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MORE Sidewalk Signatures

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Awhile back, I wrote about “sidewalk signatures” — those names pressed into sidewalks years ago by the contractors, who were so pleased with their work that they actually signed it. If you don’t remember my original column, then that’s really a shame, but go here and try to pay more attention this time.

These names were impressed into the wet cement with a mold or a stamp and have survived for decades, so it was a pretty good system.

But today I was stumbling around in Central Gardens (please don’t ask why), and happened to glance down at my feet as I moseyed along, and I noticed an entirely new — and considerably fancier — form of these signatures. As you can see, they are fancy embossed markers, cemented into place at various locations along Central Avenue. I really like the design of these things. “Miller Maker Memphis” is an especially fine one, with its triple use of a large “M.” And I’m sort of intrigued by the interlocking “paperclip” design of “Koehler Brothers & Franklin.” I assume that Franklin joined the Koehler Brothers in the concrete company and was determined to get proper (and equal) credit for the sidewalks they poured around town.

My only complaint — why didn’t everyone DATE these things? I guess it would have been expensive to create a new plaque every year, but still …

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soul soldiers

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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

On the Scene at Soup Sunday

Today, I went to Soup Sunday with Flyer food writer Pam Denney and her husband Tony.

The fund-raiser for Youth Villages always draws a crowd.

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News

Tigers Beat Southern Miss, 76-69

After a slow start, Memphis managed to put away a stubborn Southern Miss team at FedExForum Saturday. Frank Murtaugh has the story.

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Sports Tiger Blue

Memphis Tigers 76, Southern Miss 69

Canadian figure skater Joannie Rochette set a standard for inspired athletic performance this week, earning an Olympic bronze medal merely a few days after losing her mother to a heart attack. Tonight at FedExForum, Roburt Sallie took the floor with similar matters outweighing the significance of a basketball game. Only a few hours after learning his 65-year-old father has been diagnosed with prostate cancer, Sallie drilled five of six three-point attempts and scored 20 points for the most inspiring performance by a Tiger to date this season.

“There were some times I had tears,” Sallie said after his team’s 21st victory of the season. “Nobody really noticed, but I was out of it at times. To get that kind of news is devastating to my family. I only get to see my father about twice a year because of basketball. He seemed invincible to me; doesn’t have a gray hair on his head. He’s everything to our family. Coach [Josh Pastner] said if I don’t want to play, he understands. But I know how important this game was, for seeding in the [Conference USA] tournament.”

Will Coleman Slams Down Two

  • Larry Kuzniewski
  • Will Coleman Slams Down Two

“Rob called me earlier today, and said, ‘Coach, I can’t play,’” said Pastner. “I talked to his dad, and I talked to Rob throughout the day. He was extremely upset. Before the game, I brought him into my office and he said, ‘Coach, I don’t know if I can go. My mind is out of it.’ But he said, ‘If you put me in, I’ll suck it up and deal with it.’ I told him, his dad would be very proud of the character he showed tonight.”

The Tigers needed Sallie’s shooting, and a revival from Elliot Williams, who was held to four points in the first half, but scored 22 in the second, including a three-pointer that gave the Tigers an 11-point lead with 7:20 to play and allowed Memphis to coast to the final buzzer. This was Williams’ 16th 20-point game of the season, a figure matched only by Penny Hardaway, Dajuan Wagner, and Chris Douglas-Roberts over the last 19 seasons.

Southern Miss scored the first eight points of the game and led by nine 10 minutes after tip-off. Back-to-back three-pointers from Sallie and Willie Kemp, though, closed the deficit to three points, and by halftime the Tigers held a 33-32 lead. The scored was tied eight minutes into the second half before the U of M went on a 15-4 run. Wesley Witherspoon was a key contributor, hitting nine of 10 from the free-throw line. Sallie, Williams, and Witherspoon combined to score 81 percent of the Tigers’ points.

R.L. Horton led Southern Miss with 24 points, while Gary Flowers scored 13 and grabbed 13 rebounds. The victory was the U of M’s 14th straight in the series with the Golden Eagles.

The Tigers travel to Birmingham Wednesday to take on UAB in a battle of teams tied for second place in C-USA. Memphis beat the Blazers, 85-75, on February 3rd at FEF.

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News

Doing the Math in Congress

Since when did majority rule become a nefarious tactic?

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madea’s big happy family

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Sports Tiger Blue

Memphis Tigers vs. Southern Miss (7 pm, FEF)

• The hardwood version of the Black-and-Blue Game is the longest continuous series the Tigers have played to date. Memphis and Southern Miss have met a total of 82 times (the Tigers hold a 29-23 lead) and every season since the 1982-83 campaign. The Tigers have won the last 13 contests, including a 59-57 win in Hattiesburg on January 9th.

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• Tonight’s game will be the Tigers’ third C-USA rematch of the season. (They’ve split with SMU and Houston.) The game in early January was the league opener for Memphis. Elliot Williams hit 11 of 19 shots (including three three-pointers) to lead the Tigers with 33 points, a career high for the sophomore. No other Tiger reached double figures in the scoring column. The U of M almost wasted a 15-point halftime lead, shooting only two for 14 in the second half, but held on to win. The Golden Eagles only shot 39 percent from the field and were led by Maurice Bolden with 13 points.

• Southern Miss won eight of its first nine games, but has since gone 8-10 (6-7 in league play). They have two road wins against C-USA rivals: Houston and Tulane. The Golden Eagles are led in scoring by junior forward Gary Flowers (14.8 ppg) and sophomore guard Angelo Johnson (10.0). Flowers is pulling down 7.9 rebounds per game. Southern Miss leads C-USA in scoring defense, allowing just 59.4 points per game. In their last outing, the Golden Eagles suffered a narrow loss to C-USA front-runner UTEP, 59-56.

• Elliot Williams has been held under 10 points only twice this season: January 13th against East Carolina (a Tiger win) and last Wednesday at Houston (a Tiger loss). After scoring only 8 against the Pirates, Williams came back with 32 points at Rice.

• Tonight’s affair will be the penultimate home game for Tiger seniors Willie Kemp and Doneal Mack. Senior Day will be against Tulsa on March 6th. Unlike the first three seasons of their career, the C-USA tournament will be played in Tulsa (March 10-13). There remains a chance for an early-round NIT game to be held at FedExForum.

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Memphis Gaydar News

HIV Prevention Class for African American Men

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Planned Parenthood of Memphis has teamed up with the Memphis Gay and Lesbian Community Center (MGLCC) to offer a seven-session program aimed at preventing HIV and other STDs among African American men.

Called “Many Men, Many Voices,” the workshop series is aimed at black men who have sex with men, but the participants don’t necessarily have to identify as gay. The target audience includes heterosexual men “on the down low,” who enjoy gay sex unbeknownst to their female partners.

The intervention sessions will address sexual relationship dynamics, factors that influence the behavior of black men who live “on the down low,” and the social influences that racism and homophobia have on HIV risk.

In order to participate in the seven-week program, men must show up for the first session on Sunday, February 28th at MGLCC at 6:30 p.m.

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Beyond the Arc Sports

Relegislating the Thabeet Pick

The Thabeet pick: Plenty of blame to go around.

  • The Thabeet pick: Plenty of blame to go around.

The Grizzlies host the Charlotte Bobcats tonight at FedExForum. Currently only 3.5 games out of the Western Conference’s final playoff seed despite a five-game home losing streak, tonight’s game provides a good chance for the Grizzlies to end that streak against a Bobcats team that’s 7-22 on the road.

But the story of the day for the Grizzlies isn’t tonight’s game or even the team’s weakening grasp on the playoff race. It’s the assignment of #2 overall pick Hasheem Thabeet to the NBA Developmental League’s Dakota Wizards, with whom he’s scheduled to play tonight.

This latest turn in what has been a disappointing rookie season for Thabeet has spurred another look at how the team came to draft Thabeet. (A pick that, it should be noted, was fairly widely questioned locally but not particularly denigrated around the country, with the Grizzlies getting pretty good “draft grades” from most national sites.)

The media narrative that has emerged around the pick goes something like this: That General Manager Chris Wallace preferred Tyreke Evans at #2. Player Personnel Director Tony Barone Sr. favored Thabeet. Scouting Director Tony Barone Jr. was pushing Stephen Curry. And Assistant General Manager Kenny Williamson and Head Coach Lionel Hollins were either leaning Curry or not pushing hard for anyone in particular, depending on which account you believe.