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Beyond the Arc Sports

Game 5: Grizzlies 92, Clippers 80 — The Return of What Works.

The Grizzlies got back to what works in a must-win Game 5: Feeding the beasts.

  • LARRY KUZNIEWSKI
  • The Grizzlies got back to what works in a must-win Game 5: Feeding the beasts.

The roar that went through FedExForum when Zach Randolph walked to the bench late in the first quarter was one of relief as much as excitement. Facing elimination on their home floor in the fifth game of this first-round series with the Los Angeles Clippers, the Grizzlies had spent the better part of a week in the wilderness. The team’s biggest offensive advantage against the Clippers and one of the twin pillars of the team’s identity — the two-man post attack of Randolph and running buddy Marc Gasol — had been mysteriously missing.

But when Randolph took his first breather the Grizzlies led 35-22 and he and Gasol had combined for 27 points on 12-14 shooting. This was a return to the inside game more ferocious than any reasonable fan’s wildest hopes. They attacked Clippers star Blake Griffin — a dynamic scorer but mediocre defender — relentlessly, happily feeding whichever post scorer Griffin guarded. As much as the upcoming Van Halen concert being advertised around the arena, this was a reunion show, and mixed in with the palpable relief in the building was a mix of gratitude (“We missed you guys so much!”) and frustration (“Why did it have to come to this?”).

That first quarter was a thrilling display of offensive execution — eight of the post duo’s 12 made field goals were either assisted or off offensive rebounds; this was not an iso show — matched by staunch defense, especially from Tony Allen and Gasol on the Clippers’ stars, Chris Paul and Griffin, respectively.

The first quarter was reminiscent of the series-opening explosion early in Game 1. And, troublingly, so was the rest of the game.

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News

Where’s White Station High School?

Surprisingly, Memphis’ White Station High School didn’t make the top ten list in U.S. News‘ ranking of Tennessee high schools. John Branston looks into the numbers.

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News News Blog

Funds Being Donated To Help Develop Urban Garden

More than $3,000 is being donated Thursday toward developing an urban garden this fall in one of the city’s food-insecure communities.

The money will be donated at a ceremony hosted by Brister Street Productions, a concert booking and video production company, on May 10th at 2 p.m. at the Levitt Shell in Overton Park.

The funds were raised during the second annual Brister Street Music Festival, which took place on the last weekend in April. The fest featured a diverse lineup of bands that included jam, bluegrass, reggae, and Latin.

“We decided to make it a little more formal than, ‘Hey, here’s your money,’” said Jack Simon, founder of Brister Street Productions. “It actually coincides with the one-year anniversary of the first Brister Fest. I thought that it was appropriate to donate the money, say a few words, and give thanks to everyone involved.”

GrowMemphis — a nonprofit dedicated to building gardens in urban communities to increase access to fresh and healthy local food — will be the recipient of the donation.

“We’re helping give people access to food [and] creating a more sustainable city,” Simon said. “There’s so many health benefits to urban gardening.”

Chris Peterson, executive director of Grow Memphis, said it normally costs the organization $2,500 to $3,000 to fund a new garden.

“The amount that they’ve given us is perfect,” Peterson said. “It’s really great that the funding for the community garden is coming straight from the community rather than from a grant or something like that.”

Peterson said the funding would go toward purchasing things such as raised garden beds, soil, composts, watering systems, and other tools and infrastructure necessary for the garden to be sustainable in the long-term.

There will be brief speeches and music provided by Agori Tribe at the ceremony as well.

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News News Blog

Adam Mayes Added to FBI’s Top Ten “Most Wanted”

Adam Mayes

  • Adam Mayes

At 2 p.m. today, the Federal Bureau of Investigation is expected to announce that 35-year-old Adam Mayes, wanted on first-degree murder charges in the deaths of Hardeman County woman Jo Ann Bain and her 14-year-old daughter Adrian, has been added to their list of top ten “most wanted” fugitives.

The bodies of the two women were discovered last week buried in Mayes’ mother’s backyard in Guntown, Mississippi. Jo Ann Bain and her three daughters were reported missing on April 27th, and her two youngest daughters have not been located.

Mayes was a friend of Bain’s husband, and he’d spent the night at their house on April 26th to help the family pack for a planned move to Arizona. Mayes’ wife and mother were arrested yesterday in connection with the murders. His wife, Teresa, has been charged with two counts of first degree murder and two counts of especially aggravated kidnapping. His mother, Mary, has been charged with four counts of conspiracy to commit especially aggravated kidnapping.

The FBI and the U.S. Marshal’s Service are offering a $50,000 reward for information leading to the arrest of Mayes and to the missing girls. Mayes is a white man with blue eyes and brown hair that has recently been cropped short. He’s 6-foot-3 and weighs 175 pounds.

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Style Sessions We Recommend

Birchbox — For Men?

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Some of you have probably heard of Birchbox, a monthly subscription service that delivers sizable samples of beauty products right to your door. Not just any samples: For $10 a month, Birchbox tailors a box of deluxe samples to your particular beauty needs.

So far, it’s been a service targeted at women. Women who, like me, delight in all the little sample bottles and enjoy a child-like sense of glee at opening a surprise package every month.

But dudes like surprises, too! And now they can join in the fun: Birchbox Man is here and it caters to the manicured man you’ve always wished you could be.

For those of you unfamiliar with Birchbox, here’s a little peek at what I received in my April box. It had an Earth Week theme, and most of the products were natural and/or organic.

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You’re looking at trial-size samples of Befine moisturizer and cleanser, Zoya nail polish, Taylor Swift’s Wonderstruck fragrance, tea bags from Le Palais des Thés, and the Amika hair mask.

Of course, the man’s version would look a little different (and for some reason costs $20 a month instead of $10?) Essentially, you’ll get “grooming” products instead of beauty products, but the other services, like rewards points and tips on how to use your Birchbox samples will be the same. Go get your groom on.

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Opinion

Where’s White Station High School in “Best” Rankings?

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College prep public high schools in communities with universities do the best job of preparing students for college.

Not too surprising to see this finding in the latest U.S. News ranking of the “best public high schools” in Tennessee. And it is not all that surprising that perennial “best” Memphis high school, White Station, is not in the Top Ten. The reason is that White Station is an optional school with a de facto college-prep school within a school. For the top academic students, including 22 National Merit Semifinalists in 2011, there are Advanced Placement and Honors courses that are not taken by the majority of students.

No Memphis school made the Top Ten. Two Shelby County high schools — Houston and Collierville — did make the list.

The top two schools in the state, according to this particular ranking, are academic magnet schools in Nashville. Each one has about 1,000 students. The rest of the Top Ten are in Knoxville, Johnson City or near Nashville — all communities with close college connections. The only schools that do not seem to fit the mold are in Kingsport, where 40 percent of seniors were deemed “not proficient” in math, and Oak Ridge, where 50 percent were not proficient in math.

I cross referenced the Top Ten with their average composite ACT scores on the Tennessee Report Card. The ACT, of course, is the standard college entrance exam in Tennessee. As I expected, the scores were in the 23-27 range, well above the Tennessee average of 19. The University of Tennessee-Knoxville, by the way, boasts that its 2011 freshman class had an average ACT of 26.7. Houston, Collierville, and White Station each had a score of 23 and a fraction.

The way to achieve a high overall score is not so much to have, say, 22 students who make a 33-36 as it is to not factor in students who make a score in the teens. That’s the “secret” of success to academic magnet schools. The only all-optional school by academics in Memphis is John P. Freeman.

Here is a description of the admissions policy for top-ranked Hume Fogg Academic Magnet school in Nashville as posted on its website: “The 848 students attending Hume-Fogg were selected county-wide from students with total reading and mathematics stanine scores each averaging 7 or above and an academic grade point average of at least 85 (B) with no failing grades. Sixty-six percent of students who apply as eighth graders are admitted to the school. Hume-Fogg students come from diverse cultural, economic, and ethnic backgrounds. Students represent 39 of 45 zip code areas in the Metropolitan area. Hume-Fogg has 44 faculty members; of these, 39 hold an advanced degree.”

And here is the admissions policy for the “second best” school, Martin Luther King Academic Magnet School: “Students normally enter MLK at grades 7 and 9, but there are occasional exceptions. They must meet academic eligibility requirements before being selected by lottery. Total reading and total mathematics stanine scores must average 7 or above, and their academic grade-point average must be at least 85 (B) with no failing grades. The MLK student is representative of the top 10-15 percent of students in the Metropolitan-Nashville Public Schools.”

The criteria that U.S. News and World Report used are weighted toward college readiness as measured by the percentage of students who took and passed Advanced Placement exams. There is no all-optional college prep high school in Memphis. Houston and Collierville have a higher percentage of graduates who go to college than White Station.

But that does not mean White Station doesn’t offer rigorous college prep courses to a minority of its students, as evidenced by its having the most National Merit Semifinalists of any public or private high school in Shelby County. In the minds of those students and their parents, at least, White Station is one of the best high schools in Tennessee, period.

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Beyond the Arc Sports

Grizzlies-Clippers Game 5 Preview

The biggest concern tonight as the Grizzlies return home for an elimination Game 5 might be the general mood — on the court and in the stands. I’m concerned that complaints about scapegoating and various attempts to assign specific blame for team failings might suggest cracks in the team focus and chemistry. I also worry if the fans will really bring the heat tonight. Have a great couple of seasons erased the fickleness bred from the many bad seasons that have preceded it? Is the fan base that has sold out eight straight playoff games for real now or just along for the ride when times are good? Tonight will provide some answers on both of these subjects.

As for on-court specifics, here are five series factors I’ve been thinking about:

1. Two Stars Are Better Than None: The biggest difference between the Clippers and the Grizzlies? The Grizzlies worry about which player is going to take the big shot. The fans argue about it. It’s a hotly contested issue. The Clippers? They don’t really care who takes the big shot. They worry about getting the best shot. In Game 4, Chris Paul took over in the extra period with his own scoring, but that’s not always the case. He’s arguably the best crunch-time operator in basketball and every possession will start in his hands, but they don’t always end there. It might be a Nick Young open in the corner. It might be Blake Griffin or even Reggie Evans under the basket. Paul will get the ball to whoever has the best shot. It’s the way basketball is supposed to be played but rarely is when things get tight.

And yet, the Clippers execute this way with the luxury of one true superstar and another potentially emerging one.

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Opinion

True Grit: Detroit

“You’re the only person I know who takes a weekend vacation to Detroit,” a friend said to me last week before I boarded a Delta jet for an 80-minute, hub-to-hub flight to Motown for $420.

Detroit and Memphis have a lot in common — populations around 700,000, white flight, urban blight, the music of Motown and Stax, the riots of the late 1960s, recent federal investigations of corruption, popular mayors trying to clean up the mess, and a belief in the magical power of the words “grit” and “aerotropolis.” Detroit’s loss of population and auto industry jobs has been Tennessee’s gain, even though Memphis missed the party. If you Google “Detroit and Memphis and worst cities,” you get 278,000 results.

Detroit is a historical novel that I’ve been reading for 50 years. I’m from Michigan and hadn’t seen Detroit in decades, even though I still follow the pro teams, writers like Mitch Albom and Elmore Leonard, and The Detroit News and Detroit Free Press. The hook was a new exhibit called “Driving America” at the Henry Ford Museum in Dearborn and a Ford Rouge Factory Tour. The package price was $24. Getting around downtown Detroit on foot isn’t that hard and it’s cheap. The Tigers were in town. All that and Coney Island hot dogs with chili made from cow hearts. Such a deal.

Besides, reality tours are growing in popularity. People pay good money to take a boat from Fisherman’s Wharf to Alcatraz. There are slum-dog tours in India and guided tours of the state prison in Jackson, Michigan. The media bombard us with the word “reality.” In Memphis, Jimmy Ogle has found a niche as a tour guide taking people to the Harahan Bridge, underground bayous, and downtown alleys.

“When I did the walk across the bridge, 146 people showed up,” Ogle said. “And I had 85 people for my alley tour that twists and turns 17 blocks and lasted three hours. It’s not the most scenic view, but you get the real history and fabric of the city.”

Exactly. In Detroit, I walked from a friend’s office in a specialty food warehouse in the Eastern Market to Zeff’s Coney Island Hot Dogs, then hoofed it a couple of miles past vacant lots and abandoned high-rise housing projects to the Music Hall, Comerica Park (home of the Tigers), and Ford Field (home of the Lions). A sign between them marked a long-gone black neighborhood called Paradise Valley. The African-American population of Detroit increased from 5,000 in 1910 to 300,000 in 1950, thanks to the Great Migration and war production, swelling the population of Detroit to 1.8 million. Mississippi and Memphis sent their share.

General Motors now occupies the towering glass-enclosed Renaissance Center on the river that Henry Ford II envisioned in the 1970s as the savior for downtown after the 1967 riot. It was doomed by cars, crime, and suburban flight. The fourth generation of the Ford family has taken up the torch. “Driving America” and the tour of “the Rouge” blew me away. Democracy’s arsenal during World War II is an industrial complex that stretches as far as the eye can see from the third-floor observation room. The tours do not airbrush the facts. The Edsel and the Corvair get equal space with the Mustang and Kemmons Wilson’s early Holiday Inn. There’s documentary footage of labor leader Walter Reuther getting beaten up by Ford’s thugs in 1937 and of Detroit’s failure to meet the Japanese challenge that would eventually put Nissan’s North American headquarters and an assembly plant in Middle Tennessee.

My companion worked in the car factories in Dearborn and Willow Run after college in 1972 and 1973. He joined the United Auto Workers and worked seven days a week, 10 hours a day, for seven straight weeks one summer. His earnings paid for his first year of law school, just as Michigan’s middle-class prosperity made it possible for me to go to college for $500 a year in tuition. The men and women putting together the F-150 trucks in the final assembly plant glanced up at us now and then through the glass ceiling, as robotic arms lifted cabs on to chassis. Everyone ought to see this and punch a time clock some time in their life.

Skylines look best across a body of water such as the Mississippi River or the surprisingly clear Detroit River, which is connected to Lake Huron. Up close, the abandoned buildings stand out like bad teeth. Reality tours. That’s the ticket.

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Politics Politics Beat Blog

Hart Arrest, New Norris Bill Highlight TPC Quandary

Tommy Hart during TPC deliberations

  • JB
  • Tommy Hart during TPC deliberations

The work of the Transition Planning Commission, going forward, is bound to be affected somewhat by the astonishing news last Friday that TPC member Tommy Hart, a former Shelby County Commissioner, had been arrested on charges of embezzling thousands of dollars of prize money contributed by bowlers competing in a tournament at a Southaven bowling establishment owned by Hart.

As a member of the TPC’s Educational Policy and Logistics Committee, Hart had been vocal in debate on the several key issues discussed at the TPC’s meeting of Thursday, May 3, just the day before. In general, Colliervillian Hart had served as one of the TPC’s spokespersons for a middle way and had been a mediating force between urban and suburban factions on the Commission.
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There was a turning point, some weeks back, when the TPC engaged in a spirited discussion on whether (and to what extent) the TPC’s calculations on merger of Memphis City Schools and Shelby County Schools should take into account or even facilitate the plans of six suburban municipalities to extract themselves from the ongoing merger.

As much as anyone else, it was Hart who had shifted the focus of the group back to planning for a full merger involving the 150,000-odd students now enrolled in MCS and SCS. While acknowledging his suburban roots, he declared, “I’m wearing my TPC hat here,” and, in private conversations as well as public statements, he made clear his belief that there was no unanimity of opinion in his own municipality or in the other five — Bartlett, Germantown, Lakeland, Arlington, and Millington — where plans for separate schools system were going forward.

Though it has in the several months of its activity evolved a preliminary merger plan (called “Multiple Achievement Paths”) that would extend maximum autonomy to Memphis and suburban schools, as well as to new charter schools and a state-administered Achievement School District for “failing schools,” the TPC has kept itself focused on the ultimate goal of true consolidation.

Last Thursday’s meeting of the TPC, likely Hart’s last, was probably the first one in a while that made no reference at all, even obliquely, to the looming prospect of an organized breakaway from a unified school system by the suburban municipalities. That was something of an irony, given that state Senator Mark Norris (R-Collierville) had in the preceding week willed (and wiled) enabling legislation into being for the suburbs.

What happened last week was elaborate discussion by TPC members concerning the details of meshing the existing educational policies and logistical strategies of MCS and SCS — even to the details of transportation fleets and bell times. Everything was based on the presumption of having to plan for a system covering the whole of Shelby County.

Asked after last week’s meeting about the apparent anomaly involved in the TPC’s focusing on the elaborate aspects of a whole-county merger plan while the General Assembly had opened the lid early for the suburban separatist movement, both TPC chair Barbara Prescott and Richard Holden, co-chair of the TPC’s Educational Policy and Logistics Committee, downplayed the difficulty of translating the Commission’s plans into a smaller focus for a system that wouldn’t include the 50,000-odd suburban students.

Both Prescott and Holden indicated the changes, if necessary, would be adjustments of scale, but the earlier discussions Thursday had seemed to emphasize qualitative as well as quantitative differences between MCS and SCS, presenting an apples-vs.-oranges scenario — arguably as hard to disentangle at a later point as to combine in the first place.

Meanwhile, there was an ex post facto feel to the current line being vended by state Sen. Norris concerning what had been the intentions of the original 2011 bill, popularly known as Norris-Todd and referred to by himself, more formally, as Public Chapter One. Speaking on the WKNO-TV program “Behind the Headlines” last weekend, Norris suggested that the intent of his bill had always been to allow the Shelby County suburbs to prepare themselves for an early exit from merger — to the extent of extricating themselves altogether before that merger even took place.

If so, such an intention was not spoken to in extensive floor discussion on the bill, the final clause of which allowed for the lifting, in Shelby County only, of an existing state ban on new municipal or special school districts after the completion of MCS-SCS merger in August 2013.

No legal authority seems to have interpreted the bill, which became law when signed by Governor Bill Haslam, in the way that Norris is now suggesting — not state Attorney General Robert Cooper, who ruled in March that the suburbs could take no advance steps until August 2013, and not presiding U.S. District Judge Hardy Mays, whose qualified approval last year of the Norris-Todd bill for planning purposes explicitly excluded the issue of new school districts as not “ripe” until merger had been effected.

Hence the very need for new legislation for Norris — specifically HB1104/SB1923, which, as amended, would fill in the blanks left by Norris-Todd and allow Shelby County’s six suburban municipalities to proceed with enabling referenda on independent districts this year.

The immediate response of Governor Haslam, who had urged that no new legislation be rushed before the TPC could complete its work, was that it was not a “given” that he would sign the new bill but that it was unlikely he would veto it. Flash: He said Tuesday he anticipates signing it. End of that none-too-susenseful interlude. As for Judge Mays? He will likely be heard from in the near future.

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News

Tennessee Isn’t Gay Friendly

Unsurprisingly, Tennessee ranks as one of the least gay-friendly states in the U.S. Bianca Phillips has more.