
- twogroove.com
Serving as judge for the Sad Puppy Cake Contest is Flyer food writer Hannah Sayle, and she chose …
Serving as judge for the Sad Puppy Cake Contest is Flyer food writer Hannah Sayle, and she chose …
LaMarvin Ashley ATH 5-10 165 McComb, MS (McComb HS)
Reggis Ball LB 5-11 200 Stone Mountain, GA (Stephenson HS)
Ryan Byrd ATH 6-0 170 Greensburg, LA (St. Helena HS)
Nick Chartain* OL 6-5 320 New Orleans (Desire Street Academy/Independence CC)
Michael Davis LB 6-2 215 Columbus, GA (Carver HS)
Jordan Devey* OL 6-6 320 American Fork, UT (American Fork HS/Snow College)
Taylor Fallin OT 6-6 320 Bowie, MD (Bowie HS/Hargrave Military)
Zach Gholson* DL 6-3 250 Carlsbad, CA (La Costa Canyon HS/Palomar College)
Artaves Gibson RB 6-1 220 Memphis (Mitchell HS)
Monte Golden C/OL 6-2 301 Jacksonville, NC (Northside HS)
Kevin Green LB 6-1 205 Memphis (Wooddale HS)
Carl Harris RB 5-10 190 Dallas (Woodrow Wilson HS)
Charles Harris LB 6-2 215 Memphis (Whitehaven HS)
Domonique Harris QB 6-5 225 Southaven, MS (Southaven HS)
Bakari Hollier DB 5-9 195 Lafayette, LA (Acadiana HS)
Derek Howard WR 6-2 190 Boutte, LA (Hahnville HS)
Ricky Hunter DT 6-4 280 Loachapoka, AL (Loachapoka HS)
Jermaine Johnson WR 6-3 170 Houma, LA (Ellender HS)
Kenyata Johnson LB 6-2 220 Jackson, MS (Provine HS/Hinds CC)
Tyler Marzette OT 6-6 320 Birmingham (Huffman HS)
Bobby McCain DB 5-11 180 Oxford, AL (Oxford HS)
Tyriq Patrick WR 6-3 190 Philadelphia, MS (Philadelphia HS)
Donald Pennington DT 6-2 300 Amite, LA (Amite HS)
Joe Price RB 5-9 175 Madison, MS (Madison Central HS)
Terry Redden DT 6-2 285 Memphis (Whitehaven HS)
Taylor Reed QB 6-3 210 El Dorado, AR (El Dorado HS)
Robert Roquemore OT 6-6 310 Covington, GA (Newton HS)
Jamere Valentine* WR 6-2 210 Myrtle Beach, SC (Myrtle Beach HS/Butte College)
Perrance Ward* DB 6-0 205 West Point, MS (West Point HS/East Miss. CC)
* junior college transfer
Elderly LGBT people will have a chance to network with those who provide seniors services at the “Focus on LGBT Elders” forum on Thursday, February 3rd from 3 to 5 p.m. at the Memphis Gay & Lesbian Community Center (892 S. Cooper).
Also invited are representatives from companies that would like sensitivity training regarding service for LGBT elders or anyone interested in helping out with the MGLCC’s elder initiative.
For more information, email elders@mglcc.org.
I got a tip this morning that the Goodwill on Highland near the University of Memphis will become a “half-off” store – they’ll be marking everything down by 50% storewide.
A February blessing.
Heading into the backstretch of the School Systems Derby, it’s Undecided pulling even with Pickler Pony and Hart of Jones.
At least that’s how I see it. The more I read and hear, the less I know about this big space-eater of a story. Pollsters like to talk about which way the “undecideds” are leaning. I see “ayes” and “nays” leaning “undecided.”
Three weeks before early voting might begin in a Memphis referendum, Tennessee lieutenant governor Ron “Blountville Knows Best” Ramsey says not so fast. His arrogance could make merger opponents reconsider. Former mayor and superintendent Willie Herenton says it’s about time Memphis came around to an idea he has been pushing in one form or another for 17 years. Perhaps, but his association with it might not help. Memphis City Schools superintendent Kriner Cash says stay the course. Mayor A C Wharton says how about that Electrolux deal?
Have you noticed … how closing half-empty MCS schools went from an idea whose time has come to an idea nobody talks about any more?
Or that merger proponents continue to talk about a Shelby County special school district as if it could be financially independent of Memphis even though that is very unlikely, given that Memphians are a majority on the Shelby County Commission?
Or that 12 public schools in Shelby County are in no-man’s-land, also known as the Memphis annexation area, and nobody knows if or when they will shift from SCS to MCS? If these 12 schools and their 7,656 black students are absorbed by MCS, then SCS will lose 40 percent of its black enrollment.
Or that Cash recently tossed out some numbers from an inner-city school that look as fishy as Derrick Rose’s SAT score?
As for Ramsey and Herenton: Ramsey knows nothing about MCS; Herenton has forgotten more about MCS than most of the rest of us will ever know. At Hollywood Community Center last week, he made a pitch for MCS charter surrender and reminded everyone that in 1993 he suggested that the whole city surrender its charter because, “I did not want my city of Memphis to become another Detroit.” Over the next 15 years, Herenton pitched consolidation in one form or another at least a half-dozen times.
No urgency, no action. Ideals are not the same as outcomes. The most complete analysis of possible outcomes is a 2008 University of Memphis study. There are two big “ifs.” One is how much territory and how many of those 12 schools in Southwind, Cordova, and northwest Shelby County Memphis takes over. The other big “if” is how schools are funded and whose taxes go up and down. State funding is a given. So is county funding, under current law. Special school districts like Memphis and, perhaps, Shelby County can impose an additional property tax.
In the worst case for Memphis and best case for the suburbs, county government would stop using property taxes to fund schools, and each district would fund itself. In that case, the imbalance of Memphis and suburban taxes would get even more out of whack.
Finally, there is the story of the remarkable improvements in achievement scores and the graduation rate at Booker T. Washington High School. Cash said BTW achieved a graduation rate of 82 percent and outperformed Central High School in reading and math and is “within a couple points of White Station High School.”
The inner-city school lost enrollment when the neighboring housing projects were torn down. By 2005, it had fewer than 700 students and a graduation rate of 52 percent. From 2005 to 2009, its graduation rate ranged from 52 percent to 60 percent. But in 2010, the rate soared 22 points. No other city high school has improved so much so fast. Statistical outliers like that are usually due to a change of population. BTW went from 629 students in 2009 to 549 last year. We can assume it wasn’t the top students who left.
On the Tennessee Report Card, BTW does outscore Central in the percentage of students achieving proficiency in math, 52 percent to 46 percent. But Central and White Station, optional schools with more than 1,700 students each, score much higher in every other category. White Station has an average ACT composite score of 23 compared to 14 for BTW.
My point is not to beat up on BTW. Comparing it to an optional school is unfair. My point is that dramatic success stories must be verifiable and replicable. This one isn’t.
This Friday and Saturday under the big top—well, actually at TheatreWorks— Memphis’s own International Circus star Larry Clark, will perform a one man show featuring “Dangerous Circus Skills, Amazing Magic, Juggling Dexterity, Comedy, Theatrics, and other feats of Larry-ness!”
Clark got his start touring with the Grunge-era irregulars in the Jim Rose Circus Sideshow. Eventually he became the host clown for Ringling Bros. Here’s a video of one gentleman juggler telling his unique, touching story. And driving a nail up his nose with a hammer.
Concerns over the Pyramid’s structural strength in case of seismic activity have the city and Bass Pro officials rethinking the Pinch development deal.
John Branston reports.
The chances of an earthquake destroying the Pyramid in the next 100 years are slight. The chances of a demolition in the next few years are a lot better.
Bass Pro Shops and Robert Lipscomb seem to be resigning themselves to what a lot of people have been saying for years: the Pyramid just doesn’t work for a tenant that wants to put in a giant retail store and a hotel and get some use out of the observation deck and all that unused space in the lower level.
Seismic danger, “dueling building codes” and the bond market are getting blamed for the hit, but come on, this merry-go-round has been turning for six years. The Pyramid has become a symbol of failure, and apathy. FedEx Forum made it obsolete. The first question a visitor asks is “what’s that?” and then you have to tell them, “Yes, but, it’s empty.”
“If it costs too much to stabilize it then you have to decide if it is usable for anything,” Lipscomb said Tuesday.
It might be worth more as salvage material and bare ground. Then Bass Pro, if it is really committed to Memphis, could build what it wants instead of adapting to what is there. If the company wants a downtown presence at some other location, then Peabody Place has some space.
The status report that the city handed out Tuesday says:
“The Pyramid and Pinch District have received the most attention, but the City of Memphis redevelopment vision is much bolder. It is not about the addition of a retail magnet and a distinctive retail district, but more precisely, it is about building a thriving, active Convention Center District.
“The absence of this kind of district has always put Memphis at a competitive disadvantage in our ambitions for a successful convention center.”
The city is going ahead with its plans to acquire property in the Pinch District and the Lone Star property between the interstate ramps.
If the Pyramid is shaky, then the ancient convention center is shakier. What the city seems to be suggesting is something on the order of the new convention centers in Nashville and Jackson, Mississippi. A hugely expensive project at a time when the municipal bond market, according to daily news reports, is comparable to the stock market or the real estate market two years ago, especially for issues that are not backed by taxing authority.
The groundbreaking ceremony for the Pyramid was called The Big Dig. The odds are getting better that we will see a Big Demo before we see a Bass Pro downtown.
“Bear in mind, the state always holds the nuclear option, if you will.”
That statement, made by Memphis Mayor A C Wharton near the beginning of a Tuesday afternoon meeting of local officials at City Hall, underscored the heightened degree of difficulty now confronting Memphians committed to next month’s scheduled citywide referendum on the transfer of authority for Memphis City Schools to Shelby County Schools.
The meeting, to which members of the City Council, the County Commission, the two local school boards were invited, had been called on behalf of the Shelby County legislative delegation by state Senator Beverly Marrero, the Midtown Democrat who is this year’s delegation chair.
Scheduled earlier in contemplation of committee action on two anti-merger bills slated for Capitol Hill on Wednesday, the meeting would take place in the immediate wake of a morning press conference in Nashville by Governor Bill Haslam, who, along with the state’s acting Commissioner of Education, Patrick Smith, had unexpectedly and quite directly become participants in the ongoing drama.
Though Haslam acknowledged the validity of the March 8 referendum, Smith had dropped the other shoe, an implied threat to intervene if satisfactory transition plans — one involving the status of teachers involved in the proposed merger, the other concerning a host of general details concerning the transfer of authority from MCS to SCS — were not submitted to his office by deadlines of February 16 and March 1, respectively.
Wharton told the attendees at Tuesday’s meeting that retribution cold come in the form of withheld state BEP (Basic Education Program) funding, but he said he was “convinced that we can work out a plan that’s acceptable to the state of Tennessee.”
That was in answer to a question from state Senator Jim Kyle, the Memphian who heads up the Senate Democratic caucus. Kyle had asked if there were a need for any further legislation to shore up the referendum process.
That Kyle, Marrero, and various other Democratic members of the delegation were the only legislators in attendance was a statement in itself. As council chairman Myron Lowery said, “It’s extremely significant who is here today….We do not have a full complement of our delegation. We are missing important people who will be presenting legislation in Nashville tomorrow.” That, Lowery said, was “a signal to the public about what’s being planned and what’s not being shared.”
County Commission chairman Sidney Chism, another Democrat, seconded Lowery’s concerns that, as the Council chairman had put it, the legislature’s Republicans — notably the absent Mark Norris of Collierville, Senate majority leader and the author of one bill to thwart the March 8 referendum — meant to “change the rules in the middle of the game.”
Chism concurred, saying, “We can’t stop it….They can pass anything they want…They want to dictate to the people.”
At that point, County Commission member Mike Carpenter, who functioned as something of a token Republican at the City Hall meeting, rose to make the case that issues involving the March 8 referendum and the merger were not partisan ones, a position that was endorsed in short order by state Representatives Larry Miller and G.A. Hardaway and by Council member Janis Fulllilove.
State Representative Johnnie Turner would make the same point, but she returned to Chism’s fatalism in speaking of Norris’ bill, SB 25, which professes to supersede the results of the referendum, calling for an alternate, lengthy process that would culminate in a joint vote of city and county residents down the line.
“It’s going to pass. We know that it is, so what can we do as a group?” she asked.
Attention soon turned to a letter Smith had sent to MSC superintendent Kriner Cash and SCS superintendent John Aitken, in which the acting commissioner had spelled out his terms.
Several attendees expressed confusion as to their meaning, and state Representative Jeanne Richardson responded to a statement by Wharton, meant to be reassuring, in which the mayor had professed optimism about complying with Smith’s conditions and continuing with the referendum process, regardless of potential obstacles that could “mess it up.”
“Respectfully, I would suggest to you that the purpose of this letter was to ‘mess it up’” Richardson told the mayor. She said Smith’s deadlines were so abrupt as to make compliance “impossible.”
After some more back-and-forthing, state Representative Joe Towns announced that he had Smith on the line, and the Commissioner’s voice was patched through to the public audio system of City Hall.
As was the case with an early phone call from City Council member Shea Flinn, Smith’s voice on the call was virtually unintelligible in the cavernous chamber, and, though the commissioner acknowledged that the second of his two deadlines, the March 1 one involving general transition, was not supported by specific statutes, he stood by both it and, especially, the first one of February 15 regarding teachers.
If Smith’s explicit meaning remained unclear, his tone was conciliatory and seemed to imply flexibility — a fact which gave Senator Kyle the opportunity to say, toward the end of the meeting that not all of the legislature’s Republicans would be of one mind regarding the Memphis situation and that the city’s point of view and that of MCS would be given a fair shake.
Briefly reviewed the fast-track status extended to Norris’ bill by the Republican leadership, Kyle said the bill, likely to get floor votes in both Senate and House on Monday, “may be amended, may be changed.”
He concluded, “By Friday, we’re going to know what we’re going to voting on Monday in the legislature at 5 o’clock. We need to know whether you’re for that bill or not.” Though isolated responses of “no” were heard in the chamber, Kyle said, “There may be a bill we can support.”
And, after Kyle’s reiteration that representatives of the city and county and the two school boards shold make their wishes known, the meeting shortly came to an end.
Get updates all day long on Larry Porter’s second recruiting class at twitter.com/TigersMedia.
The Highland Hundred hosts a Signing Day bash at The Rendezvous at 4 p.m., with Coach Porter expected to appear at 5 p.m.
Quickest way to turn a sagging program around is in the trenches. Check out the vitals on these four signees, all offensive linemen:
* Tyler Marzette: 6’6″, 320 lbs.
* Nicholas Chartain: 6’5″, 320 lbs.
* Robert Roquemore: 6’5″, 300 lbs.
* Taylor Fallin: 6’6″, 320 lbs.