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Sports Tiger Blue

NCAA 2nd round: Tigers 71, George Washington 66

Eight days after an ugly loss at FedExForum staggered Memphis Tiger fans far and wide, the U of M beat George Washington in the second round of the NCAA tournament. The Tigers led the Colonials start to finish, but clinched the victory only when GW’s Maurice Creek missed a three-point attempt — his team down three — with just under three seconds to play. (Michael Dixon was fouled and hit a pair of free throws for the final margin.) Memphis advances to play the winner of tonight’s second game in Raleigh, likely the East region’s top seed, Virginia. (Coastal Carolina is the 16-seed offered up to the Cavaliers.)

Josh Pastner

Tiger senior Chris Crawford buried three three-pointers in the game’s first eight minutes, as many as he’d hit in four previous NCAA tournament games. They were the only shots the Memphis native would hit, missing nine others but still scoring a career-high in tournament play (9 points). Fellow Memphian Joe Jackson scored 15 (also a tournament high) and contributed six assists to help the Tigers improve to 24-9 for the season. Dixon led Memphis with 19 points off the bench, including a trey with less than two minutes left that extended the Tigers’ lead to 67-62. He also hit two critical free throws with 9.6 seconds left.

Memphis led by 10 points with 9:30 to go, but steady play from the Colonials’ Isaiah Armwood (21 points despite four fouls) and Kevin Larsen (16 points) kept GW in the contest.

The outcome tests Tiger coach’s Josh Pastner‘s oft-stated belief that if a team makes three-point shots, it will win. Memphis missed 16 of its 22 attempts from long range, but held on for the victory as the Colonials were even uglier from beyond the arc (2 for 12). The Tigers shot 49 percent for the game compared with 45 percent for 9th-seeded George Washington. Memphis had 19 assists against 12 turnovers.

Austin Nichols and Shaq Goodwin were efficient inside for the Tigers, combining to hit seven of 10 shots and pull down 11 rebounds.

The win means Memphis will not lose consecutive games all season. It will also give the Tigers a chance for what would be the biggest NCAA tournament upset in the program’s history. UVA went 16-2 in the mighty Atlantic Coast Conference this season, winning the hallowed league’s regular-season and tournament titles. The Cavaliers’ frenetic motion offense is sure to test a Tiger team that goes only eight deep in its rotation.

The 2013-14 Tigers have handled the role of underdog well, against Oklahoma State in the Old Spice Classic, and twice against the reigning national champions. They’ll need another big upset to reach the program’s first Sweet 16 since 2009.

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News

MSO Big Band Takes on The Big Easy

Alexandra Pusateri has the word on the Memphis Symphony’s New Orleans Jazz Concert, Saturday.

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News News Blog

City Moving Forward With More Green Lanes, Cycling Campaigns

The first green lane in Memphis at Bellevue Boulevard and Cleveland Avenue.

  • Bianca Phillips
  • The first green lane in Memphis at Bellevue Boulevard and Cleveland Avenue.

The City of Memphis is rolling forward with its bike-focused efforts as green lane projects have been announced throughout the city and two new cycling campaigns are underway.

Green lanes, named for their famous green paint rather than environmental impact, are a generic term for types of protected bicycle lanes where there is a buffer between moving bikes and moving cars.

“That buffer area can take different shapes and forms,” said Kyle Wagenschutz, the bicycle/pedestrian coordinator for the city. “It could be that you paint the buffer area in the roadway. It could be that you use parked cars as the buffer area, so instead of having the parked cars against the curb, they would be a little off the curb and the bikes would be against the curb. That wall of parked cars creates the buffer.”

The city’s first green lane was built last year on Overton Park Avenue between Cleveland Avenue and Bellevue Boulevard, the same year Mayor Wharton committed to building 15 miles of bike lanes. The city is in the process of solidifying that goal: 22 miles worth of lanes have been identified and funded. Eighty percent of the total project costs will be funded through federal grants, with the city having to match the remaining 20 percent.

Perception of safety is important to get more people riding bikes, Wagenschutz said, and green lanes help soothe concerns. According to the city, the number of people cycling has doubled over the past three years and the accident rate for bicyclists, the number of accidents per person, has decreased 32 percent. With those statistics, the highest-used bicycling facilities in the city are ones that are separated from moving cars like the Shelby Farms Greenline and the Wolf River Greenway.

“The Wolf River Greenway, on a weekend, will see 2,000 people a day using it. On that same gorgeous beautiful day, we’re unlikely to see that same usage on Madison Avenue,” Wagenschutz said. “It’s because the Wolf River Greenway, in addition to being aesthetically pleasing to look at, provides a level of comfort.”

Ideas for the green lanes and bicycle-centric designs come from countries in Northern and Western Europe like Denmark and the Netherlands — both of which have a large cycling population.

“We’re taking inspiration from how they designed their roadways in those countries and importing it back to America, adapting it for the culture, and adapting it for the design that’s prevalent here in the U.S.,” Wagenschutz said. “[They] have sort of mastered the art of design for roadways in such a way that it’s created these kinds of spaces for bicyclists and cars to operate independently of one another.”

The city has also launched the Get There Together campaign to put the focus on people, rather than choice of transit, to try and change the mindsets of how people travel within Memphis.

“This new way of thinking embraces the mutual obligation we each have to each other to make sure we’re attentive, conscientious, and respectful to one another, regardless of how we have chosen to get around,” the website reads.

Wagenschutz has also been working on a month-long project for the city called the 30-Day Car-Free Challenge, where for the month of April, Memphians can sign up to change their mode of transportation, even for a day, and be entered into contests for prizes. More information about both campaigns, and all bicycling projects, is available at http://bikepedmemphis.com.

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Art Exhibit M

Esther Ruiz’ “Cerebral Settings” Friday at Glitch

Don’t miss “Cerebral Settings” tonight from 6 to 11 p.m. at GLITCH (2180 Cowden).

Brooklyn-based sculptor Esther Ruiz will present a series of “imagined landscapes” inspired by “space operas, pop culture, geometry, and the setting sun.” Her landscapes — miniature geometric line drawings and brightly colored plexiglass tableaus — are backed up by a series of star-scape murals by painter (and GLITCH founder) Adam Farmer, as well as soundscapes by musician Todd Chappell.

When I stopped by GLITCH earlier this week, Farmer and Ruiz were busy figuring out where to plug in a yellow neon orb (Ruiz, laughing: “I’m not sure if this sculpture is finished”) and how exactly the guest book — an old legal pad — should be attached to one of the walls. The remnants of last month’s show by digital artist Lance Turner were mostly concealed beneath the more minimal (“cerebral”) current display. Painted blue cardboard, left over from Tyler Hildebrand’s November installation served as a light-blocker for windows.

Rupee

  • Rupee

Not Lost

  • Not Lost

Ruiz is a Rhodes graduate and Houston native who has made her mark in New York upstart galleries such Brooklyn Wayfarers and Airplane Gallery. She has also shown locally at David Lusk. Her strange, compact figurations make reference to digital odysseys and sand gardens, Los Angeles swimming pools and futuristic fictions. They bring out a clean, meditative aspect in the post-psychedelic GLITCH space.

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Sing All Kinds We Recommend

Buh-Buh Basketball: GO TIGERS!!!!

Here’s Jack Oblivian’s cover of Bill Hickock and B.B. Cunningham’s best sports song ever. GO TIGERS!

Buh-Buh Basketball: GO TIGERS!!!!

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Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Malco Ridgeway To Host Wine Tasting

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Tonight, from 6 to 8 p.m., there will be a Spring Fling Wine Tasting at the Malco Ridgeway Cinema Grill. The event coincides with the opening day of Wes Anderson’s latest film The Grand Budapest Hotel.

The wines for the tasting include 19 Crimes, Hob Nob Pinot Noir, Mersoleil unoaked Chardonney, Ca’Montini Pinot Grigio, Friexenet sparkling wine, and more.

According to Malco rep Karen Scott, the Malco Ridgeway and the Grand Budapest Hotel have one thing in common — a lobby with a “quirky feel.”

“Plus,” according to Scott, “mustaches play a prominent role in the film and attendees will likely see A LOT of them at the event.”

Tickets to the Spring Fling Wine Tasting are $10. Admission to films and concessions not included. Attendees must be 21 and have ID.

FYI, Flyer film reviewer Greg Akers loved The Grand Budapest Hotel.

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Calling the Bluff Music

Local Crime Stoppers Director Applauds Miami Official For Eating Tipster’s Info

Richard Masten, Miami-Dade County Crime Stoppers director, eats tipsters information in court

  • youtube.com
  • Richard Masten, Miami-Dade County Crime Stoppers director, eats tipster’s information in court

Miami-Dade County Crime Stoppers Executive Director Richard Masten made national headlines for eating a wad of paper containing information from an anonymous tipster during court last week.

On Friday, March 14th, Masten was ordered by Miami Judge Victoria Brennan to provide information that the local division of Crime Stoppers received regarding a cocaine possession case to a defense attorney. The attorney didn’t want to know the tipster’s identity but simply the information the person provided in relation to the case, according to CBS Miami.

Masten, however, refused to turn the paper over and instead chewed it up. He was held in contempt of court, arrested, and fined for the action. He initially faced a maximum penalty of two years in jail for the offense but received a lighter sentence yesterday (March 20th) of probation. He has also been ordered to write a report on anonymous tip laws.

Masten said he did the act to limit the chances of the tipster’s identity being publicized. He also sought to protect the integrity of Crime Stoppers, an organization that has divisions across the globe, and guarantees tipsters anonymity when they provide information.

The abnormal occurrence made it on the radar of Buddy Chapman, the executive director for Crime Stoppers of Memphis and Shelby County. Chapman said he doesn’t think Masten’s actions were irrational.

“I think he was trying to make a point,” Chapman said. “I’m assuming that he didn’t have anything on that paper that would have identified the caller. I say that that information on the case. I think it’s ridiculous that we’re asked to provide it. I think it’s a fishing expedition on the part of the defense attorneys. I don’t have any real big heartburn about providing the time and date the call came in, nor I do I think that’s anything that I’d have to eat, but I do think he was probably making a point, and I do applaud him for that.”

Chapman said members of the local Crime Stoppers staff are frequently subpoenaed to court but are only able to divulge the time and date they received a tip and what the tip provider said.

“I understand that defense attorneys have got to mount the best defense for their crime, but if you really think about it, a tip is not proof of anything,” Chapman said. “It’s simply information passed on, which then has to be investigated and verified to be of any use for anything. It really gives police a starting point in most cases.”

Check out my cover story on the local Crime Stoppers division here.

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Style Sessions We Recommend

Style Session with Chalsie Petteway

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In the casual interior of downtown’s Café Keough, you find traditional café chairs and a bountiful supply of Lorina French lemonade. And, in this case, it would be rather hard to exclude the uniform-free barista Chalsie Petteway among the restaurant’s charming details. Laden with layers of beads, large dangling earrings, and a flowing floral top, Chalsie brings both style and comfort together in an authentic way that matches Cafe Keough’s ambience.

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Chalsie’s typical look is “a combo of the ’70s and ’90s, and running late!”

“I am always rushing, so I grab the first thing that I see, even if it doesn’t match, and if patterns clash, so what?” she says. A believer of style as self-expression, Chalsie even prioritizes comfort as the aesthetic. “Wear what makes YOU comfortable and it will look 10 times better.”

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Outfit Details
Cream top – Vince Camuto. Green pants, scarf, floral top, shoes, and necklace – Urban Outfitters. Earrings- New Orleans boutique. Italian Leather Purse – Patricia Nash.

Special thanks to Café Keough, this Style Sessions’ shoot location.

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News

Comeback? We Never Went Anywhere.

Bob Nelson takes issue with the “Memphis – The Come Back” campaign.

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Sing All Kinds We Recommend

Ben Gaines @ Poplar Lounge Saturday

Ben Gaines @ Poplar Lounge Saturday