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Protestors Stage One Last Hurrah Against Planned CVS

Foes of a CVS pharmacy to rise at the intersection of Union and Cooper were in full battle array this morning, holding signs and asking for honks of support as they mourned the impending demolition of Union Avenue United Methodist Church.

The group’s leader, Gordon Alexander of the Midtown Action Coalition, conceded that the protest was symbolic. Since the demonstration was already scheduled, he and others decided to proceed even though hope of preserving the historic building is all but lost.

Gordon Alexander led a protest Saturday morning against CVS for its coming demolition of Union Avenue United Methodist Church.

  • Gordon Alexander led a protest Saturday morning against CVS for its coming demolition of Union Avenue United Methodist Church.

“We have no alternative,” he said. “They’re going to tear the church down.”

Friday, Chancellor Arnold Goldin upheld an earlier decision that essentially clears the way for the historic structure to be razed. It will be replaced by what protestors consider a bland, suburban-style retail pharmacy that doesn’t fit with the neighborhood’s quirky bohemian character.

Once built, the new CVS will sit directly across from a large Ike’s Pharmacy and variety store. CVS bought the building for more than $2 million from St. Luke’s UMC — almost $1 million more than a Presbyterian church would have paid to reuse the building as a church, Alexander said.

He called CVS’ rebuff of about 1,500 signatures against its acquisition of the building “stubborn” and “arrogant.”

“They basically bought their way in,” he said.

Although company representatives have argued their new store will create jobs and fit as much as possible with the neighborhood’s overall look, the protestors weren’t buying it. And if Alexander has his way, plenty of people in Midtown won’t be buying it either. He fully envisions an all-out boycott.

“Lots of people won’t shop at CVS,” he said.

The demolition could proceed in a few weeks.

Protestors gave one last-ditch effort to save the historic church at Union and Cooper, even though they acknowledged their gathering was symbolic only.

  • Protestors gave one last-ditch effort to save the historic church at Union and Cooper, even though they acknowledged their gathering was symbolic only.
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international polar bear day

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Is the Schools Merger Worth It?

John Branston has some thoughts on the pros and cons of the proposed merger of Memphis and Shelby County schools.

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Beyond the Arc Sports

Grizzlies-Kings Ticket Contest

Shane Battier’s first return game for the Grizzlies, Saturday night against the Sacramento Kings, is not being televised. But we can give you a chance to welcome Battier back to town up close. We’ve got two lower-level tickets for Saturday night’s game to give away. Go to this link to enter the contest. The drawing is at 4 p.m. today.

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Beyond the Arc Sports

The Post-Deadline Playoff Race

In the wake of a chaotic trade deadline day in the NBA, let’s look at the crowded race for the bottom four seeds in the Western Conference playoffs. With the top four seeds — San Antonio, Dallas, L.A. Lakers, Oklahoma City, in some order — seemingly locked up and with three teams — L.A. Clippers, Sacramento, Minnesota — too far back, there seem to be eight teams competing for four spots. How it might shake out:

5. New Orleans Hornets 34-25 14 games back
What They Did: Traded Marcus Thornton to the Sacramento Kings for Carl Landry.
What it Means: They essentially exchanged a high-level reserve guard for a high-level reserve forward. Given the injury concerns with starting center Emeka Okafor and the lack of quality frontcourt depth, this was probably a good deal for the Hornets. New Orleans has had a very erratic season so far and are hard to predict, but as long as Chris Paul stays healthy the rest of the way, they might be hard to catch. I like New Orleans for the 6th seed. Home/Road splits remaining: 12/11.

6. Denver Nuggets 34-25 14 games back
What They Did: They traded Carmelo Anthony and Chauncey Billups to the New York Knicks for half the Knicks roster. You probably heard about it.
What it Means: The Nuggets have looked great in two games since the Melo trade, notching double-digit wins against both the Grizzlies and Boston Celtics. But do we need to put an asterisk next to those games? For starters, both were in Denver, where the Nuggets have been unusually good, with the league’s fourth best home record (24-7). The Grizzlies game felt like a “Home Alone” game, with the Nuggets relieved to finally be past the on-going Melodrama and eager to prove they could win without him. The Boston game came against a Celtics team emotionally reeling from the unexpected trade of center Kendrick Perkins just hours earlier. The Nuggets might look a little different once things settle down, and a slightly road-heavy schedule won’t help. But this is still a deep, talented, well-coached team. I’m guessing the race between Denver and Memphis could come down to tiebreaker the Nuggets won by taking the season-series. So, I like Denver for 7th. Home/Road splits remaining: 10/13

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Art Exhibit M

Climbing Everest

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When you head out to Main Street for tonight’s Trolley Night, be sure to stop by the Memphis College of Art Graduate School to witness the first woman to climb Mount Everest without ever leaving Memphis. Julie Smetana, an MFA student at MCA, will climb the 6 flights of stairs at the front of the building 498 times for 25 hours until she reaches the height of the summit of Everest.

“I calculated out the elevation of Everest and how many laps it would take for me to get to that elevation,” she says. “People climb stairs every day but not for 25 straight hours. All of the work that I do I try to make a little ridiculous and absurd and seemingly pointless, but it’s really about the conscious decision I make to do that work and spend the time doing it.”

Smetana began her work at MCA as a student of painting and sculpture, but has become increasingly involved in performance and video art, which will make up the bulk of her thesis. As for the endurance-based performance, the 25 year-old artist says she was happy to combine her art with her passion for endurance sports. “I’ve run triathlons and last year I did an Iron Man,” says Smetana. “I was going to make it kind of a private event and use the back stairwell in our new building, but when you run an Iron Man or a marathon, people can watch you and people can see you. So, that’s why I decided to use the front stairwell in our building which has giant windows.”

She’s filming the ascent, which she calls “a mundane, repetitive, sometimes horrific act.”

“I’m going to try to go straight through without stopping,” says Smetana. (She will eat and drink while climbing, but plans on taking the occasional bathroom break.)

I ask if anyone will join her. “I’ve been thinking about that. I hope so,” she says. “It would be kind of funny and cool. It would probably distract me a little bit.”

The performance begins tonight at 6 p.m. and will continue until tomorrow evening.

MCA Nesin Graduate School, 477 South Main

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A Taste of Germany in Collierville

Home-style German cooking in Collierville and Sweetgrass’ Ryan Trimm are covered in this week’s Flyer food column.

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Sing All Kinds We Recommend

Herrington and Akers on the Oscars (2011), Part 5: Director and Picture

Ladies and gentlemen, please return your tray tables to their upright and locked positions. We’re approaching our landing for this week of Academy Award revelry. We didn’t all survive the perilous journey (namely, Melissa Leo), but those who did can say they’re stronger for it. This week Flyer writers Chris Herrington and Greg Akers have examined the Screenplays, Animated/Editing/Cinematography, the Supporting Players, and the Lead Players. Today the experts turn their attention to the biggest categories, Best Director and Best Picture.

Best Director
Nominees: Darren Aronofsky (Black Swan), Ethan & Joel Coen (True Grit), David Fincher (The Social Network), Tom Hooper (The King’s Speech), David O. Russell (The Fighter)

GREG AKERS: Hooper won the Directors Guild Award, which makes him a serious contender. But I’m putting my money on David Fincher and his brilliant work on The Social Network. Remember when the idea of him making a Facebook movie with Justin Timberlake was at the least bizarre and sounded like a terrible idea? Vindication.

Should Win: All of these directors deserve to be nominated except for Hooper, whose movie is more about the performance than the visuals. David Fincher should win, hands down, but I respect the work done by Aronofsky, Russell, and the Coens. They’ve all done work I like more, though. (So has Fincher, but that’s another matter.)

The odds-on favorite for Best Picture: The King’s Speech

Got Robbed: This is easy. Perplexingly, Christopher Nolan has never been nominated for a Best Director Oscar. I’ll get into Inception again when we discuss Best Picture, but I think even the most confused or antipathetic of Inception‘s detractors have to give props to the significant technical achievement that the movie is. In light of his filmography — particularly The Dark Knight and MementoInception is clearly Nolan’s vision. It’s the best movie yet by one of the best directors there is. (And I feel no need to qualify that statement.)

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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

On the Scene at the Butchering Demo: Just the (Pig) Facts

Andrew Ticer and Michael Hudman look on as David Newman leads the demonstration.

  • Andrew Ticer and Michael Hudman look on as David Newman leads the demonstration.

Last Saturday, on a balmy and beautiful afternoon, I watched David Newman butcher half a pig on the deck of Andrew Michael Italian Kitchen.

I thought it would be, well, weird. And it had its moments. Hand saw. A pig foot falling off the table. Peeling off a layer of fat. But frankly, I found the experience informative and exhilarating.

Newman’s affable personality helped. He works as a meat science professor at North Dakota State University, but I think he has a future as the rock star of home butchering. Newman can explain how to butcher a carcass with charisma and science. Plus he’s good looking. I’d say, move over, Alton Brown.

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Beyond the Arc Sports

Breaking Down the Battier/Thabeet Trade

The Grizzlies made only one trade yesterday, but it was a doozy. And even the deal they did make was obscured by the one they tried and failed to make.

Call it a Comeback: Shane Battier back in Beale Street Blue.

  • Call it a Comeback: Shane Battier back in Beale Street Blue.

There’s way too much to sort through for one post, so I’m breaking up trade-deadline-related material into probably four posts. This one will look exclusively at the reasons for and ramifications of the Shane Battier/Hasheem Thabeet trade. Over the next few days I hope to come back with stuff on: 1. The magnitude of the Thabeet mistake, what was or wasn’t learned from it, and the chances of him coming back to haunt the team. 2. The failed Mayo-to-Indiana deal, what happened and what it means now. 3. How the Western Conference playoff race looks in the wake of a massive day of NBA dealing.

None of those posts — I hope — will be nearly as long as this one.

But I will offer a quick take on the Mayo non-deal first: Don’t believe stuff suggesting that the Grizzlies decided to back out of that trade. Michael Heisley himself has made clear that the team tried to make the deal but that it just didn’t come together in time for the deadline.

In addition to a desire by some in the organization to trade Mayo for immediate on-court purposes, I think much of the deal was also financially motivated. In the short term, it would have mitigated the extra money the team took on in the Battier deal. And heading into the summer, the team hopes to resign Zach Randolph, Marc Gasol, and Battier and has decent cheap players (Tony Allen, Sam Young, and Xavier Henry) in place at the two guard. I think they wanted to move off Mayo’s money in order to free up more room for Randolph/Gasol/Battier.

The Pacers deal, while nowhere close to good value for Mayo, would have done three things: Freed up cash now and this summer, given them a better back-up center (Josh McRoberts) to replace Thabeet the rest of this season, and given them a first-round pick as the spoonful of sugar to help the medicine go down. I wouldn’t have liked the deal at all, but I understand it.

And, with that, on to the main event:

The Deal: The Grizzlies trade Hasheem Thabeet, DeMarre Carroll, and a lottery-protected future first-round pick to the Houston Rockets for Shane Battier and Ish Smith.