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Mid-South Spay & Neuter Services Gets a Free Building

The current Mid-South Spay & Neuter Services facility at 854 Goodman

  • The current Mid-South Spay & Neuter Services facility at 854 Goodman

The city’s low-cost spay and neuter clinic will soon be moving from its cramped space at 854 Goodman to a larger facility in Hickory Hill, thanks to a building donation from First Tennessee.

The new location at 5650 Mt. Moriah is twice as large as the current Mid-South Spay & Neuter Services facility, the waiting room for which is often standing-room-only on a typical day. Since the new space was a former veterinary clinic, future renovations are expected to be feasible and cost-effective. The larger size will allow the clinic to increase the number of patients it’s able to treat.

First Tennessee gave the building to Mid-South Spay & Neuter Services as part of their community investment efforts, through which it donates foreclosed properties to nonprofit groups. Mid-South Spay & Neuter Services will start a public fund-raising campaign to fund renovations to the new space.

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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Edge Coffeehouse Set To Open in Harry’s Detour Space

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It’s a homecoming, of sorts, for the Edge Coffeehouse, which will be moving into the Harry’s Detour spot at 532 Cooper, a space it once occupied nearly 20 years ago.

By this point, the Edge (perhaps best known for the Avalanche, a great coffee milkshake) has had several homes, but more on that in a moment. …

Owner Frank James was hoping to have the latest incarnation of the Edge open for business on July 4th, but says he’s still securing permits. He does, however, plan to open the doors for the holiday and to celebrate.

“We’re having a giant party,” says James. “I’m expecting a mob, seriously.”

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News

Pickled

Hannah Sayle on the growing number of restaurants selling house-made pickles.

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Sports Tiger Blue

Tiger Trivia Tuesday

Chris Crawford has led the Tigers in assists in each of his first two seasons at Memphis. Since the stat was first tabulated by the U of M (for the 1968-69 season), five players have led the Tigers in assists all four seasons they played.

Name this quintet.

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News

Amy LaVere at the Hi-Tone

Singer Amy LaVere returns from her latest tour to play the Hi-Tone Tuesday.

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News

Ric Chetter’s New Gig

Former Rock 103 DJ Rick Chetter has a DIY radio station these days. Bianca Phillips reports.

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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Tom’s Tiny Kitchen Expands with Chipotle Pimento Cheese

Pimento cheese fans, listen up: Tom’s Tiny Kitchen has recently added a chipotle-spiked version of its much-loved pimento cheese.

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The chipotle adds a bit of heat, though nothing too intense, and a fine smokiness. Irresistible.

The chipotle pimento cheese sells for $7 and is available at the Cooper-Young Community Farmers Market, Agricenter International, and the Memphis Farmers Market.

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News

Letters. We Get Letters …

Here’s this week’s pack of letters to the editor — concerning Graceland Too, Obama, healthcare, etc.

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News

The United States of Sport

Frank Murtaugh reflects on the unifying nature of sports in a divided nation.

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From My Seat Sports

The U.S.: One Nation, Under Sports

If you look at the front page of your paper (or the home page of your favorite news site), it’s easy to come away with the feeling America has never been more divided. We can’t agree on the federal government’s role in managing the economy. We can’t agree on what makes an immigrant legal (and when). We can’t agree on the nature of health care, and whether or not it should be an obligation. Then you have the age-old scream-generators: abortion, gun control, campaign financing.

Ain’t it great to be an American?

As Independence Day nears, though, I’m reminded of the last and best unifier we Americans enjoy year-round. It’s sports. The games our children play, the teams we cheer (or boo), the activities that keep us (well, some of us) healthy.

There’s irony to the unifying quality of American sports, of course. Seat a Grizzlies fan next to a Clippers fan on a flight from Memphis to L.A. and see how “unified” they feel after three hours. But that’s precisely the magic of sports. Two people from two different parts of the world, likely with entirely different lifestyles and daily priorities, who live and breathe over the same series of basketball games. Sports matter.

I’ve seen cars in the FedExForum parking garage with Obama bumper stickers parked next to cars with Palin stickers. For all I know, there’s a red-clad fan sitting next to a blue-clad fan, bound together for 41 games of die-hard cheering … until election night. (Which makes me wonder: Does Mitt Romney have a favorite team? If President Obama wears his White Sox jersey to a debate, what does Romney wear?)

College football fans in these parts might question the unifying quality of their sport of choice, especially when morons are poisoning trees in the interest of waving their favorite team’s flag. But these idiots are like plane crashes: they steal headlines from the thousands upon thousands of flights that take off and land without incident.

I attended the 2006 induction ceremony at the Pro Football Hall of Fame in Canton, Ohio. Took my seat — on a scalding-hot bleacher — right next to a woman in a Troy Aikman jersey (the former Cowboy quarterback was among the inductees). We exchanged pleasantries and the woman introduced me to her husband — the guy sitting on her other side — wearing a Washington Redskins jersey. I’ve spent the better part of six years trying to do the math on that slice of matrimony, wondering how fall can be endured with an NFL Hatfield and McCoy under the same roof. There’s a bonding metaphor somewhere, and it has as much to do with sports bringing fans together as it does love bringing couples together.

My dad grew up in Memphis, a Cardinal fan, and a supporter of Jimmy Carter. For more than twenty years, he lived next-door to a Red Sox fan in New England, a man with photos of Ronald Reagan and one George Bush or another on his office wall. My dad and his neighbor were devoted golf partners. His neighbor — his dear friend — eulogized my father at his memorial service in 2005. These two had reason to shun each other as misguided political enemies. But that would have further spoiled countless walks from tee to green. Sports matter — and they unify.

If you mix and match the colors of the current champions in the NFL (New York Giants), NBA (Miami Heat), and Major League Baseball (St. Louis Cardinals), you get a nice blend of red, white, and blue. Coincidental for sure. But at a time when so many news items divide us, in a year when we’ll have to choose blue or red come November, it’s nice to consider the role sports play in making America a single, unified nation. The Olympic Games open in London later this month, with enough flag-waving to mist the eyes of the most steely of patriots. It’s a degree of jingoism we should let be. For it’s less about policy-making or borders than racing in a pool or on a track. A kind of conflict we can embrace as one.

Have a safe and happy Fourth.