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Bristerfest at Levitt Shell

The 2013 Bristerfest hits the Levitt Shell Saturday night. Lead acts are Butch Mudbone and Gene the Machine.

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Animal Advocates Protest Dropped Charges

Save Our Shelter-Memphis will hold a peaceful demonstration on Saturday to protest the district attorney’s office’s decision to drop animal cruelty charges against former Memphis Animal Services (MAS) director Ernie Alexander and supervisor Tina Quattlebaum. Bianca Phillips has the story.

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Animal Advocates to Protest Dismissal of Former Shelter Director’s Charges

Ernie Alexander

  • Ernie Alexander

Members of Save Our Shelter-Memphis (SOS) will be holding a peaceful demonstration on Saturday, April 27th at noon at the corner of Poplar and Highland to protest the district attorney’s office’s decision to drop animal cruelty charges against former Memphis Animal Services (MAS) director Ernie Alexander and supervisor Tina Quattlebaum.

The DA’s office announced last week that it would not prosecute Alexander and Quattlebaum for charges that stemmed from a 2009 Shelby County Sheriff’s Office-led raid at Memphis Animal Services that revealed dogs dying of starvation.

According to a statement from the Shelby County district attorney’s office, the charges were dropped due to lack of cooperation of key witnesses, a lack of direct evidence of the defendants’ contact with the animal victims, budget constraints that were placed on MAS by the city administration at that time, and because both Alexander and Quattlebaum made attempts to notify their supervisors about shelter conditions. Based on those factors, the DA’s office determined that prosecution would not have a “reasonable likelihood of success.”

Members of SOS wants the former administrators to be held responsible: “SOS Memphis implores the City of Memphis and the Shelby County Attorney General to prosecute all documented animal cruelty cases to the full extent of the law and to request the Courts to sentence the full terms of imprisonment and fines allowed by Tennessee Law with regard to aggravated and misdemeanor animal cruelty.”

They’re also asking the city to implement an employee review process for workers at MAS. According to SOS’s press release about the protest, “Due to lack of documentation and lack of action taken, two MAS employees are still on the job despite watching animals being tortured and doing nothing. Mistakes attributed to ‘clerical errors’ continue to occur, resulting in animals that are missing or unnecessarily dying while in the care of MAS.”

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Scott McCreery at Horseshoe Casino

American Idol winner Scott McCreery performs an all-ages concert at Horseshoe Casino Friday Night.

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Politics Politics Beat Blog

Maxine Smith, Civil Rights Icon, Dead at 83

Maxine Smith, 1929-2013

  • Maxine Smith, 1929-2013

Maxine Smith, the longtime executive secretary of the Memphis NAACP and a pivotal local figure in virtually every important aspect of the civil rights era, has died at 83.

Smith’s slipping of the mortal coil is sure to be formally recognized and her life commemorated by local, state, and national legislative bodies, for there is hardly as aspect of the times she lived in that she didn’t do much to transform.

As in the case of Rosa Parks, whose denial of a seat on a Montgomery bus in 1956 led to that city’s landmark bus boycott, led by the young Martin Luther King, Smith’s ascent into social leadership stemmed from a personal rebuff.

She and Miriam Sugarmon Willis, another civil rights pioneer, saw their applications rejected to do graduate work at Memphis State University in 1957. That led to Smith’s involvement with the NAACP and her activity on behalf of sit-ins and various protests and voter registration drives.

She led the “If You’re Black, Take It Back” campaigns that boycotted downtown stores with segregated work forces and separate water fountains. She personally escorted the African American children who desegregated Memphis public schools in 1961. In 1969 she was a leader of the “Black Monday” boycotts to force further school desegregation.

As a leader of the NAACP, Smith was outspoken in support of the 1968 sanitation workers’ strike, which would culminate in the tragic assassination here of Dr. King.

Having been elected to the Memphis School Board in 1971, she was the single most important factor in the elevation in 1979 of Willie Herenton, a black principal, to fill the vacant position os school superintendent, organizing resistance on the Board and in the city to a Board majority’s plan to hire a white superintendent from Michigan.

Smith was equally influential in the 1991 mayoral campaign of Herenton, who won and became the city’s first elected black chief executive, just as he had been the school system’s first black superintendent.

Speaking of Smit on WREG-TV Friday, after learning of her death, Herenton, now organizing a charter-school network, credited Smith for being a major force for “the advancement of African Americans,” and said, “When the annals of history are written … Maxine Smith’s name will be there. She made an indelible imprint on this city.” A tearful Herenton acknowledged that he would never have become superintendent of schools “if not for the courage of Maxine Smith.”

Perhaps appropriately, Smith was elected president of the School Board the same year, 1991, that Herenton was elected mayor. She left the school board in 1995 and eventually relinquished the reins of the NAACP, but continued to function as a sort of elder stateswoman, speaking out on issues and offering advice whenever she was consulted by either side to a controversy, which was often.

She remained an inspirational figurehead, as did her late husband Vasco Smith, a veteran civil rights activist himself and a longtime member of the Shelby County Commission, which meets now in a building named for him.

Speaking of Maxine Smith’s death on the floor of the U.S. House of Representatives Friday, 9th District congressman Steve Cohen said, “Today in Memphis, Tenessee, a great lady passed, a lady who was as fierce, as brave, as courageous as any woman who has ever lived in this country…She helped take Memphis beyond Jim Crow and segregation… and she helped take America there….”

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News

George Jones, 1931-2013

Chris Davis on country legend George Jones, who passed away today.

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Sing All Kinds We Recommend

The Possum Has Left the Building: George Jones (September 12, 1931 — April 26, 2013)

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George Jones, known as the Cadillac of Country Music because of his vocal range and nuanced phrasing, has died.

While looking back over past articles I stumbled across a piece I’d written prior to Jones’ 1998 appearance at The Mid-South Fair. And while I may have overstated my point when I said he ignored Rock-and-Roll completely (some great Rockabilly cuts for Starday say otherwise), it’s a fun read touching on the good, the bad, and the ridiculous. And I thought I’d share with other Possum fans.

Here’s the link.


“She Thinks I Still Care” was written by Memphis songwriter Dickey Lee

No heartfelt tribute to the man can be free from all the lurid details. So here’s a teaser excerpt:

“Once in an unfounded (and possibly coke-driven) fit of jealousy, he chased Porter Wagoner into the men’s room of the Grand Old Opry [and] grabbed Wagoner by the penis.”

Yes, you read that correctly.

And while we’re looking back and remembering, here’s my perfect George Jones set list circa 2009.

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H.O.P.E. Protests Mental Health Facility

Bianca Phillips reports on a protest against a Memphis mental health facility for employing a man accused of sexually harassing clients.

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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Ciao Baby! Neapolitan Pizza Now Open

Ciao Baby!, which opened 22 days ago in Collierville, serves Neapolitan-style pizza made in a wood-fired oven.

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I ordered the Margherita (9-inch, $9.33 including tax). It’s topped with house-made mozzarella, and the rustic-style crust is thin but not at all skimpy. Wonderful.

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Says owner Adrian Arcuri of his pizzas, “It’s an art.”

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Grizzlies Beat Clippers, 94-82

Chris Herrington has the story of Thursday night’s Griz must-win victory over the Clippers.