league coaches to finish fourth in C-USA’s West Division). Hall matched
Rice’s all-conference quarterback Chase Clement pass for pass (Clement wound up
with 318 yards but two picks of his own), and the Tigers held all-conference
wideout Jarett Dillard to a fairly pedestrian eight receptions for 66 yards. But
clamping down on Dillard merely opened gaps in the Tiger defense for Owl tight
end James Casey, whose 11 catches were good for an astonishing 208 yards (which
don’t even include the game-tying two-point conversion with under two minutes to
play).

Two of the three most important stat lines in football are
first downs and penalties. The team that wins these categories typically wins a
game. Rice had 24 first downs to the Tigers’ 22 and the Owls were penalized but
three times for 20 yards, while Memphis had six infractions that cost them 48
yards. (In the third critical area — turnovers — each team had two.) A week
earlier, Memphis had twice the penalties (eight) of their opponent, and a pair
of turnovers (to none for Ole Miss) offset the first-down advantage Memphis held
(28 to 19). It’s a cliche, of course, but the honest truth: when Memphis
protects the football and avoids penalties, the Tigers will start winning games.

Next up for the Tigers is a trip to Huntington, West
Virginia, for a tilt with Marshall. The Thundering Herd was manhandled by
Wisconsin last weekend, but pounded Illinois State in its opener. The game is
now a must-win for the U of M, as the 2008 schedule gets tougher with every 50
points scored by Louisville and every major upset pulled off by East Carolina.
(Can the Pirates be the 2008 BCS-busters we saw in Boise State two years ago and
Hawaii in 2007?) For a winning season, the Tigers are going to have to find a
three-game winning streak (minimum) on that schedule. With Marshall followed by
Nicholls State and Arkansas State at home, then a road game against a beatable
UAB team, Memphis may well determine how high the bar for this season can be
raised before the nationally televised showdown with the Cardinals on October
10th. The first aim next weekend, you can be certain, is to keep the Herd under
40 points.

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News

Racist A–Holes to Gather in Memphis for Convention

On November 8th, white supremacists from around the globe will gather in Memphis for the Euro International Conference, hosted by David Duke.

According to DavidDuke.com: “Just a few short days after the political and media bosses install a new President of the United States; we will meet in Memphis, Tennessee, to issue a clarion call for a Movement across the United States, and indeed across the European-American world, to defend our heritage and freedom!

“We will assemble to say clearly that neither Black Radical, Barrack Obama (sic), nor Mr. Amnesty, John McCain truly represent the will of the American people.”

There’s more, but it’s too depressing to share. Except for this: “It will be held in a first-class, premier hotel in a beautiful and secure country setting that is still just a short ride from the Memphis region airport. This fine hotel has agreed to a reduction of almost 40 percent off their normal rates.”

Gee, wonder what fine establishment agreed to give these upstanding folks 40 percent off? (We’re looking into it.)

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Opinion Viewpoint

A “No-Tell Motel” From Memphis’ Past

By all accounts, Bob Berryman was a shady character. A rather notorious gambler and bootlegger, he served eight years in prison for murdering a bouncer at a downtown nightclub. Even so, his name brings back fond memories for many Memphians, for he was the owner and operator of the Silver Slipper …

Read more about one of Memphis’ first “no-tell motels” at Vance Lauderdale’s blog.

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Politics Politics Feature

Police vs. Demonstrators at the RNC, Part I

–video by Chris Davis