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Sports Tiger Blue

Tigers 75, East Carolina 68

The Tigers escaped Greenville, North Carolina, tonight with their 11th consecutive win, but only after holding off the East Carolina Pirates in an ugly, uneven affair. Chris Crawford and Joe Jackson combined to hit four free throws in the final 14 seconds to seal the win.

Memphis fell behind 10-4, and had to rally for a 28-27 halftime lead. Junior forward Adonis Thomas went on a shooting binge over the game’s first 20 minutes, but missed nine of his twelve shots from the field. The Tigers shot 32 percent for the first half while ECU was hardly better (35 percent).

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The game remained tight over the first five minutes of the second half, then the Tigers went on a long-distance shooting spree, with treys from Joe Jackson (actually two), Chris Crawford, and Geron Johnson expanding the U of M lead to 13 with just over 12 minutes to play. The Pirates closed within four (51-47), but the Tigers again answered, extending the lead to 11 on back-to-back buckets from Crawford and Jackson. ECU reduced a 9-point deficit to three over the game’s final two minutes, Prince Williams converting a three-point play with 16 seconds remaining. Crawford and Jackson, though, were perfect from the free throw line after intentional fouls by the Pirates.

It was a big night for Jackson, the junior from White Station High School. He scored a career-high 26 points to lead all scorers and also tallied the 1,000th point of his career. Johnson added 13 points for the Tigers and Crawford had 11. Thomas took only one shot after halftime and finished with eight points. Memphis outrebounded ECU, 49-33, with Shaq Goodwin pulling down 10.

The win gives Memphis a record of 17-3 (6-0 in Conference USA play) and a sweep of its two games with ECU this season. They return home Saturday to host Tulsa at FedExForum (1 p.m. tip-off).

NOTES: Jackson is the 48th player to score 1,000 points for the U of M and the 24th native Memphian in the club. He’s the first Bluff City product to reach the plateau since Jeremy Hunt in 2007.

Categories
News

Sunset Boulevard at Playhouse

Classic Hollywood melodrama, Sunset Boulevard, is at Playhouse on the Square.

Categories
Intermission Impossible Theater

Surviving a Mass Shooting: Mary Hollis Inboden talks about THE WARRIORS FOR NEWTON

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The Warriors co-creators Mary Hollis Inboden and Evan Linder

I’m so happy to have watched Mary Hollis Inboden grow up on stage. I say “grow up” although, even as a teenager she was convincing in mature roles, and more than occasionally she was the shiniest star in a roomful of shiny stars. But a show she’s bringing back to Memphis with fellow Playhouse on the Square alum Evan Linder, has made me try to imagine having not experienced her as the angry cowgirl in Talking With, or Chesty Prospects in Saucy Jack and the Space Vixens. And it’s not easy. Mary Hollis Inboden is a survivor of the 1998 Westside Middle School shooting in Jonesboro, an unimaginable tragedy nearly eclipsed by recent, even more unimaginable tragedies .

Monday, February 4, Mary Hollis is coming home to Circuit Playhouse to take part in The Warriors for Newton, a staged reading of the original work she and her fellow players in the New Colony Theatre created in response to the Westside shooting.

Mary Hollis moved to Chicago in the summer of 2006. Almost immediately she landed two recurring TV roles on The Chicago Code, a short-lived series, and the more critically-acclaimed Boss with Kelsey Grammer. Two years later, Evan Linder, a fellow Playhouse alum, started bending her ear about The New Colony, a collaborative theatre company he was developing with a group of friends. She signed on.

New Colony has since made a name for itself with pieces like Calls to Blood and 5 Lesbians Eating a Quiche.

Here’s what Mary Hollis had to say about creating The Warriors:

The Warriors came about in our third season. Evan and I as founding members were thinking up potential show ideas to pitch to the company. We came uncomfortably close to pitching an idea about silent Hollywood and the Fatty Arbuckle/Virgina Rappe scandal, and then I blurted out “I think I might want to do something about Westside.” Evan being a close friend knew what I was referring to. He was a junior high school-er just across the river in the Memphis suburbs when the shooting on my middle school playground occured.

You can read about March 24, 1998 and the shooting on the Internet but only with some effort. The story of Jonesboro is buried now beneath so many other horrific stories of youth violence or school massacres.

At 26, I was ready to talk about the shooting at Westside Middle School and I knew I couldn’t do it by myself – I needed the talent family of The New Colony and the blessing from my childhood friends from the playground that day. I began reaching out. It was terrifying. I gathered email addresses from approximately 35 survivors and was shocked when about 24 of them responded with not only their approval, but details from their daily lives now as adults most of them raising families. I hadn’t given the people I will always think of as 12 enough credit. Through correspondence with my old friends and with the help of The New Colony ensemble we started writing The Warriors.

Evan and I had two rules we followed diligently: The Warriors would not sensationalize the shooting on my playground and it would not be a story of the actual shooting. In following these rules we created a gentle story of survival, what it means to experience childhood trauma and move forward.”

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THE WARRIORS FOR NEWTOWN: MEMPHIS BENEFIT
a special reading of The Warriors by Evan Linder, followed by a community conversation
February 4th, 2013 at 7PM, The Circuit Playhouse

for reserved tickets email: warriorsbenefit@gmail.com

ALL PROCEEDS WILL BE DIVIDED EQUALLY FOR THE SANDY HOOK ELEMENTARY SCHOOL VICTIMS RELIEF FUND AND THE MEMPHIS GUN-DOWN PLAN. http://memphisgundown.org/

Categories
Memphis Gaydar News

New “Don’t Say Gay” Bill Calls Out Gay Kids

Stacey Campfield

  • Stacey Campfield

Knoxville Senator Stacey Campfield is at it again. His “Don’t Say Gay” bill, which bans talk of homosexuality in schools for kids in kindergarten through the eighth grade, died with the adjournment of the Tennessee General Assembly last year. But now he’s reintroduced the bill, and this time, it’s getting personal.

The new “Don’t Say Gay” bill, SB 234, would require that teachers or counselors tell parents of LGBT students that their child may be gay.

Or as the bill’s wording states:

A school counselor, nurse, principal or assistant principal from counseling a student who is engaging in, or who may be at risk of engaging in, behavior injurious to the physical or mental health and well-being of the student or another person; provided, that wherever possible such counseling shall be done in consultation with the student’s parents or legal guardians. Parents or legal guardians of students who receive such counseling shall be notified as soon as practicable that such counseling has occurred.

A blog post on ThinkProgress. org points out that LGBT kids often face family rejection upon coming out to their parents and that 40 percent of homeless kids are gay. Those homeless youth have either been kicked out of the home or have chosen to leave a hostile environment.

“LGBT youth who experience family rejection are at high risk for depression and suicide,” the blog post states.

For a more in-depth analysis of Campfield’s latest “Don’t Say Gay” bill, read Jackson Baker’s latest Political Beat post.

Categories
Politics Politics Beat Blog

Even More Campfield: He Introduces ‘Don’t Say Gay II’

Stacey Campfield

  • Stacey Campfield

NASHVILLE:


“The general assembly recognizes that certain subjects are particularly sensitive and are, therefore, best explained and discussed within the home. Because of its complex societal, scientific, psychological, and historical implications, human sexuality is one such subject. Human sexuality is best understood by children with sufficient maturity to grasp its complexity and implications….”

That pseudo-philosophical paragraph is the introduction to the latest bill introduced in the Tennessee General Assembly by one Stacey Campfield, the former state representative and freshly minted state senator from Knoxville who seems determined that his name will forever more be synonymous with the term “gay-bashing.”

It will be remembered that Campfield was the author of the infamous “Don’t Say Gay” measure that passed the state Senate in 2011 and knocked around in the House all of last year before being shelved — an outcome that was assisted by Governor Bill Haslam’s tactful but firm suggestion that the bill, which forbade any mention of homosexuality in elementary schools and had attracted either contempt or ridicule in most of the Western world, was “unnecessary.”

The fact is: If Stacey Campfield had not existed, it might have been necessary to invent him. Not a day goes by on Capitol Hill in Nashville that Campfield doesn’t take some action designed to make his name a proverb.

Observe: On Wednesday, January 30, was born Son of Don’t Say Gay, or Don’t Say Gay II., beginning with the benign sociologese of the paragraph heretofore quoted, which is quickly followed by this:

“(b) At grade levels pre-K through eight (pre-K-8), any such classroom instruction, course materials or other informational resources that are inconsistent with natural human reproduction shall be classified as inappropriate for the intended student audience and, therefore, shall be prohibited.”

Why prohibited? Why, for the good of the putatively or actually gay child, of course:

”A school counselor, nurse, principal or assistant principal “ may counsel anyone “who may be at risk of engaging in, behavior injurious to [one’s] physical or mental health and wellbeing … provided, that wherever possible such counseling shall be done in consultation with the student’s parents or legal guardians. Parents or legal guardians of students who receive such counseling shall be notified as soon as practicable that such counseling has occurred….”

There is more to the bill, but you get the idea:. In other words, Say “gay” if you must, but say it out of the hearing of the Regular Kids and in a way that isolates the suspected or known outliers and makes them squirm. Call it Tough Love. Call it The Cure.

And that’s not the worst of it.

Enter Jeff Woods, the incomparable “Pith in the Wind” sage of the Nashville Scene, who has happily reneged on the brief retirement his announced last year, and why not? With Campfield still on the loose, what choice did he have but to return to duty?

Woods reads the new bill to be “requiring schoolteachers and administrators to out gay children to their parent… for the child’s own good, of course.” As he notes, Campfield’s bill (called “the Classroom Protection Act”) would, in its quarantined way, let “schoolteachers and administrators counsel gay students who are facing bullying or other problems, but the school then must report it to the child’s parents.”

Like Woods, we find it impossible not to quote the response of Wonkette in an item which ends this way:

“Before we go, yr Wonkette (particularly this portion of yr Wonkette who actually happens to be a female lesbian) would like to cordially invite the Tennessee General Assembly to eat a bag of lightly-salted poison rat dicks. Enjoy! Choke!”

We will hazard here the prediction that Campfield’s newest philippic against the state of gaydom will ultimately meet the fate of his first effort, except that, unlike that first version of Don’t Say Gay, it is unlikely to receive the imprimatur of either Senate or House.

On second thought, let’s make that a guess — not a prediction.

Additional

But is there another Stacey Campfield, a more thoughtful version of the smash-mouth iconcoclast — a persona that doesn’t get enough attention because the stunt-prone Campfield’s inflammatory social legislation obscures it?

There is some evidence to suggest that the answer is yes.

It is Campfield’s membership on the Senate Education Committee (as one its House equivalent beforehand) that has enabled him to be on the front end of his now-notorious gay-baiting legislation. But he can — and does — offer constructive contributions to school-related bills.

It was Campfield, for example, who took the lead last week in challenging the bona fides of Tennessee Virtual Academy, the fledgling online taxpayer-subsidized public-school service which was authorized by the 2011 General Assembly.

Representatives of TNVA had tappeared before the Senate Education Committee with a souped-up new-media version of their curriculum — a dog-and-pony show,as some observers called it — and were about to leave it at that when Campfield dug in and queried them sharply about the substandard scores achieved by TNVA students and the reasons for them.

This week the TNVA presneters got more of the same, on a bi-partisan basis, from members of the House Education Committee, and Governor Bill Haslam would announce his intention to limit the scope of TNVA pending better results.

It was a debate that Campfield was a prime mover in, but, understandably, his role in it — one in which he could offer leadership in achieving a consensus — was obscured by the new Don’t Say Gay II bill and by another inflammatory proposal to cut welfare payments to families of under-performing students.

And that’s nobody’s fault but Campfield’s.

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Table 613

For next week’s Food News column, Hannah is writing about Table 613, the new Kosher restaurant in Sanderlin Center. I tagged along with her to check it out for lunch.

Hannah started with the Matzah Ball soup ($4.99). It smelled wonderful, and Hannah said it was very good.

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She also ordered this bulging grilled chicken sub ($9.99), which was topped with onions, peppers, mushrooms, jalapenos peppers, and a savory sauce.

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I ordered the falafel pita ($7.99). This is loaded with hummus, eggplant, and babaganoush. Very tasty.

The menu also includes a number of salads, from Caesar to broccoli cashew. There’s also a the quarter-pound Butch burger and a Schnitzel sandwich, plus sides, a kids’ menu, and a small selection of desserts.

Table 613 is open Sunday through Thursday, 11 a.m.-9 p.m. and Friday 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.

Categories
Opinion

Twinkies and Pabst would be One Sweet Deal

It seems that one of the key ingredients in Food and Drink That Isn’t Good For You is a dose of nostalgia.

Here’s a squib from the New York Times this week:

“Hostess Brands, has named a pair of private equity firms, Apollo Global Management and C. Dean Metropoulos & Company, as the collective lead bidder for Twinkies and several other snack brands, two people briefed on the matter said on Tuesday. Apollo and Metropoulos appear to have beaten out a sizable number of competitors for the iconic snack brand, including Grupo Bimbo of Mexico, the maker of Arnolds bread.

“But as the “stalking horse” bidder, with an expected offer of some $400 million, the pair will have largely set a floor for a court-supervised auction that is expected to take place within weeks. But Twinkies have long been regarded as the bankrupt baker’s crown jewel, having drawn scores of potential buyers over the last two months. News that Hostess was shutting down its factories prompted a burst of nostalgia for the cakes.”

Grupo Bimbo? Twinkies as crown jewels? You can’t make this stuff up.

Same goes for investment bankers dealing in junk food instead of junk bonds.

I am pulling for the bidder that also owns Pabst Blue Ribbon beer, the low-cost alternative to overpriced and overhyped craft beers. A Pabst and a Twinkie, with a side of Slim Jims and Cheetos, would be junk food heaven, and about 2,000 calories too. Except you can hardly find a package of Twinkies anymore since Hostess shut down. Competitor Little Debbie has stepped into the void, with a faux Twinkie selling for $3.09 a pack, or twice as much as the tasty Valentine’s Day offering pictured here.

A PBR and a snack cake. Sweet.

Categories
News

Officer Involved in Fatal Shooting Has Record of Performance Problems

Memphis Police officer Ned Aufdenkamp, one of the officers being investigated in the shooting death of 24-year-old Steven Askew, has a personnel file peppered with problems. Hannah Sayle has the story.

Categories
News News Blog

Officer Involved in Steven Askew’s Shooting Death Has Checkered Past

One of the Memphis Police Department officers involved in the shooting death of 24-year-old Steven Askew has a less-than-stellar personnel file.

Ned Aufdenkamp

  • Ned Aufdenkamp

According to his personnel file, Officer Ned Aufdenkamp was already on the Memphis Police Department’s radar for past performance problems and was submitted for the department’s Early Intervention Program in 2012.

On Thursday, January 17th, Officer Aufdenkamp and Officer Matt Dyess responded to a loud music complaint on Tyrol Court in the Aspenwood Apartments. Although they did not hear any loud music, they did notice a man, Steven Askew, asleep in a Crown Victoria. When they approached, the two noticed a handgun in Askew’s car. Aufdenkamp and Dyess then knocked on the windows and issued verbal commands to Askew, who, according to the officers, armed himself with his gun and pointed it at them. The two officers fired their weapons and Askew was killed. Officers Aufdenkamp and Dyess have both been relieved of duty with pay while the matter is investigated.

Among other things, Aufdenkamp’s file reveals four workstation complaints against him and seven reports filed by Aufdenkamp of citizens resisting arrest — including five within a three month period and some that involved the use of chemical spray and physical force.

“The supervisors were bothered by the frequency and proximity of the resisting arrests, the use of chemical spray, and the resulting injuries to either Aufdenkamp or the suspect,” the report reads. “Several complainants explained, in their own words, that they felt Aufdenkamp would intentionally ratchet up the level of pressure on the scene when it wasn’t necessary.”

On January 5th, 2012, Aufdenkamp was involved in a verbal altercation with a fellow officer on a traffic stop. According to the report, “the original conversation was with another officer, but Aufdenkamp interjected himself into the altercation and other officers had to stop between them to prevent it from escalating.”

Later that month, the Internal Affairs Bureau received a complaint that Officer Aufdenkamp was “rude and disrespectful” during a traffic stop and had “approached with his gun out.”

Aufdenkamp was then referred to the Early Intervention Program and placed on desk duty. In March of 2012, Aufdenkamp was ordered to attend Anger Management.

There are numerous other instances in which Aufdenkamp apparently did not follow protocol, failing to report when he bottomed out and disabled his patrol car in May of 2011, and leaving roll call to engage in what became a unreported domestic disturbance in September of that same year. In April of 2011, MPD received a complaint that Aufdenkamp stopped a violator and supposedly roughed him up, searched him for no reason, broke his rear windshield with a flashlight, and got on his loud speaker and said, “Speed up or I’m going to take your black-ass to jail.”

“The supervisors would like Officer Aufdenkamp to learn to use his verbal skills more effectively,” the report summary reads. “As a result of the Department Investigation, Aufdenkamp was temporarily assigned to the Precinct front desk because if he continues to generate complaints, he could be placed in an official non-enforcement status for up to six months, according to the rules of the Early Intervention Program.”

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Categories
News

More on Stacey Campfield

Andria K. Brown has a few thoughts about state senator Stacey Campfield’s latest brainstorm.