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Homeless Service Provider Employee Terminated For Sexual Harassment

H.O.P.E. members protest outside the Beers Van Gogh Center.

  • H.O.P.E. members protest outside the Beers Van Gogh Center.

An employee at the Beers Van Gogh Center of Excellence has been terminated for sexual harassment, following a months-long campaign calling for his termination by Homeless Organizing for Power and Equality (H.O.P.E.).

Over the past year, H.O.P.E., an advocacy group that fights for the rights of homeless people, has received complaints from their members and former employees of the Beers Van Gogh Center alleging that peer counselor Hervelle Williams had made unwanted sexual advances toward them and had used homophobic language. The center is run by the Tennessee Mental Health Consumers Association and provides housing, support, and Medicaid services for people with mental illnesses.

“As I heard our members share their experiences, I was stunned” said H.O.P.E. member Toni Whitfield when H.O.P.E. began its campaign. ”This situation with this staff person is out of control including offering one of our members $20 to show him her breasts, telling her and others about the size of his penis, and asking a woman if she wanted to be in a ‘three-way’ with him and his girlfriend.”

“It did not take long before we learned that this was far from an isolated incident. In fact, we think that this is part of a much larger systemic issue in our homeless services network. Folks on the streets call it ‘play to stay,'” said H.O.P.E. organizer Paul Garner.

Last summer, H.O.P.E. members began weekly demonstrations outside the center to raise awareness about Williams’ record of alleged sexual harassment. Each Thursday at noon, members gathered outside the center on Madison, holding signs that read “Play To Stay Is Not Okay” or “Say No To Sexual Harassment.”

H.O.P.E. members took their concerns to the Tennessee Mental Health Consumers Association, and investigations were launched by the Memphis Housing and Community Development office, Tennessee Department of Mental Health, and the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation.

Click here for more of the Flyer‘s coverage on the situation at the Beers Van Gogh Center.

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News

Thinking About Memphis Tiger Football

Frank Murtaugh thinks about Memphis Tiger football every week. This week, his thoughts turn to George O’Leary and the UCF Knights.

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News

Mmmm! Fried Egg Sliders.

Susan Ellis writes about the delights of the Slider Inn’s fried egg sliders and other tasty items at Hungry Memphis blog.

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Sports Tiger Blue

Three Thoughts on Tiger Football

• Let’s stop measuring the strength of the Memphis program relative to its neighbors in the SEC. (Remember, the Tigers have gone 2-25 against NFL Lite since beating Tennessee in that “program-changing” upset . . . 17 years ago.) If we’re trying to establish where Memphis might go, how prominent the Tigers might become on the college football landscape, we need to look at this week’s opponent at the Liberty Bowl. George O’Leary’s UCF Knights are the gold standard. Said Memphis coach Justin Fuente at his Monday press conference, “They’re fundamentally sound and they play hard, smart and tough. You very rarely see them hurt themselves or see them make silly mistakes.”

George O’Leary

O’Leary took over the program in 2004, only its ninth in Division I. And UCF stunk up the place (0-11) for exactly one season. In 2005 — playing in Conference USA for the first time, which helps — UCF went 8-5 and played in its first bowl game (a loss to Nevada in the Hawaii Bowl). The Knights have since had three 10-win seasons, played in the C-USA championship game four times (winning twice), and played in four more bowl games (they’re 1-1 in the AutoZone Liberty Bowl). This year they’ve already beaten Penn State and made South Carolina sweat considerably. With Louisville leaving the American next season, UCF will be the face of this new football conference. The Tigers’ annual meeting with this team is a new and valuable litmus test for a program seeking relevance.

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Among several promising sights in the Tigers’ win over Arkansas State two weeks ago, one stood out: the pass rush. Led by junior end Martin Ifedi (2.5 sacks, 4.5 tackles for loss), the Tigers tied a program record with seven sacks, all but grounding the Red Wolves’ passing game. Despite playing only three games, Memphis leads the American Athletic Conference with 13 sacks for the season (the rest of the league has played four games each). Compare this total with 29 in 12 games last season, and you have the kind of trend that could impact a won-lost record. Andre Arnold holds the program’s single-season record for sacks with 13 (in 2000). Ifedi (5.5 through three games) could reach that mark by Halloween.

• Entering the season, Fuente emphasized that this year’s team has the kind of depth that will allow the coaching staff to make choices when it comes to attacking an opponent. There are multiple weapons along the defensive line (five players were in on the seven sacks against ASU) and, after what we saw two weeks ago, there may be a threatening tandem of Tiger tailbacks. Senior Brandon Hayes is the top returning rusher (576 yards in 2012), so his 114 yards — and 6.3 average on 18 carries — was pleasant, but can’t be called a surprise. But freshman Marquis Warford? Who had the diminutive Texan (he stands 5’8”) averaging 15.7 yards on 11 carries in his third college game? No way do these kind of numbers repeat themselves Saturday against UCF. But if the Tigers’ current version of Thunder & Lightning (my buddy Greg Gaston prefers to keep it local and call them “Hustle & Flow”) can find holes through a still-evolving Tiger offensive line, Memphis can control the clock to a degree, and limit the chances Knight quarterback Blake Bortles has to light up the scoreboard.

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Fly On The Wall Blog Opinion

Local Man Driven to Brink of Insanity Trying to Impress Out-of-Town Parents with Memphis BBQ.

Cozy? Cramped is more like it.

  • Cozy? Cramped is more like it.

Drowning his sorrows over a to-go order of BBQ Nachos, John Arlington, 32 of Downtown Memphis, sighed profusely as he described the problematic first-time visit to Memphis by his parents, Stan and Sharon Arlington of Flagstaff, Arizona.

“I had the agenda set in stone,” said John showing a Google map on his sauce-smeared iPad with pinpoints of BBQ destinations. “They were going to have a tour de force of the finest BBQ ever made. Cozy Corner, Payne’s, Central, I thought they’d love it. Boy, was I wrong.”

John’s culinary plans first hit a bump in the road during his parents initial arrival Friday afternoon. “They pulled up to the house and my dad gets out of the car holding a bag from Burger King” He explained. “Then dad goes on and on about how tasty the Memphis BBQ Pulled Pork Sandwich was. I was like are you fucking serious?”

It only went downhill from there. After complaints of the appearance and “cultural surroundings” as Sharon Arlington put it, many BBQ restaurants were vetoed by John’s parents in lieu of suggestions like P.F. Chang’s, Applebee’s, or “maybe a nice looking Shoney’s.”

Dinner the previous evening was eventually decided to be a Memphis BBQ Chicken Pizza delivered by Domino’s since Sharon had a coupon that was about to expire.

“John tried taking us to all these crazy places,” said Stan Arlington. “Randy’s Cue I think was the name of it, was in some spooky alleyway downtown, and Sharon almost got hit by a bicycler in front of the BBQ Shop place.”

“I liked the ones with the drive-thru like the Porky’s on Popular Street [sic],” noted Sharon Arlington. “It’s so much easier but the sandwiches are just way too big. I usually just eat half a McRib. You should do a story on that so people know when they are for sale again.”

“Never again,” expressed John as he tried to repair his damaged passenger door lock on his car from what he says was due to excessive use by his mother during the visit. His parents then asked if he wanted one of their Swanson Hungry Man Riblet Dinners they were preparing, causing John to dash off in a huff.

“Ever try this stuff? It’s pretty darn good,” claimed Stan.

Edward Valibus is a distinguished archduke of Lithuania currently residing in Memphis, TN. He spends his days frittering away his wealth making independent cinema with his production team Corduroy Wednesday. He holds the current world record for eating the most pudding cups in one hour and is a special contributor to Fly on the Wall

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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Fried Egg Sliders at Slider Inn

A recently departed colleague had a list of dishes she wanted to eat before she left town. One was the Slider Inn‘s lobster roll, with its wonderful brioche-like bun.

This isn’t about that (and sorry, catsmeow, it’s not about the government shutdown, either).

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This is about that fine trio of fried egg sliders ($6.99). Nothing fancy here but good — a perfectly fried egg, American cheese, tomato, lettuce, spicy mayo.

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News

Best of Memphis Video Recap

Did you miss the Best of Memphis party at Imperial Lanes last week? Or did you have one too many Smirnoff Honey Legs Martinis and forget part of the night? Either way, here’s a video recap of the party.

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News

Tree Form Dancing

Chris Davis reports on a group of Memphis dancers who are paying homage to certain trees in Greenbelt Park.

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News News Blog

Best of Memphis Party Video!

Yesterday, we shared our favorite shots by photographer Don Perry from the Best of Memphis party, which was held at Imperial Lanes last week. Today, we continue the theme of rubbing our fabulous party fun in your faces with this video by Edward Valibus. The music is from the Mighty Souls Brass Band, which closed out the night with a lively dance party inside the bowling alley.

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Intermission Impossible Theater

Be a Tree: Memphis dancers get back to nature.

A tree named Epiphany

  • A tree named Epiphany

There is a famous quotation variously credited to Martin Mull, Laurie Anderson, Steve Martin, Frank Zappa, Elvis Costello, Miles Davis, George Carlin, and a slew of other creative wits, but predating the lot of them: “Writing about music is like dancing about architecture.” The line is generally invoked to discredit music critics, but it’s really dancers who take the hardest hit. What’s wrong with dancing about architecture? Why not respond sonically, poetically, or physically to the landscape, manmade or natural? It’s a question a group of local dancers are asking as they prepare to perform “Trees: Dances and Odes for Tall Leafy Friends.”

“Trees,” is a series of short environmental works inspired by specific trees in Greenbelt Park on the banks of the Mississippi River. Contributing artists including Robin Salant, Anne J. Froning, Bethany Bak, Marianne Bell, Wayne M. Smith, and Sarah Ledbetter will use installation, improvisation, tap dance, storytelling, and a variety of mixed media to consider the life, shape, motion and sounds of trees.

Among the trees...

  • Among the trees…

Director Sarah Ledbetter has described “Trees” as “an irreverent love letter,” although it was difficult to find much irreverence in a recent “open studio” work through of the piece. Even the most humorous work, which finds a group of tap dancing beatniks reciting sincere poetry, is infused with good old fashioned capital-R Romanticism.

“Trees” is a free event taking place Saturday, October 5 and Sunday, October 6 at 5:30 p.m. at the Mississippi Greenbelt Park on Mud Island.Attendees should park at the lot approximately 1 mile north of the Willis Ave (Harbor Town) bridge, where they will receive a program and beverages.