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Beyond the Arc Sports

Schedule Breakdown

The NBA’s regular-season schedule was released last night. You can see the full Grizzlies’ schedule here.

Here are a few thoughts as we look ahead to what should be a really fun season:

Games of Note:

At Los Angeles Clippers — Wednesday, October 31st: The season opener is a tough one, a road rematch with the team that eliminated the Grizzlies from last season’s playoffs. The bad news: The Clippers might be better this season after adding veterans like Chauncy Billups, Lamar Odom, Grant Hill, and Rony Turiaf to their bench. The good news: Blake Griffin had knee surgery this summer and might not be 100-percent for this game.

Utah Jazz — Monday, November 5th: The home opener against one of the West’s young, emerging teams.

Houston Rockets — Friday, November 9th: “Linsanity” — to what ever degree it will still exist — makes its Memphis debut.

Miami Heat — Sunday, November 11th: The Heat didn’t play in Memphis during the lockout season, but the defending champions come to town for their lone appearance here.

At Oklahoma City Thunder — Wednesday, November 14th: The team’s first national television game (on ESPN) is also an early measuring stick against the defending Western Conference champs.

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News

Haslam vs. the Tea Party

Governor Haslam has incurred the wrath of his party’s neanderthal wing. Tim Sampson finds it amusing.

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Politics Politics Beat Blog

The Early-Voting Error Total is Now Well Past 2,000

Dr. Joe Weinberg

  • Dr. Joe Weinberg

Here’s an update by Joe Weinberg, the Germantown pediatrician who, simultaneously with blogger/A..V. specialist/District 1 County Commission candidate Steve Ross, has been keeping running totals on the number of wrong ballots issued countywide so far during early voting for the August 2 election.

Weinberg’s figures are calculated only for the state and federal portion of the election ballot. They do not measure possible erroneous ballots for countywide races or School Board races.

Through Wednesday, July 25, the cumulative total of erroneous state and federal ballots was 2,306. That broke down into 1,893 ballots containing the wrong state House race, 133 with the wrong state Senate race, and 280 with the wrong congressional districts. The cumulative error percentage rate was 5.6 percent, about what it has been since the second day of early voting on Tuesday, July 17.

(The first day’s early voting on Monday, July 16, had an error rate of a flat 10 percent!)

However, Weinberg notes that the error percentage rate for Wednesday’s voting all by itself was only 4.4 percent. “Hopefully, this is the start of a trend,” Weinberg said.

Ross, after looking at Weinberg’s figures, certified them as consistent with his own findings.

It was Ross whose researches first revealed the scope of erroneous ballots. It was Weinberg who was consulted by state Election Coordinator Mark Goins of Nashville, who would certify the accuracy of Weinberg’s figures and the consistency of an error rate in the 5 percent range.

Robert Meyers, the chairman of the Shelby County Election Commission, has acknowledged the accuracy of figures produced by Ross and Weinberg and has publicly thanked the former for bringing the situation to light. The chairman has said the Election Commission technical staff is working “day and night” to correct the ballots, conceding that there is no way to amend those wrong vote already cast.

It is generally acknowledged that a major contributing factor to the high error rate is the fact that the Commission waited until mid-June, when Chancellor Arnold Goldin imposed a redistricting plan on the fractionated Shelby County Commission, to begin matching precincts with redistricting maps provided by the state. Simultaneously the Election Commission was reducing and consolidating the number of countywide precincts.

Ross and other critics of the delay have pointed out that, since no elections will be held based new County Commission lines until 2014, the Commission could have begun preparing ballots as early as February when all electoral bodies required to redistrict for 2012 elections had accomplished t heir reapportionment.

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Politics Politics Beat Blog

What is the GOP Trying to Tell Us? That Chumney vs. Weirich is a Race?

Chumney (left) and Weirich: A Republican broadside opens up doubt where there was certitude.

  • Chumney (left) and Weirich: A Republican broadside opens up doubt where there was certitude.

As August 2nd gets nearer, expect to see and hear some surprising things on the campaign trial. One of them surfaced this week in an email sent out from Shelby County Republican headquarters.

The slug line itself was intriguing: A campaign record that Prince Mongo would be proud of.

The surprise, though, would come from the email itself. Two surprises, really. One was the choice of subject: Carol Chumney, Democratic nominee for District Attorney General. The other —and chief — surprise was that the Republican Party found itself tempted (Or obliged. Or whatever) to go after Chumney , whose chances of beating widely admired Republican Amy Weirich, the incumbent D.A. , had almost universally been written off, even among Chumney’s relative handful of never-say-die supporters.

The text wastes no time, beginning with a direct slap: “There are a few things you can bet on when it comes to summertime in Shelby County: Heat. Humidity. And Democrat Carol Chumney running for yet another political office!”

It goes on to recount the fact that Chumney lost three mayoral races in the last decade — one for county mayor and two for mayor of Memphis — and squares the verbal circle with the statement “It’s a record Prince Mongo would be proud of.”

Next, after endeavoring to establish that Chumney is unqualified to be D.A. and is “all-too-desperate for a government job,” the text enumerates a series of Weirich accomplishments and endorsements that are indeed impressive.

Fair enough — even to noting that fact that Weirich has some prominent Democratic support (City Council members Jim Strickland and Shea Flinn, for starters, though no names are actually mentioned) and that the “area’s top two Democrats,” who are identified as 9th District Congressman Steve Cohen and Mayor A C Wharton, have declined to endorse Chumney.

All de rigueur. (As they say.) So why are we reading this email? “This race is too important to leave to chance.” That seems a little breathy. After stressing the importance to public safety of electing Weirich, the next paragraph goes on to say, “But it won’t happen by accident.”

Chance? Accident? Puzzling terms, especially given the facts of Weirich’s advantages (not excluding something like a 10-to-one fundraising advantage) and the certitude of there being a flood of suburban (read: Republican) votes on August 2nd in favor of municipal school districts.

What does the Shelby County GOP know that the rest of the sapient world doesn’t about circumstances of chance or accident that could potentially upset the odds board and give Carol Chumney a victory over Amy Weirich? Why does the Grand Old Party sound so worried?

Chumney should be grateful for this Republican email. It introduces the idea of doubt into what had been widely regarded as a done deal.

In fact, Chumney began circulating the letter herself —attaching it to an email in which, inter alia, she pointed out:

I came within 7 points of becoming the Mayor of Memphis in 2007 against a 16 year incumbent.

I ran for public office because of my passion for public service. My win record is 16 to 3, having won 7 primaries for state house; seven general elections for state house; the top vote getter for the city council election and then winning the run-off against an opponent who put thousands of his own money in the race (George Flinn). My only losses have been to well-funded incumbent mayors.

This, too, is fair enough. And Chumney, too, has some things in her resume to boast of, including, as she noted in a followup email, her service as a special judge in civil and criminal courts.

Is there a race here? It still looks awfully much like a probable runaway for Weirich. But maybe indeed the Republicans know something troubling about the vagaries of fate. That email sure makes it look that way.

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Opinion

Whitehaven’s “Elvis Presley Boulevard Impossible”

ep-blvrd.jpg

In May, the Food Network show “Restaurant Impossible” and host Robert Irvine did an intervention at a family-owned, money-losing place called Pollard’s Bar-B-Q on Elvis Presley Boulevard. Now Memphis is getting ready to do a $43 million makeover to the street all the way from Brooks Road to Shelby Drive.

On Thursday evening, City Councilman Harold Collins and I met for dinner at Pollard’s before heading to a Whitehaven community meeting. It was the second of our before-and-after visits to Pollard’s. The standard story line for “Restaurant Impossible” is admission of failure, resistance, acceptance, makeover, and tearful finale as the delighted owners see the transformation, and customers flock to the place. I can report that the restaurant decor and food are somewhat improved.

Fixing Elvis Presley Boulevard will be a lot harder.

“No offense to Pollard’s,” said Collins, “but I want to see some more restaurants on this street like Applebee’s and Outback Steak House.”

Whitehaven is a neighborhood on the edge. It is the western border of our grandly named but not so grand in fact “aerotropolis.” It’s the home of Graceland, which is a 15-minute drive from the rest of they city’s main tourist attractions. Lately Whitehaven has been the bridesmaid to other big-ticket public-private projects that jumped the line including the Bass Pro Pyramid, the Harahan Bridge Project, Overton Square, and the Fairgrounds and Tiger Lane.

Harold Collins

  • Harold Collins

Collins says Whitehaven has average household income of $45,000, corporate citizens including FedEx, Medtronic, Smith & Nephew, and Methodist South, and deserves better. The groundbreaking for the street improvements is in November, and the work will continue in stages until 2018.

“We are preparing the bride for the wedding,” he said to cheers from about 150 people, including Congressman Steve Cohen and challenger Tomeka Hart. “Then we’re going to go courting.”

The meeting was the third one for Whitehaven residents and businesses, and it was designed to show the kinder, gentler side of the City Engineering Division. No more”design and defend,” said Engineer John Cameron. The public is invited to vote on such details as streetlight posts, sidewalk plantings, medians, and even the “compass” design in the middle of the Brooks Road intersection.

The crowd ate it up. There was applause for “LED lighting” and “mast arm signage” and a clean-up starting next week in anticipation of Elvis Week. Cameron said the street would remain open at all times, although some lanes will be closed from time to time. Trucks will continue to use the road, which is part of U.S. Highway 51. So, in theory at least, will bicycles, with shared lanes being added to the roadway. The Harahan Project, Cameron said, is separate and “they’re not going to come raiding this project.”

As for existing businesses that don’t clean up, “I am certain pressure will be put on them,” Collins said.

He plans to ask the Shelby County Commission to appropriate an additional $10 million over three years.

A makeover can only carry you so far. It’s the cooking and the main fare that keeps them coming back or turns them away. Whitehaven’s “Boulevard Impossible” has just begun.

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News

Ostranders Nominations Announced

Let the kvetching begin! The Ostranders nominations are out. Chris Davis has the details.

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Intermission Impossible Theater

Ostrander Award Nominations: Community Division, 2012

Underdog Indie no more: With seven nominations New Moons KING LEAR wows the Ostrander judges

  • Underdog Indie no more: With seven nominations New Moon’s KING LEAR wows the Ostrander judges

Time to play my favorite game: Who got robbed?

SET DESIGN
Jimmy Humphries In the Next Room (or The Vibrator Play) The Circuit Playhouse
Mark Guirguis Present Laughter The Circuit Playhouse
Christopher McCollum Glengarry Glen Ross Theatre Memphis
Christopher McCollum Bye Bye Birdie Theatre Memphis

COSTUMES

Robin Owens Lend Me A Tenor Germantown Community Theatre
Andre´ Bruce Ward Emma Theatre Memphis
Rebecca Y. Powell In the Next Room (or The Vibrator Play) The Circuit Playhouse
Amie Eoff Next To Normal Playhouse on the Square
Amie Eoff Present Laughter The Circuit Playhouse

LIGHTING
John Horan God of Carnage Playhouse on the Square
Colin Chauche Spring Awakening The Circuit Playhouse
Jeremy Allen Fisher Chicago Theatre Memphis
John Horan Xanadu Playhouse on the Square
Colin Chauche Present Laughter The Circuit Playhouse

PROPS
Lydia Baughman In the Next Room (or The Vibrator Play) The Circuit Playhouse
Lydia Baughman God of Carnage Playhouse on the Square
Betty Dilley The Spitfire Grill Germantown Community Theatre
Lydia Baughman Present Laughter The Circuit Playhouse

HAIR/MAKE UP

Nicholas Bursoni The Club Playhouse on the Square
Mitch Baker and Liz Sharpe Chicago Theatre Memphis
Claire Rutkauskas The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe Germantown Community Theatre
Nicholas Bursoni Present Laughter The Circuit Playhouse
Barbara and Rick Sanders No, No, Nanette Theatre Memphis

Categories
News

State Releases TCAP Scores

The TCAP scores for Memphis and Shelby County Schools have been released. John Branston has the story.

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News

National Socialist Party to Meet in Memphis

Some people see Socialists everywhere. This weekend their paranoia becomes real, as the Socialist Party USA holds its annual meeting in Memphis. Elizabeth Cooper reports.

Categories
Opinion

Test Scores in for Memphis and Shelby County Schools

TCAP-logo.jpg

Let the bashing begin. The State Department of Education has released district-by-district achievement test scores.

Student performance on the 2012 Tennessee Comprehensive Assessment Program improved significantly in school districts across the state. Nearly all of the state’s 136 districts saw proficiently levels increase, and two-thirds improved in every subject of the 3-8 TCAP Achievement tests.

Memphis made improvements in math and reading at the high school and lower-grades levels. Shelby County made bigger improvements and had, as usual, higher numbers of students in the “proficient” and “advanced” categories.

District proficiency levels reveal major improvements in math skills. More than 50 districts saw double-digit growth over last year in Algebra I, with some reporting gains greater than 30 percentage points. Additionally, 23 districts saw double-digit growth in grades 3-8 math.

In Memphis, in grades 3-8, 27.6 percent of students were proficient or advanced in math and 29.2 percent were proficient or advanced in reading. In high school, 33.8 were in those categories in algebra 1 and 43.2 percent in English 1.

In Shelby County, in grades 3-8. 57.4 percent were proficient or advanced in math and 61.3 percent in reading. In high school, 60.2 percent were proficient or advanced in Algebra 1 and 74.3 percent in English 1.

In the future unified Shelby County Schools, the scores will be lumped together. But the outcome of the municipal schools issue will impact the results.