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Sports Tiger Blue

Move Over Larry Finch

Brittany Carter established a new single-game scoring record Friday night in the women’s 98-83 win over Sacramento State in Seattle. But the sophomore forward’s new mark — 49 points — actually represents a U of M standard for women’s or men’s basketball. The men’s record remains the 48 points Larry Finch scored against St. Joseph’s on January 20, 1973. (Among women, Tamika Whitmore held the record of 45 points since 1999.)

Brittany Carter

  • Brittany Carter
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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Burritos at Swanky’s

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  • Justin Fox Burks

Ever wonder if you could eat a burrito the size of your head? Go to Swanky’s and you’ll find out. With two kinds of tortillas, fi�ve meats, three sauces, and 15 fi�llings to choose from, the burrito you design can easily end up being quite large.

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News

Overton Park and 100-Year Floods

Mary Cashiola reports on the continuing debate over flood water run-off and Overton Park.

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News

The Rant

Tim Sampson riffs on his old faves — Sarah Palin and her acolytes.

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Daily Photo Special Sections

duffel-bag class

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Sports Tiger Blue

Tommy West’s All-Stars

Tommy West coaches his final game for Memphis this afternoon (2:30) in Tulsa. I thought a fitting send-off for him would be a look at the 14 players who earned first-team all-conference honors during his tenure.

Stephen Gostkowski

  • Stephen Gostkowski

• Artis Hicks (OL), 2001
• Glenn Sumter (DB), 2001
• Jimond Pugh (C), 2002
• Wesley Smith (S), 2003-05
• DeAngelo Williams (RB), 2003-05
• Stephen Gostkowski (K), 2004-05
• Gene Frederic (C), 2004
• Andrew Handy (OL), 2005
• Marcus West (DL), 2005
• Rusty Clayton (DS), 2006
• Michael Gibson (P), 2006
• Andy Smith (OL), 2007
• Brandon Pearce (OL), 2008
• Clinton McDonald (DL), 2008

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Daily Photo Special Sections

thanksgiving

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Sports Tiger Blue

Be Thankful Memphis Tiger Fans

It’s easy to consider 2009 a downer if you’re a Tiger fan and choose to grind your teeth over an NCAA investigation into the men’s basketball program or a dreadful season for the football team. But if you look at the university’s athletic programs with a wider lens, there’s plenty to be grateful for as you carve this year’s turkey.

Ashley Berra

  • Ashley Berra

• Brooks Monaghan. The women’s soccer coach is building the kind of resume that will capture national attention . . . if it can just catch enough local eyes first. In Monaghan’s 10th season at the helm, the Tigers won their third straight Conference USA championship and reached the NCAA tournament a third consecutive year. And next season may be the year the U of M finally advances in soccer’s version of the Big Dance. Returning will be junior Ashley Berra (Conference USA’s 2009 Offensive Player of the Year), junior Kelsey Bakker (C-USA’s 2009 Defensive POY), and Vendula Strnadova (a three-time all-conference selection).

• Mike Rose Soccer Complex. On the subject of soccer, I can’t imagine a better place to watch a match than the just-the-right-size stadium off Bill Morris Parkway. It’s a shining example of what the football program needs. A stadium doesn’t necessarily have to be on campus . . . but size matters, and a lot.

Categories
Music Music Features

Remembering Dennis Brooks

“Dennis was my teacher,” Heidi Knochenhauer says of Dennis
Brooks
, the tireless advocate of Memphis music and blues who died
from a heart attack last month at age 59.

Brooks was not a musician but carved a niche for himself through
enthusiasm and hustle as a key figure in the Memphis blues scene. That
scene will celebrate him Sunday, November 29th, with an afternoon and
night concert at Neil’s, the Midtown venue where Brooks promoted
concerts most often in recent years.

The concert — dubbed the Dennis Brooks Life Celebration
— was organized by Knochenhauer, a grant writer for the Arkansas
Blues and Heritage Festival who calls Brooks her “blues wingman” for
area festivals and blues events in recent years; former colleague
Chuck Porter, who hosts the “Blues Today” program on WEVL-FM
Friday mornings; and stalwart local blues musician Brad
Webb
.

Starting at 2 p.m. and running deep into the night, the concert will
feature many key names in the local blues/roots community, among them:
Webb, Blind Mississippi Morris, Billy Gibson, William Lee Ellis, Reba
Russell, and Eric Hughes. There are also out-of-town musicians coming
in to pay tribute, among them Alabama’s Microwave Dave and Portland’s
John-Alex Mason.

“He was what I call a spoke in the wheel,” Webb says. “It takes a
lot of spokes to make that wheel go round. And Dennis was always there,
from booking bands to being a friend to being a reporter/man on the
scene. He would call me on Sunday nights, going, ‘Man, I’m at Huey’s
and Microwave Dave’s here, and there ain’t but 11 heads at 9 p.m.
Where’s the support?'”

A founding member of the Beale Street Blues Society, Brooks
played a role in the careers of regional blues notables such as Webb
and Blind Mississippi Morris, Daniel “Slick” Ballinger, and Richard
Johnston.

“He booked Morris and me on the first trip to Norway, before Robert
Belfour, Bill Ellis, and Richard Johnston went,” Webb says. “And Dennis
never charged too much — 10 percent, which is about unheard of
for an agent. Dennis was kind of an old-school type of guy who wasn’t
real fancy. Dennis was a friend to me. It wasn’t a business
association.”

Many musicians shared a similar kinship with Brooks, something
reflected in the large and still-growing lineup for this weekend’s
concert.

“There was never a question. It was y’all tell me when to be there
and we’ll play,” Porter says. “Everybody thought the world of him.”

“We’re still getting calls from people who just found out he
passed,” Webb says.

“Musicians were always welcomed at his home when they came through,”
says Knochenhauer, who was most recently working with Brooks on the
nonprofit Arkansas Music Preservation and Education initiative, modeled
after the Mississippi Blues Trail markers. Brooks was a board member
and “our main researcher,” Knochenhauer says. “He knew everything. He
was our encyclopedia. It’s really a loss.”

Sunday’s celebration concert will be free — “Dennis
wouldn’t have had it any other way,” Knochenhauer says — but
donations will be accepted and a silent auction will be held to raise
proceeds for Brooks’ headstone as well as a potential music note on
Beale Street, with a wide range of music-related items in the auction
donated from the likes of photographer Dick Waterman and Alligator
Records’ Bruce Iglauer.

The tentative lineup for the concert:

2 p.m. – Bill Ellis, Tomi Lunsford, Sandy
Carroll

3 p.m. – Bobby Lawson Band, David Daniels, Stan
Street, Don Cook

4 p.m. – Wampus Cats, MT Leon, Elmo

5 p.m. – The Hitmen, Sterling Billingsly, John-Alex Mason

6 p.m. – Blind Mississippi Morris, Billy Lavender,
Microwave Dave, Phil Durham

7 p.m. – Steve Selvidge, Richard Johnston, Billy Gibson

8 p.m. – Don McMinn, Davis Coen

9 p.m. – Reba Russell Band, Valerie June

9:50 p.m. – Eric Hughes Band

10:15 p.m. – Jam Session

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We Recommend We Recommend

Lit Up

According to Jen Andrews of the Shelby Farms Park Conservancy
(SFPC), the calls inquiring about Starry Nights would start coming in
every year around November. That the holiday-lights show and
fund-raiser for MIFA had its last season in 1999 … well, that meant a
lot of disappointed people. But no more. Starry Nights, now benefiting
SFPC, once again will brighten the East Memphis skies starting November
27th.

The resurrected show features some of the old favorites, such as the
“Kapow Gate” with its bouncing ball. There are also new designs, such
as “Nature’s Way,” a two-story tree that goes through the four seasons,
and “Under the Sea,” an underwater fantasy scene.

Reb Haizlip, who did the original designs, returned for the updated
Starry Nights. The display takes advantage of new technology, including
LED lights, which Andrews says fits into SFPC’s low-impact philosophy
and will use 85 percent less energy. The music to accompany the tour,
once on cassette tape, can now be heard on a low-frequency radio
station and includes performances by DeltaCapella, Greg Hisky, Kallen
Esperian, and the Bar-Kays, among others. (A CD of the soundtrack also
is available at the Starry Nights’ gift shop.)

On Monday, November 30th, from 6 to 10 p.m., the show will be closed
to motorized vehicles to make way for runners, cyclists, walkers,
skaters, etc. “Run, Walk, or Ride the Starry Nights” will be hosted by
the Memphis Grizzlies and meteorologist Jim Jaggers. Tickets are $20
per person or $10 for kids 10 and under.