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Beal’s Dixie Kream – Olive Branch, Mississippi

Beals Dixie Kream in 1966

  • Beal’s Dixie Kream in 1966

So the other day I was looking through a stack of 50-year-old yearbooks from Olive Branch High School. Doesn’t everybody do that on a Saturday night?

I didn’t find any Lauderdales among the students, but one thing I did notice was an ad in the back of all the yearbooks, for an establishment called Beal’s Dixie Kream. Yes, that’s right — it (and the owner’s name) was spelled Beal — without the “e.” Sometimes the ads spelled the name of the place “Cream” but the neon sign out front says “Kream.”

The owner, as you can see, was Mrs. Hazel Beal. No mention of a Mr. Beal, so I wonder if she was a widow? Divorced? None of my damn business? (choose one)

The yearbooks spanned 1960 to 1967, and one thing that caught my eye was how the brick exterior changed over the years. In a 1961 ad, it was apparently a solid color, but in later ads it clearly had a checkerboard pattern. What’s curious is that by 1967, the walls were back to being one color. Too bad the ads were in black-and-white, so I don’t know what color(s) the place was painted. I bet it was quite festive, and since it appeared in every yearbook, THE place to go on Friday and Saturday nights in Olive Branch.

Like most ice-cream joints, Beal’s offered milkshakes and a variety of sandwiches. But it also provided customers with “Memphis telephones” so they could “Talk While You Eat.” In fact, look at the 1966 advertisement, and there’s the phone booth, right in front.

The ads say Beal’s Dixie Kream was located on Highway 78 at the Tennessee/Mississippi state line. I haven’t driven out Lamar in a while (probably ever since Maywood closed), so does anyone know what happened to this cute little place, and what’s there now?

Here are some other views of it, taken from the old yearbooks:

Beals in 1961

  • Beal’s in 1961

Beals as it looked in 1965

  • Beal’s as it looked in 1965

Beals in 1967. Note the popcorn maker.

  • Beal’s in 1967. Note the popcorn maker.
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What are Memphis’ Best Restaurants?

It’s time for Memphis Magazine’s annual Best Restaurant Poll. Go here to vote for your favorites!

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Opinion

The Morning After

They say it’s better to say nothing and be thought a fool than to open your mouth and leave no doubt. Well, it’s also better to be thought a hopelessly divided community than to hold an election that proves it.

What else can you say about a referendum that united blogger Thaddeus Matthews and Shelby County commissioner Terry Roland? And Shelby County school board member David Pickler and Al Sharpton? And suburban mayors and the Shelby County Democratic Party?

United they stand, on one thing: Say no to consolidation. The victory party should be interesting. So much for “One Memphis.”

It didn’t take Sharpton parachuting into town last week to dance on the grave to tell us consolidation was dead on arrival. No majority-white suburban county has ever consolidated with a major majority-black city. And even in the cities where consolidation passed, as noted by Suzanne Leland and Kurt Thurmaier in their book City-County Consolidation: Promises Made, Promises Kept?, black voters feared the loss of political power.

The lawsuit that could delay certification of the results is a long shot. Separate city and county referendums, as the authors note, are not unusual. The consolidation scorecard shows about 40 successful consolidations in 120 attempts.

This is the third time Shelby County voters have rejected consolidation with Memphis. On Monday, a group of reporters were talking about when and if it might come up again. Someone said two years from now, but I think it will take a financial calamity before we have another consolidation discussion. And if that happens, consolidation is more likely to be mandated somehow than voter approved.

Calamity means an actual calamity, as in municipal bankruptcy or a move by FedEx to another city. The threat of some future calamity won’t do it. The unpopular mayor, Willie Herenton, tried that. The popular mayor, A C Wharton, tried that.

The Metro Charter Commission and Rebuild Government had an impossible job. A piece of legislation that gets loaded up with something for everyone is called a Christmas tree bill. The charter authors tried to do that, but it backfired. Opponents found something not to like. The second option was to go negative and run an all-out fear campaign, like several congressional candidates did in the closing weeks of the campaign. But that would have meant beating up on Memphis even more. It made more sense to call off the dogs. A split referendum was not going to pass, period. There was no urgency to an idea that wouldn’t take effect for four years and whose tax impact would not occur for seven years.

If there was any silver lining to this cloud it was that some young black activists like Andre Fowlkes, Darrell Cobbins, and Wendi Thomas stepped up. The black voting bloc that Matthews, Sharpton, and AFSCME long for is a crock.

“Something good came out of this,” said consolidation supporter and former city councilman Jack Sammons. “For the first time in my adult life, the community paused to reflect about where we are going.”

What now? The suburban mayors and commissioners hole up and vilify Memphis. The municipal unions treat government as a jobs and benefits program. The Shelby County Democratic Party drives off the last remaining white Democrats. Memphis will continue to lose population and middle-class families.

FedEx founder Fred Smith said Plan B would be for the city and county mayors to make the separate governments smaller and more competitive. But in a recent meeting with reporters and bloggers, Wharton was skeptical about two-headed government even when the mayors are in broad agreement, and he has held both mayoral jobs.

There might have been a time when Smith’s view would have counted for something. The political boss of Memphis for the first half of the 20th century was E.H. Crump. His biographer, William Miller, wrote this about him: “Whether it was a consequence of his Old South heritage or just nature, he was an absolutist. There was right and wrong, truth and error, and one man’s point of view was not always as good as another’s.”

Not any more.

Memphis and Shelby County and the two school systems won’t make serious cuts or pull together until there is a crisis. Warnings and appeals to idealism and a better future won’t do it. There will have to be a calamity. And then it will be too late.

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Sports Tiger Blue

Tigers top L-O in exhibition

The 19th-ranked Tigers beat Lemoyne-Owen tonight, 106-49, in their first of two exhibition games. A crowd of roughly 15,000 made it to FedExForum for what amounted to a coming-out party for the U of M’s highly acclaimed freshman class . . . at least a portion of that class. (Will Barton didn’t play as he nurses a minor injury, and Jelan Kendrick didn’t suit up as he continues to address an off-the-court matter.)

Some first impressions on the frosh who did hit the floor:

JOE JACKSON (White Station) — This is an ultra-quick point guard, in the mold of Antonio Burks and Derrick Rose, just not as big as the two former NBA-bound Tigers. Jackson has the innate ability to penetrate the lane and weave between larger players before finishing at the basket. Which makes him an improvement on last year’s primary point, Willie Kemp. Even with 12 pounds added since high school, though, Jackson is a small college player (6’0, 175 pounds). Teams with a big, strong backcourt may be able to exploit Jackson defensively. Jackson made four of six field-goal attempts against the Magicians, his only misses coming from three-point range.

Joe Jackson

TARIK BLACK (Ridgeway) — Based on what I saw tonight, this is your difference-maker this season. With a little more muscle, Black will have the body of an NBA power forward (he’s currently listed at 6’8″, 252 pounds). And he already has better hands than Joey Dorsey did in his last college game. My favorite play by Black tonight came early in the second half when, positioned at the left elbow, he took an entry pass and swung the ball to the left corner, where Charles Carmouche drained a three-pointer. Tiger basketball has generally not run its offense through the center position. Certainly not since Chris Massie was in uniform seven years ago. Black grabbed five offensive rebounds tonight (against a smaller opponent than many he’ll face this season). The energy, though, should keep him on the floor. A scary combination will be Black and Will Coleman sharing playing time. Closest thing to a “Twin Tower” lineup Memphis has been able to play in quite a while.

Tarik Black

CHRIS CRAWFORD (Sheffield) — He has the perfect body for a college shooting guard: 6’4″, 205 pounds. And he had the prettiest shot tonight (perfect rotation and a silky release). Quickness may be an issue for Crawford on defense, but it’s much too early to call it a weakness. He may not have arrived with the McDonald’s All-American credentials of some of his teammates, but Crawford looks like the kind of player who could be steady, if not outstanding, in college. Calls to mind Antonio Anderson. He hit two treys tonight and led the Tigers with five assists.

ANTONIO BARTON — Less celebrated than his brother, Will, Antonio started tonight because he led the Tiger point guards in rebounds during preseason practice. Both physically and in style of play, he resembles former Tiger point guard Chris Garner. Whereas Garner was an integral part of his teams in the mid-Nineties, though, it’s hard to envision many minutes for Antonio Barton on the floor this winter. If his brother and Kendrick return in full, Antonio would be seventh or eighth, at best, in Josh Pastner’s rotation. He appears to be a fighter on defense, and is obviously willing to rebound. Who knows?

HIPPOLYTE TSAFACK — Tsafack will bring the proverbial lunch pail for these Tigers. With Will Coleman, Angel Garcia, and Black firmly in the rotation, Tsafack’s size (6’8″, 231 pounds) is a luxury for Pastner. The 2009-10 Tigers could never “go big” to gain advantage against a smaller opponent. This year’s team will be able to do so. Tsafack will be an insurance policy for the likelihood that Coleman or Black gets in foul trouble.

NOTE: After two seasons in the rafters of FedExForum, the banner honoring the 2007-08 Final Four team has been lowered. As mandated by the NCAA, any public celebration of the now-vacated appearance had to be removed. Also gone is the banner that celebrated the 137 career wins — 38 of them now vacated — by Antonio Anderson, Robert Dozier, and Chance McGrady. (The banner honoring the 1984-85 Final Four team — another vacated line in the NCAA record book — still hangs.)

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News

Blight Fall

In this week’s print edition, out this morning (hint, hint), Bianca Phillips, Hannah Sayle, and I take on the collateral damage of the foreclosure crisis — Memphis neighborhoods — and what’s being done to combat blight and deterioration.

Of course, not all of Memphis’ blighted properties are foreclosures. Many are investment properties long ignored by their owners and in need of some serious upkeep.

What I find the most alarming is the scale of Memphis’ blight. In discussing this story with friends and colleagues, most people I talked to said something like, I have a house like that on my block. Or around the corner. Or in my neighborhood.

The story focuses on several people’s attempts to fight blight: Attorney Steve Barlow’s efforts to sue owners of dilapidated property under the Tennessee Neighborhood Preservation Act; Brad Watkins’ “Blightwatch” videos on YouTube and his confrontation of Wells Fargo’s over back taxes they owe to the city and the county; and Tommy Wilson and his bomb the blight art project.

One of the things people have been very interested in — especially given how many of them have said they have blighted property near them — are the lawsuits.

I should note that you can’t just sue your next door neighbor for having a junky house. But if the property is vacant or renter-occupied and doesn’t meet code, then you could sue for the loss in value to your property or to force the property owners to fix whatever problem exists.

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GOP wins

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Politics Politics Beat Blog

Why Are These Men Smiling?

New Speaker-to-be John Boehner (right) with new congressman-to-be Alan Nunnelee during a joint appearance in DeSoto County

  • JB
  • New Speaker-to-be John Boehner (right) with new congressman-to-be Alan Nunnelee during a joint appearance in DeSoto County

Meet the new bosses. And, for better or for worse, they really aren’t the old bosses.

The new wave of Republican influence in Washington, Tennessee, and elsewhere is unlike previous political sea changes in the nation’s history. And note: we said “influence,” not “control,” because, until each of a series of tight battles for the almost evenly divided U.S. Senate is resolved, the exact dimensions of the changeover remain unknown.

But changeover it is. Nationally, Republicans gained control of the U.S. House by somewhere between 50 and 60 votes. In Tennessee, the state’s House contingent went from 5-4 Democratic to 7-2 Republican, with even arch Blue Dog Lincoln Davis in rural Middle Tennessee’s 4th District falling to a Republican challenger.

In Shelby County, there was no change to speak of. Challenged incumbents, whether Democratic or Republican, all kept their seats. And perhaps even the congressional victory of Democratic incumbent Steve Cohen in the 9th District (Memphis) owes more to local trends, which showed a strong GOP turnout throughout early voting and a bit of a compensating Democratic bump on Tuesday, Election Day.

Most of the outcomes were fully expected — specifically Republican Bill Haslam over Democrat Mike McWherter for the Tennessee governorship, Republican John Boozman over incumbent Democrat Blanche Lincoln for the U.S. Senate in Arkansas, the GOP’s Stephen Fincher over Democratic state Senator Roy Herron in the rural 8th congressional District of northwest Tennessee , and Alan Nunnelee of the GOP over Democratic incumbent Travis Childers in Mississippi’s 1st district.

All of these races were romps. But so were the victories of Democrat Cohen (over Republican Charlotte Bergmann) and Arkansas’s Democratic governor Mike Beebe over Republican challenger Jim Keet.

What these two cases, along with the relatively narrow loss of Democrat Chad Causey to Republican Rick Crawford in Arkansas’s 1st district, had in common was that these Democrats made much less of an effort (and in Cohen’s case no effort at all) to distance themselves from their party brand. The previously mentioned Democratic losers were conspicuous in their studied renunciations of traditional party loyalty.

Let us posit that you can’t sell Chevys by spouting the talking points of the Ford line, and let it go at that.

So the new Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives will be Ohio’s John Boehner — the same John Boehner who came through these parts little more than a week ago to campaign for Nunnelee (and for his own Speakership, for that matter). The same John Boehner whose “Pledge to America” was a pale and indistinct retread of GOP predecessor New Gingrich’s “Contract with America” in 1994, the last time the Republicans upset a Democratic apple cart to this extent.

But in that case the GOP was coming to congressional power for the first time in more than a generation, and it set about to dramatically change the rules, downsizing government and deregulating corporate power.

Most of that having been accomplished already, the new Republican regime won’t find that much to transform. Since President Obama maintains his veto power, along with strength in the Senate, it won’t be as easy for Boehner and company to repeal what they call “Obamacare.” (The other semantic target of this year’s GOP surge, Nancy Pelosi, will be gone from her Speakership after a pair of two-year terms.)

This inability of the victors to define their goals might well become as irksome and frustrating, both for themselves and for the electorate, as would be anybody’s attempt to demonstrate just what it was about the Democrats’ rule for the last two years that necessitated the mass congressional firings that just got carried out at the polls.

What kind of mess was there, in other words, that was quantitatively or qualitatively different from the one left behind by the Republicans in the final years of the George W. Bush presidency? And what was the rationale for returning to that particular failed status quo ante? Is it possible that Republicanism is now the country’s default political mode, to be returned to any time the Democrats flunk a chance, however brief, to bring about something new and successful?

In any case, where we are is where we are. But even in Tennessee, where massive redistricting is bound to occur as a result of the GOP’s post-census control of the shaping, just how different will the new configuration be? The Tennessee congressional ranks already will stand at 7-2, with Republicans in charge, and the two Democratic outposts in Memphis and Nashville will most likely endure for the next decade or so, regardless of whatever rough beasts take shape in Tennessee or in Washington over those years.

And, oh yes, consolidation: Can anyone be surprised at the lopsided defeat of the Metro Charter referendum — or at the reaction against the proposed merger by inner-city African Americans intent on maintaining their control of a truncated urban space? Or at the aversion to marrying up with the city on the part of county residents, so many of whom are where they are in order expressly to pursue as secure a divorce from Memphis as possible? ‘Nuff said.

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Politics Politics Beat Blog

Cohen, Haslam, Fincher: All Winners

Cohen takes his victory lap.

It turns out Charlotte Bergman couldn’t win. Not even close.

9th District congressman Steve Cohen retained his seat in the U.S. House of Representatives with a large victory over Bergman, who called Cohen to concede the race within an hour of polls closing.

“Seventy-plus percent is a landslide,” Cohen said in a speech to supporters, “And landslides are what we do.”

Cohen’s victory sends him back to a changed national landscape in Washington, as Republicans won enough seats to take control of the House by a margin of some 60 seats.

“If we lose tonight, and it’s looking like we will” I assure you you’re going to have an effective Congressman from the 9th district,” Cohen told his supporters soon after claiming victrory.

Bergman made an appearance at Bill Haslam’s local headquarters in east Memphis but did not give a formal speech
.


Other Races
Stephen Fincher picked up a seat for Republicans in the 8th district, defeating Roy Herron with 60 percent of the vote in a heavily financed campaign.

For the other big races, it was a night of landslides.

As expected, Republican Bill Haslam soundly defeated Democrat Mike McWherter in the governors race, with 65 percent of the vote to roughly 33 percent for McWherter. McWherter did prevail in shelby County, however, with 51 percent of the vote there.

Marsha Blackburn defeated Greg Rabidoux handily, with 72 percent of the vote in the race for the 7th Congressional seat.

Republican Brian Kelsey will get a chance to serve a full term as the state senator for district 31 after defeating Ivon Faulkner.

Ophelia Ford will retain her seat in the state senate district 29, defeating Robert Hill and Herman Sawyer.
In races for state House seat in Shelby County, some results were relatively close, but incumbents were able to hold on.

Democrats Jeanne Richardson and Mike Kernell retained their seats in seriously contested races. Incumbents Curry Todd, Lois DeBerry, Barbara Cooper, and Johnnie Turner won re-election over opposition handily. All except Republican Todd are Democrats.

The consolidation referendum narrowly passed in Memphis, 51 percent to 49 percent, while getting hammered in non-Memphis voting, 85 percent to 15 percent.

Memphis votes approved a pair of amendments — to repeal staggered-term requirements for city council members; and to allow city employees to reside within greater Shelby County.

C. Elise Dillingham and Jackson Baker contributed to this report.

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Intermission Impossible Theater

This could be epic

Hi-Tone_poster.jpg

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