Oct. 27 Germantown Weekly

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Tuesday, October 27, 2015

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HONORING A FALLEN FRIEND MPD oicers, family pay respects and remember the life of Terence Olridge. Page 2

Germantown Weekly OLYMPICS

U.S.A. Women Boxing Trials Trials held at Cook Convention Center By Pete Wickham Special to The Weekly

Bailey Station students dressed up in wacky outits in celebration of the school’s 10th birthday. The day included games and other fun activities.

SCHOOLS

Happy birthday! Bailey Station celebrates a decade of learning

By Kim Tunnell Special to the Weekly

B

ailey Station Elementary recently celebrated its 10 year anniversary in a big way. The event was held on a beautiful Saturday afternoon on the school’s grounds. BSE families, faculty and staf, past and present, were invited to enjoy a carnival atmosphere. See BAILEY, 2

PHOTOS BY ERIN REAGAN/SPECIAL TO THE WEEKLY

Lydia Pearson enjoys the Hula Hoop contest during the birthday bash.

Inside the Edition

THEATER

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‘Frankenstein 1930’ comes alive at ECS

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inate some of the gore of the story, while playing up the eerie elements,” said Becky Caspersen. “This is deinitely a show that will play well to most audiences.” In the production, senior Grayson Hill plays the eccentric Victor Frankenstein and classmate Matt McCalla plays the Creature. McCalla has acted in several ECS productions, but is very much enjoying his current role. “From the time that Frankenstein 1930 was announced, I knew I wanted to be the monster of Frankenstein,” said McCalla. “The Creature has the strength of a full grown

By Mylissa Horrocks Special to The Weekly

WHAT’S HAPPENING Whether you’re looking for a date-night idea or entertainment for the kids, check out our local event listings. CALENDAR, 19 © Copyright 2015

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The Commercial Appeal

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Evangelical Christian School drama department’s newest play is “Frankenstein 1930” and the inal two shows will be Thursday and Saturday at 7 p.m. on the ECS Macon Campus. Evangelical Christian School director Becky Caspersen has reworked the popular play to be lit in sepia to recall the 1931 ilm that memorialized the story. “We’ve worked to elim-

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ECS’ Grayson Hill plays the role of Viktor Frankenstein and Cole Jackson plays Gorgo in the school’s production of “Frankenstein 1930.”

man, but a developing mind. He’s not like anything else, he doesn’t process things, he acts upon instincts and emotions. When watching the play, you’ll see a progression of his understanding of things, he begins to think, to ponder his very exis-

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tence, it’s a thrill to watch. I love every second that I get to portray the Creature, it’s exhilarating.” Tickets to ECS’s Frankenstein 1930 are $10 and may be purchased at ecseagles.com/arts. Mylissa Horrocks is with ECS.

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More than 400 boxers are busy chasing the Olympic dream in Memphis this week. For Claressa Shields and Marlen Esparza it’s “Dream Times Two.” The U.S. Olympic Women’s Boxing Trials, and the inal qualiier for the Men’s Olympic Trials in Reno later this year, will run through Friday at Cook Convention Center, with the inals set for Saturday evening at 7 p.m. in the Cannon Center. At stake are the three women’s berths on the U.S. squad that will compete in the Summer Olympics next year in Rio de Janeiro. The men are competing for the inal 20 spots — two in 10 diferent weight classes — in the men’s trials Dec. 7-12. Shields, a middleweight, and featherweight Esparza are seeking their second bits of Olympic hardware. Shields is seeking to become the irst two-time gold medal winner in U.S. Boxing history. Esparza won the bronze in London. Both won gold at the last fall’s World Boxing Championships in South Korea, and give USA Boxing executive director Mike Martino cause to believe that medals in all three women’s weight categories are a real possibility. Among the men’s entries are a pair of Memphis area light welterweights, Macro Hall and Adam Young. This is the second time that Prize Fight Boxing has brought an Olympic Trials to the Mid-South. The Men’s Trials were held in Tunica prior to the 2004 Athens Olympics.

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In the News emPloyment

U of m economist: ‘We need a lot more jobs’ Sees slowing of jobless rate decline By Kevin McKenzie mckenzie@commercialappeal.com 901-529-2348

The unemployment rate in Greater Memphis for September was 6.4 percent, government data showed on Thursday, better than the 7.6 percent a year ago and the best for the month since 2007, be-

fore the Great Recession. Still, University of Memphis labor economist John Gnuschke, director of the Sparks Bureau of Business and Economic Research, keeps coming back to one word: jobs. Whether it’s the Memphis metro-area labor force that has more than 30,000 fewer people in it than it did four years ago, or encounters with the criminal justice system that haunt people looking for work, Gnuschke focuses on jobs.

“We need a lot more jobs, and I keep coming back to that,” he said. “We still need a lot more jobs.” Here, edited for brevity, are excerpts from a conversation with Gnuschke earlier this week about the Greater Memphis employment picture.

UNEMPLOYMENT RATE We’re doing better, but the unemployment rate falls for a couple of reasons. It falls because people drop out of the labor force. And so that’s happening,

and then it falls because some jobs are being created, employers are doing more hiring, the economy is looking stronger. So as long as that continues, that unemployment rate is good and it should continue to fall. But it’s nearing the point at which we can’t expect it to continue to fall as rapidly.

LABOR FORCE The only way we’re going to get people to participate in the labor force is to, in fact, create

jobs. If there are a lot of jobs out there, people will go seek them. Memphis is famous for that. If you have a job opening and you say you’re going to list it and you’re going to have a job fair Monday morning, there will be a line of people around your facility.

MORE JOBS A lot more jobs puts pressure on wages as employers, of course, pay more to get better employees, and they will.

In brief

in memoriam

G E R M A N T OW N

Pedestrian struck, dies car accident

PHOTOS BY MIKE BROWN/THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL

Memphis Police Director Toney Armstrong and other MPD oicers await the casket of Oicer Terence Olridge at First Baptist Broad on Oct. 19. Olridge was slain during a dispute with a neighbor Oct. 11. He was remembered as a man who realized his dream of being a Memphis police oicer.

‘Terence is watching’ Family and friends remember slain memphis oicer

BAILEY from 1 Fifth graders showed of their vocal skills with musical entertainment. Collierville Mayor Stan Joyner spoke and presented a proclamation to current principal Cindy Tesreau and founding principal Sherry Roper. Attendees enjoyed bounce houses, a teacher dunk tank, a cake walk, a photo booth, a football throw, a lollipop pull, bowling, a rubber duck pull, Hula Hoop contests, a softball throw and a win- a-ish toss, as well

yojones@desotoappeal.com 901-333-2014

F

irst Baptist Church Broad was the site of two signiicant moments in Oicer Terence Olridge’s journey:

as many other activities. Having this much fun worked up an appetite, so food trucks were also on hand to oblige hungry patrons. In addition to the celebration, Bailey Station’s PTA and staf worked to complete a 10 Year Commemorative Tile Wall within the school. Students and staf created self-portraits, which in turn were made into ceramic tiles. This display is a beautiful celebration to all who enter the building. Kim Tunnell is with Bailey Station Elementary School.

The Commercial Appeal

Federal case for killed cop continued

By Yolanda Jones

In February 2015, he was sworn in as a Memphis police oicer at the church. On Oct. 19, family and friends gathered at the Binghamton church to attend his funeral. “On the night we gathered to celebrate Terence’s graduation from the Memphis Police academy, everyone was all smiles and Terence looked at me as if to say, ‘I told you I was going to be here,’” said Memphis Police Director Toney Armstrong. “We had no way of knowing then that we would be here today to celebrate Terence’s life.” Olridge, an of-duty Memphis police oicer, was shot and killed last week by his neighbor during a dispute. Lorenzo Clark, 36, was arrested on state and federal weapons charges in connection with the shooting, but police have said there is not enough evidence to charge Clark with murder in Olridge’s death. Clark has been charged with being a felon in possession of a handgun. Police are continuing to investigate the shooting. During the noon service at-

A pedestrian struck in an early Thursday morning accident on Poplar in Germantown died a short time later at the Regional Medical Center, authorities in the suburb said. The victim — Freddie Lee Phillips, 59, of Memphis — was apparently crossing Poplar from north to south on his way to work at the West Street Diner. He worked at the restaurant about eight years as a dishwasher. Germantown police said Phillips was struck by an eastbound car on Poplar just west of Germantown Road about 6:15 a.m. Oicials said there were no indications of drugs or speeding contributing to the accident, and no charges against the driver are expected. Insp. Lee Covey, head of the Germantown police uniform patrol division, said the driver of the car was a nursing student on his way to work. A witness, according to Covey, was behind the car that struck Phillips. The witness said both cars were traveling under 40 mph and the victim “just appeared” all of a sudden.

Oicer Kyle Craig, Terence Olridge’s partner, comforts Olridge’s iancee, Shaleda Rozier. Craig described his partner as a “humble” man who loved his family and job.

tended by hundreds, Olridge was remembered as a father, a son and a man who went after his dream of becoming a Memphis police oicer. “Terence was locked in and focused,” Armstrong told the audience. “He was working a job that he had dreamed of. Last Sunday, he was in the ight for his life when the Lord said, ‘Stop ighting. It is time.’ ” Olridge, 31, is the fourth Memphis police oicer killed in the last four years in the city. Three months ago, Oicer Sean Bolton was shot and killed during a traic stop while on duty. Armstrong said that Olridge was also the second member of his 118th graduating class to die this year. “Stay strong,” Armstrong said

to the members of the class that attended Olridge’s funeral. “Terence is watching and telling you to take care of business.” Oicer Kyle Craig described his partner as a “humble” man who loved his family, job and always had a good attitude. “I asked him what the ‘T’ stood for in his name and he told me ‘terriic,’ so that’s what I started calling him,” Craig said. Olridge leaves behind a 10-month-old daughter from a previous relationship. His iancée, Shaleda Rozier, is four months’ pregnant with his second child. Before his lag-draped casket was closed, she placed an ultrasound picture of their unborn child on Olridge’s chest.

The federal case was continued Thursday for Lorenzo Clark, 36, who is charged with state and federal gun violations in connection with the Oct. 11 fatal shooting of offduty Memphis police Oficer Terence Olridge in Cordova. His attorneys, Bill Massey and Lorna McCluskey, were granted a continuance until Wednesday. Clark’s mother called out “I love you son” and his cousin, Barbara Clemons, said she believes he shot the oicer in self defense. McCluskey and Massey said they want time to coordinate due to the dual prosecutions. Katie Fretland

THE

WEEKLY The Commercial Appeal Volume 3, No. 34 The Weekly, a publication of The Commercial Appeal, is delivered free on Tuesdays to select residents throughout Germantown and Collierville.

Mailing address: The Weekly The Commercial Appeal 495 Union Ave. Memphis, TN 38103 To suspend or cancel delivery of The Weekly, call 901-529-2731. THE WEEKLY EXECUTIVE EDITOR

David Boyd • 901-529-2507 boyd@commercialappeal.com CONTENT COORDINATOR

Matt Woo • 901-529-6453 woo@commercialappeal.com THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL PRESIDENT AND PUBLISHER

Attending Bailey Station’s big day is founding principal Sherry Roper (left), Collierville Major Stan Joyner and current Principal Cindy Tesreau.

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In the News GOVERNMENT

Cohen joins call for lower incarceration rates For nonviolent drug ofenders By Richard Locker locker@commercialappeal.com 615-255-4923

U.S. Rep. Steve Cohen added his voice Friday to the growing number of oficials calling for reforms to end the nation’s high rates of incarceration for nonviolent and lower-level drug

ofenders. In a speech to the criminal justice section of the American Bar Association’s fall institute in Washington, Cohen, D-Memphis, also called for the collection of national statistics on the use of deadly force by law enforcement agencies. He said a bill he has introduced called the National Statistics on Deadly Force Transparency Act would give lawmakers and the public “the

numbers we need to measure the problem so we can igure out how best to address it.” A new group comprised of 130 police chiefs, prosecutors and other top law enforcement oicials from across the U.S. issued a report calling for a reduction in incarceration rates for nonviolent ofenders. “I know it will shock none of you when I say that our criminal justice system is broken. For proof, we

need look no further than our nation’s prison population...” Cohen said. Cohen linked the issue to what he called “the failed war on drugs,” including “racially discriminatory sentencing disparities for crack versus powder cocaine” and “the irrational criminalization of mari-

juana.” He said marijuana remains classiied in federal law as a Schedule 1 drug, which is reserved for the most dangerous drugs with no medical. The congressman cited a number of steps Congress and President Barack Obama are considering, in-

cluding the Sentencing Reform and Corrections Act of 2015 introduced earlier this month by a bipartisan coalition of senators. It would reduce mandatory minimums for prior drug ofenses and broaden the ability of judges to tailor sentences on a case-bycase basis.

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va DuVernay admitted to being a little “shaken up,” having just toured the National Civil Rights Museum and stood on the balcony where Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated. But at the museum’s Freedom Award ceremonies at The Cannon Center for the Performing Arts Thursday night, the Oscarnominated director of the movie “Selma” called her initial visit to Memphis “one of the most beautifully organized experiences I’ve ever had.” “You do it really nice here in Memphis,” DuVernay added. The 43-year-old DuVernay, the irst AfricanAmerican female director nominated for an Academy Award for Best Picture, as well as the irst black female director to be nominated for a Golden Globe Award, was one of the three “phenomenal and inspiring individuals,” as host Michael Eric Dyson called them, receiving the annual Freedom Award in a black-tie event at the 2,100-seat Cannon Center. The other honorees were Ruby Bridges-Hall, who as a 6-year-old integrated an all-white school in New Orleans in 1960; and Joan Trumpauer Mulholland, who as a white woman from the South who was ostracized, imprisoned and attacked for her role in lunch-counter sit-ins, voter-registration drives and other eforts during the Civil Rights movement. The ceremony took place against a potent historic backdrop — this year marked the 50th anniversary of the bloody march on Selma, Ala., and the subsequent passage of the Voting Rights Act — but it also came amid surging contemporary issues, such as recent police killings of unarmed African-Amer-

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Ruby Bridges-Hall, who as a 6-year-old integrated a New Orleans school in 1960, gives her remarks after being presented a Freedom Award during the ceremony Thursday night at The Cannon Center for the Performing Arts.

icans, the mass incarceration of black men and continuing racial violence, including the slaying of nine black churchgoers by a white man in Charleston, S.C., in June. “Clearly our job to combat racism is not over,” said museum president Terri Lee Freeman. Bridges-Hall, 61, portrayed in a famous Norman Rockwell painting being escorted to school by federal marshals, told the audience that walking past hateful crowds back then represented “my irst experience with racism.” She said it was something that a child couldn’t understand. “It doesn’t matter to us, as 6-year-old kids, what our friends look like. ... All of our babies, when they come into this world they come with a clean heart and a fresh start on life ...,” Bridges-Hall said. “It’s us — we as adults — we take racism and pass it on to our children.” In her remarks, Mulholland, 74, invoked a message from a poster she saw in Mississippi — a place she least expected to see it. “Y’all means all,” the poster read. “Let’s hold that thought, and go forth and make it a reality,” she said. The ceremony closed after recognizing another participant in the Civil Rights struggle, Rev. Clark Olsen, who traveled to Selma in 1965 after King called upon clergy members to join the march.

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In the News SHELBY FARMS GREENLINE

Funds sought for Perkins connection to greenline By Tom Charlier charlier@commercialappeal.com 901-529-2572

This panel by Memphian Jamond Bullock is one of 73 panels that have been painted by artists on the Wolf River flood wall along the proposed trail for the Chelsea Avenue Greenline.

CHELSEA AVENUE GREENLINE

‘Wine at the Wall’ fundraiser is Friday By Emily Adams Keplinger Special to The Weekly

Come celebrate outdoor art as the Greater Memphis Greenline invites the public to share its community fundraiser, Wine at the Wall, on Friday, from 4-6 p.m. at the corner of Evergreen Street and Marble Avenue. The public is invited to come stroll the North Memphis Chelsea Avenue Greenline and view the latest art installation along a quarter-mile section of the Wolf River lood wall. The installation stands next to an unused railway that the Greater Memphis Greenline wants to transform into a new multiuse trail that will link Midtown to the uptown riverfront. The corridor will include New Chicago and Uptown neighborhoods, as well as the Wolf River Greenway, the Mississippi River Trail, St. Jude’s campus, Rhodes College and other nearby schools. “This project is signiicant to the Memphis community as we are seeking

to build a network across the Greater Memphis area that will put a walking trail or a bike trail within a mile of every Memphian,” said Syd Lerner, executive director of Greater Memphis Greenline. “We are working in collaboration with the city of Memphis and the Chelsea Avenue Greenline is already in development.” The Wine at the Wall event will honor Paul Patterson with the Department of Public Works with the city of Memphis and Karen Golightly of Paint Memphis for making this outdoor artwork project a reality. There will also be a silent auction and live entertainment. “Outdoor art can be a draw, like a magnet, to bring people to an area. We want this art installation to increase foot and bicycle traic for the future Chelsea Avenue Greenline,” explained Lerner. Tickets for Wine at the Wall are available at eventbrite.com/e/wine-at-thewall-tickets-18782575188 or by calling 901-219-1059.

Judging from the rutted path that’s been worn into a steep slope, bicyclists and walkers already are inding their way from the Perkins Road area to the Shelby Farms Greenline. But in a project that’s expected to cost $170,000, the Shelby Farms Park Conservancy and residents of the Avon neighborhood hope to provide safer and better access to the popular multiuse trail, which passes beneath a bridge on Perkins. They’re raising funds to build an Americans with Disabilities Act-compliant trail and ramps connecting Perkins and Princeton roads with the greenline. The project received a major boost earlier this month thanks to a decision by Shelby County Commissioner Heidi Shafer, who represents the area. Each commissioner is allocated $100,000 to contribute to nonproit groups or toward a community enhancement project, and Shafer, citing broad neighborhood support, agreed to devote her entire allotment to the greenline access initiative. “That was a huge, huge step in the right direction,” said Cameron Mann, manager of development and communications for the conservancy, the nonproit group that oversees the greenline and Shelby Farms Park. In addition to that sum, the conservancy also has raised a few thousand dollars through a website (shelbyfarmspark.org/ perkins) and its Facebook page, said Betsy Peterson,

active learning

JIM WEBER/THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL

ABOVE: A bicyclist passes under the Perkins Ave bridge on the Shelby Farms Greenline. The conservancy and residents of the Avon neighborhood are raising funds for an access ramp at Perkins which is just a dirt track through the woods presently. LEFT: Rendering of Perkins Access to Shelby Farms Park Greenline.

coordinator for development and communications. The group also has launched a crowdsourcing efort through IOBY (In Our Back Yard), a platform for supporting community projects. But they’re still more than $65,000 short of the goal for the project. Residents of the Avon neighborhood, which is bounded by Perkins, Mendenhall, Walnut Grove and the greenline corridor, irst sought a connection when the greenline was built in 2010, going so far as to raise some money for initial rendering. But

it wasn’t until 2013, when the conservancy received a Mid-South Regional Greenprint subplanning grant, that the irm Ritchie Smith Associates could be hired to design the project. Kevin Raney, a resident of the Avon community, said neighborhood residents now must either negotiate the steep trail or cross one of two busy streets — Perkins or Mendenhall — to get to the greenline. “Really there is no access to the greenline from our neighborhood that doesn’t have some signiicant dangers that go with

it,” Raney said. Peterson said the project is important because it’s within a 2.5-mile gap between access points on the greenline, which currently runs from Binghamton to Shelby Farms and soon will extend farther eastward to Cordova. “The only access to the greenline is on cross streets at grade,” she said. “We’ve never constructed a ramp like this.” Also, the existing “goat path” is steep and not particularly safe, she said. And the more it gets used, the greater the threat of erosion.

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In the News DEVELOPMENT

When the Mississippi River rose to historic levels with a crest just shy of 48 feet in April and May of 2011, it brought headaches and damage, but now it may help bring millions in grant dollars to Shelby County with the second phase of the National Disaster Resilience Competition.

G’town to see new TraVure plan Five-story building would be city’s tallest By Jane Roberts robertsj@commercialappeal.com 901-529-2512

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DISASTER RELIEF

County asks HUD for $70M in disaster resilience competition By Linda A. Moore lmoore@commercialappeal.com 901-529-2702

This lood didn’t bring national television news personalities to Memphis to wade in the rising waters of the Mississippi River. But the looding in April 2011 that afected areas of Millington, Raleigh, Frayser and Southwest Memphis could bring millions of dollars in federal grant money to Shelby County. In the second phase of the National Disaster Resilience Competition, the county will ask the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development for $70.4 million for projects that include reworking a loodway in Millington and the buyout and relocation of homeowners in the Weaver Road area. The request is an attempt to secure some portion of $1 billion in federal funds that allow competing communities to receive grants ranging from $1 million to $500 million. Shelby County was one of 57 communities to apply for the irst phase and one of 40 asked to continue to

the second phase. “This is one of the irst really signiicant investments that the federal government has made in resilience. Most of the dollars go to recovery eforts,” said John Zeanah, administrator of the Memphis-Shelby County Oice of Sustainability. The competition required applicants to detail what has been done since the disaster and the work that could be done with the federal dollars. The 100-plus-page document detailing the county’s plan is available on the county’s website. These targeted areas were looded after high winds and storms on April 4, 25 and 27 sent water from the Wolf and Loosahatchie rivers, as well as from the Nonconnah and South Cypress creeks, into communities, with some areas reaching 100-year flood levels, Zeanah said. The money will help these areas recover and put in place lood resilience infrastructures to prepare for future disasters. “You’re competing based on the quality of

what you’re trying to get accomplished,” said Tom Needham, the county’s public works director. In Millington, that means redeveloping the lood-prone area with softball ields, ishing lakes, campgrounds, boardwalks and other amenities that won’t be harmed by looding every eight or nine years, Needham said. And in Southwest Memphis, in an area where twothirds of the community is made up of empty lots or empty buildings, the plan would relocate residents and create other uses for the vacant land, including community gardens and new trails to connect the area to T.O. Fuller State Park. The residents would be relocated outside the lood zone, but within the community, Needham said. “We’re looking at trying to team up with some folks locally to help develop housing in the area so people don’t leave,” he said. The plan includes the use of software that will help the county predict future looding events, Needham said.

Germantown got its irst look today at a revised $90 million development that would bring in a ivestory oice building — the tallest structure in the city — plus two hotels and a bevy of retail. The suburb’s Smart Code Review Commission walked through changes to the TraVure project, planned for the southeast quadrant of Kirby and Poplar. “We do see the major strides taken by the development team to address the concerns of the planning commission and to mitigate the concerns of residents,” said Cameron Ross, economic and community development director. While neighbors still have unresolved issues with the 10-acre dense development, Ross expects the planning commission will vote on Phases 1, 2 and 3 on Nov. 3. If approved by the commission, construction of the road into the development and other infrastructure elements would begin immediately. In late August, developers Ray Gill and Desai Hotel Group asked for time to redesign the project, largely because it would have required 12 code variations. Planning commission members said that was unprecedented in Germantown and warned that rejection would mean a six-month wait before the plans could be resubmitted. The developer withdrew them.

Revised plans for the TraVure project at Kirby and Poplar in Germantown now require just one code variance, instead of the 12 in the initial plans.

The plan the public will saw calls for one departure from code for the hotel complex, a four-story building at the center of the project that will house a Hilton Garden Inn and Home 2 Suites. In 2013, Germantown worked with property owners in the “western gateway” — the 56 acres along Poplar that form the suburb’s main entry from Memphis — to shape what growth in that small area might look like. Developers who adhere to the rules, for instance, can build ive stories high instead of the two that are permitted in the current zoning. They may also build denser developments. In this case, nearly all of the 10 acres will be developed. Under the old rules, only 30 percent could have been developed. TraVure in French means a “portable bridge for crossing gaps.” “We chose it for several reasons, but the primary reason is TraVure connects the older, conventional Germantown with the developing, urban Germantown of the future,” Gill said. For the landlocked city to grow, it has to capitalize limited open space, growing up and in much denser tracts than typical suburban growth. For developers, the

challenge is creating dense growth that is palatable to neighbors and still within the conines of the code that, for instance, requires buildings to abut streets. The largest problem with TraVure initially was light from the parking garage, which is to be situated to the west of the Nottoway subdivision. Neighbors complained that light from headlights and the structure would be streaming into their bedrooms at all hours of the night. The developers restructured garage walls so headlights on even the highest vehicle will be behind cover. It has also decreased the height of horizontal openings and tucked the building’s light ixtures behind structural elements. Developers have also added 25 feet of landscaping, including a meditation garden, along the border. Now, a total of 50 feet of green space and a new fence will separate Nottoway from TraVure. Residents and elected oicials were both concerned that a separation wall on the Poplar side, originally to be built in phases, could present problems. The plan now includes it in the first phase.

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« Tuesday, October 27, 2015 « 7

In the News The bluegrass band Blue Day played music for the crowd assembled in the Town Square. The band members are Rick Crenshaw, Tony Branham, Ed Richter and Steve Craig.

Joy Sturtevant came all the way from Arkansas to set up a booth to sell jams, jellies, pickles at Dairy Day.

DAIRY DAY IN COLLIERVILLE

Jon Pierson gives his grandson, Jacob Berry, 3, a lesson on the proper way to feed a goat.

Volunteer Merryn Ruthling watches Kathleen Ong-Halleron play a game of ring toss at Collierville’s annual Dairy Day event.

Sid Singh takes aim with a beanbag before lofting it at the target.

Sarah Milner, 2, gets a sticker from Ashley Carver, director of the Morton Museum, during Dairy Day.

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Allie Pina and Sydney Milner make their own crafts at one of the tables on the Town Square.

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In the News RIVERDALE ELEMENTARY

3-D illustrations excite parents School comes to life in schematic drawings By Jane Roberts JIM WEBER/THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL

Traic on Tenn. 385 passes over a closed interchange for the new Interstate 269 east of Collierville, a 4.5-mile stretch of the interstate that will run to Miss. 302 near Byhalia. The road oficially opened last Friday afternoon.

FREEWAY LOOP

SOUTHERN SWING Section of I-269 from Collierville to Mississippi state line now open By Tom Charlier charlier@commercialappeal.com 901-529-2572

The irst leg of a nearly 30-mile, $700 million-plus freeway loop around the southern perimeter of Memphis opened to traic Friday afternoon, Tennessee transportation oicials announced Oct. 19. The project cost $53.8 million, including $42.5 million for the 2.5-mile portion in Tennessee. It is part of the local bypass around Memphis along the planned Interstate 69 route from Canada to Mexico. The entire I-269 project will form a nearly 60-mile horseshoe from Millington to Hernando, Miss. The northern portion — from Millington to Collierville — has been inished, although it remains designated Tenn.

385 pending completion of other components of the loop. The segment opened Friday will be the irst to carry traic along the southern I-269 loop extending south from Collierville to near Byhalia, then swinging westward to Hernando, where it will connect with I-55/69. In all, there are eight I-269 segments in Mississippi that are expected to cost a total of about $665 million, said Jason Scott, public information oicer for the Mississippi Department of Transportation. The other seven segments are all more than 50 percent complete, although no paving has begun. “We’re still doing bridge work, dirt work and drainage,” Scott said. Completion of all the Mississippi segments is expected by fall of 2018.

robertsj@commercialappeal.com 901-529-2512

The expansion at Riverdale Elementary in Germantown has generated its share of furrowed brows. Oct. 21, most of the wrinkles were gone or turned into smiles as the irst schematic drawings of the inside and out tilted and danced in a 3-D spin across an overhead screen. No one clapped, but the nods and grins summed up the mood. “I’m thrilled with everything,” said parent Amy Lipscomb. Long after the school board had moved onto the next agenda item, she and a knot of other parents clustered around A2H architect Stewart Smith, peppering him with questions about hallways and the number of restrooms for each pod of classes. The $12 million expansion, which includes a gym with pulldown bleachers for 500, plus classrooms configured to grade level and subject matter, could be under construction by spring and inished a year later. The expansion will serve as the new front of Riverdale Elementary, which almost from the beginning has functioned with a stack of portable units in the back. Traic will enter of Miller Farms Road, curving past the gym and classroom wings on either side of a boulevard, allowing parents to cut in half the time they spend in line during arrival and de-

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This 3-D schematic shows the interior of the planned addition to Riverdale Elementary School in Germantown.

parture. School bus trafic will wind up the north side and drop students of at a second entrance. The front door will be tucked amid bio-swales, wild grasses planted in rock and gravel to absorb rain runof and reduce mowing and maintenance. The exterior of the classroom wings will be glass, looding the classrooms with natural light. Southern-exposed outside walls will have overhangs to eliminate glare and heat. There will be no heating or cooling units on the rooftop, saving on future roof repairs and 30 percent on heating and cooling expense. The looring will be either an antimicrobial carpet, low pile or an organic tile loor. Neither will require strong chemicals for cleaning. “What I think is really neat is that with the existing building, we have not had the ability to have our music and art classes together in one area. With this, we do,” said principal Joseph Bond. “One feature about the

We wanted our new schools to reflect the feel of this community.” Jason Manuel, Superintendent

art room, there will be a roll-up garage-style door, so the teacher can take the whole class outside to work,” he said. Hallways will be pushed out to the outside glass facade so light streams across them. Lockers will be congregated in common areas, instead of lining corridors. In the interest of space, some classrooms will have movable walls that allow classes to spill out into the sunlit halls. “I love the natural light,” parent Josh Malahy said after the formal presentation. “I like the way they have incorporated some alternative classroom space in either the corridor or outside. I

like the environmental landscaping with the bioswales. It seems functional and not just aesthetic.” Germantown — the school board and community — worked long to arrive at building materials and systems that will be eicient over time, but also speak to the character of the city. “Shelby County built schools out of cinder block and they all looked the same,” said Supt. Jason Manuel. “We wanted our new schools to relect the feel of this community. Some parents would like to see the gym space enlarged to ease crowding for city league teams. Through the summer and early fall, it wasn’t clear what the district would build. Plans were discussed for a new elementary, a gymnasium addition at Houston High and the Riverdale project. In late September, the board approved a $12 million budget for Riverdale, which includes all new furnishings plus $1 million contingency to cover possible overruns.

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ACADEMIC ALL-STARS

Proud Sponsor of Academic All-Stars Congratulates these Memphis-area high school students who have earned the Academic All-Stars Award. Christina Shute | Evangelical Christian School | Foreign Language

Christina, a senior, is a leader and talented Spanish Language student. She holds a 4.56 weighted grade point average and scored 32 on the ACT. She is passionate about learning a second language. She has received the top Spanish student award for Spanish I, II and III. She also has received Gold, Silver and Bronze recognition on the National Spanish Exam. Last spring she participated in a month long immersion study experience in Merida, Mexico. Active in school life, Christina has been a four-year member of the Color Guard and served as Color Guard Captain her junior and senior years. She has participated in the concert band for four years. She is highly involved in the drama department, where she has had roles as an actress, singer or dancer or has been part of the hair and makeup team for many productions. She is a member of the Spanish Club and Student Leadership Institute. Christina volunteers by playing a major role on mission trips to Mexico. She has assisted in an English camp for elementary students, led a vocal group and led Vacation Bible School for youngsters. She also consistently volunteers for Streets Ministries, where she builds relationships through games or tutoring.

Victoria Lwamba | Olive Branch High School | Foreign Language

Victoria, a senior, has a love for foreign languages. She holds a 4.32 weighted grade point average, while taking a course curriculum illed with Advanced Placement, Honors and Dual Enrollment classes. English is not Victoria’s native language, but she has worked diligently to overcome the language barrier. She speaks luent Swahili and English. She wants to learn as many languages as possible and currently is enrolled in her third year of Spanish. She has been inducted into the National Spanish Honor Society. A very active student, Victoria plays volleyball and soccer. She is a member of the National Honor Society, Mu Alpha Theta, Interact, the Cooking Club and the Environmental Club. She constantly volunteers and has worked with the Halloween Carnival, food pantry projects, Habitat for Humanity and various 5K runs. She is a peer tutor and participates for community-based projects including “Trunk or Treat” and Vacation Bible School. Always willing to work hard to accomplish her goals, Victoria has perfect attendance in high school. She is known for being polite and respectful. She goes on mission trips each summer and plans on going to Indiana and Montana next summer.

Will McAtee | Memphis University School | Foreign Language

Will, a senior, has a voracious appetite for anything related to foreign languages, especially French and Latin. He holds a 4.98 weighted grade point average and scored 34 on the ACT. He earned four consecutive Summa Cum Laude Gold Medals with two perfect scores on the National Latin Exam. He has been one of the top scorers at the Tennessee Junior Classical League State Convention each year. His Certamen Team placed irst in Latin I in 2012, irst in Latin II in 2013 and second in Advanced Latin in 2014 and 2015. He served as National Junior Classical League Senator, organizing tournaments and presentations. In addition to Latin, Will added Honors French I, and Honors Accelerated French II and III to his class schedule. Having completed eight AP courses, eight Honors courses and 10 Honors Accelerated classes with top marks, Will has been inducted into the Cum Laude Society, National Honor Society, Mu Alpha Theta. National History Honor Society and French and Latin Honor Societies. He is a member of the Interfaith Club and a school ambassador. He is a Heartbeat mentor, advocating to lower school students the importance of making healthy choices A four year member of the soccer team, Will currently serves as goalie.

Erwin Purnell | Overton High School | Foreign Language

Erwin, a senior, is a top student and president of the school’s Spanish Club. He has completed three years of Honors Spanish and helps translate for the many Spanish native speakers who enroll at Overton. His standardized test scores indicated that he is one tier away from the level of a native speaker himself. He has taken a dificult schedule of classes, ranks sixth in his class and maintains a 4.31 weighted grade point average. He earned the former Memphis City Schools William H. Sweet Award for Academic Excellence. A multi-talented student, Erwin plays cello, piano, organ and string bass. He also is a vocalist and conducts orchestras and choirs. He established his own orchestra ensemble in 2013, the Memphis Orchestra Ensemble. He has received awards for All-West and All-State. He has been inducted into the National Honor Society and was selected for REACH Memphis, where he attended Lipscomb University’s Law Camp. He is vice-president of the Interact Club and a member of the Key Club and the Facing History as Ourselves Student Leadership Group. Hardworking and dedicated, Erwin volunteers with UNICEF, St. Jude Children’s Research Center, Le Bonheur Children’s Hospital and the Make-a-Wish Foundation.

Lea Makhloufi | Germantown High School | Foreign Language

Lea, a senior, will complete the dificult International Baccalaureate program this spring. She holds a 4.61 weighted grade point average and scored 33 on the ACT. Lea has an amazing facility for foreign languages, speaking luently in French and Spanish. She also speaks Arabic and gives bilingual tours of the school to Spanish-speaking parents. Through a U.S. Department of State National Security Language Initiative for Youth scholarship, Lea traveled to Oman for two months, where she lived with an Arabic family and learned the language. Ranked 12th out of 507 seniors, Lea was selected for the Governor’s School for International Studies. While there, she completed two classes, participated in the Model UN and studied the Bengali language. Lea created a peer-to-peer tutoring program in her school. She is a member of the National Honor Society, National Spanish Honor Society (President), National Science Honor Society and the National Beta Club. She has been named a National Merit Semiinalist. She received the French Student of the Year award last year. In addition, Lea was selected for the American Legion Volunteer Girls State Program. She is co-president of the school’s Spirit Squad and serves as a school ambassador.

Kira Tucker | Central High School | Foreign Language

Kira, a senior, is an outstanding student who plans to major in political science and international studies. She holds a 4.77 weighted grade point average and scored 34 on the ACT. She has exhausted every level of Russian offered in the district. When she learned Honors Russian I so quickly, her teacher allowed her to skip Honors Russian II and advance to Honors Russian III. She completed Honors Russian IV last year. To keep up with her Russian verbal skills, Kira meets regularly with her Russian teacher, usually during lunch periods. She won Gold Medals on two different levels in Russian Essay Writing competitions. Driven to achieve her goals, Kira has chosen a rigorous course of study. By year’s end, she will have challenged herself with 12 Advanced Placement classes, plus Dual Enrollment Fiction Writing. She took Linguistics last summer at the Summer Scholars Program offered by Washington University. She was accepted into the Governor’s School for International Studies and was an American student ambassador to Warsaw, Poland, as part of the Memphis in May exchange program. Kira has been named a National Merit Semiinalist and an AP Scholar with Distinction. She also founded and served as captain of the Wordsmith Writing Team.

Zoe Liles | Covington High School | Foreign Language

Zoe, a senior, is an excellent student, who excels in the study of the Spanish language. She has taken Spanish I, II and III, earning top grades in every class. She has been inducted into the National Spanish Honor Society, where she served as secretary. Zoe has taken her Spanish skills outside the classroom and applied them in real life. She traveled to Spain in June 2015 with nine of her peers. She also traveled to Costa Rica and Nicaragua on mission trips with her youth group. While there, she used her Spanish language abilities to communicate with native speakers. Currently ranked seventh in her senior class, Zoe has been tapped as a member of the National Honor Society. She has participated in and won Spanish competitions in several categories. She has been selected for the All-Northwest, All-State and Quad state Honor choirs. She is secretary of the National Science Honor Society and a member of the Music Honor Society. She participates with the Student Council and HOSA (Health Occupations Students of America). An active volunteer, Zoe works with the homeless, food drives, clothing drives and the Boys and Girls Clubs.

For more information, call or email Mary Lou Brown, Community Relations Manager for The Commercial Appeal at 901-529-2508 or mary.brown@commercialappeal.com

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Community EDUCATION

Shelby County graduation rate on the rise Even without suburban schools By Jennifer Pignolet pignolet@commercialappeal.com 901-529-2372

Despite losing ive suburban high schools to the formation of the municipal districts, Shelby County Schools’ on-time graduation rate ticked upward last year. The rate increased from 74.6 percent to 75 percent. The average district ACT score dropped, however, from 17.7 to 16.9. The state released the numbers Thursday as part of annual report card data. Statewide, the graduation rate also increased, from 87.2 percent to 87.8 percent. Metro Nashville schools’ graduation rate rose three points to 81.6 percent. With the municipal districts breaking away last year, and legacy Shelby County and Memphis City schools merging the year before that, comparing year-to-

year data can be an apples-tooranges comparison. But three years ago, Memphis City Schools — perhaps the closest recent comparison demographically to current SCS — had a graduation rate of 67.6 percent for the 2012-13 school year. As part of its Destination 2025 plan, SCS has a goal of a 90 percent graduation rate by the year 2025. In a news conference at Hollis F. Price Middle College High on Thursday morning, chief academic oicer Heidi Ramirez said the plan sets benchmarks for the district to hit each year to be able to reach that goal. The benchmark graduation rate for last school year was 74 percent. “What today confirms is when we set clear, consistent and ambitious goals for our children focused on student learning, when we support our teachers, our coaches, our principals and other staf, and we actively engage communities in this work, we can not only meet, but we beat our goals,”

Ramirez said. She attributed the increase to improved identiication of students who are missing credits or otherwise unlikely to graduate on time, and targeting them for intervention and support. Hollis F. Price and Middle College High School were the only two schools with a 100 percent graduation rate. Both are choice schools that ofer dual enrollment in college courses. Twenty schools had graduation rates over 80 percent. But on the other end of the spectrum, Northside High came in at the bottom with only 44.2 percent of the class of 2015 graduating. In the ive municipal districts with a high school, Arlington had the highest on-time graduation rate at 95.4 percent. Collierville came in second with 91.3 percent, followed by Germantown with 89.5 percent. Bartlett had an 85.5 percent graduation rate and Millington’s was 84.1 percent. Among the municipal districts with the most students scoring

“Certainly we have progress to make,” she said. Ramirez also said she has not looked at how struggling schools leaving SCS due to state takeover by the Achievement School District could have afected the data. But the ASD only took over two high schools last year, Fairley and Frayser — now called Martin Luther King Jr. Collegiate Preparatory High School — and they had graduation rates of 75.7 percent and 52 percent, respectively. Margo Roen, the ASD’s chief of new schools and accountability, noted the state’s report card measures graduation rate as the percentage of students who entered the school as freshmen and graduated within four years. She said the ASD has focused on helping students who were behind to catch up. Without the four-year parameter, the graduation rates for the two schools are 92 percent at Fairley and 78 percent at MLK prep.

21 on the ACT, making them eligible for the state Hope Lottery Scholarship, Germantown had the highest percentage with 74.4 percent. Collierville was close behind with 73.1 percent. But from there, the numbers drop precipitously. In Arlington, 53.6 percent of graduates qualiied for the scholarship, followed by 44 percent in Bartlett and 25.6 percent in Millington. Just 25.4 percent of SCS students qualiied. The report card data also shows a shift in demographics as a result of the suburban schools splitting away from the county system. The percentage of African-American students in SCS increased from 67.6 percent to 78.4 percent. Also, a larger percentage of the students now are economically disadvantaged, increasing from 68.9 percent to 79.8 percent. On the lower ACT score average, Ramirez did not attribute the decline to the departure of ive suburban high schools forming the district, but said SCS administrators were still digging into the data.

Staf reporter Jane Roberts contributed to this story.

COMMUNITY

Don Furr brings replica DeLorean in celebration of ‘Back to the Future’ Day By Matt Woo woo@commercialappeal.com 901-529-6453

When Don Furr talks about the movie “Back to the Future,” he doesn’t mind being called a “fanatic.” Since the 1980s classic made its big screen debut 30 years ago, Furr has owned and restored three DeLoreans vehicles, the same model cars made famous in the “Back to the Future” trilogy. On Oct. 21, in celebration of “Back to the Future” Day, Furr drove his replica DeLorean to the JC Penny parking lot — just like movie charac-

ters Marty McFly and Dr. Emmit Brown did before sending the dog Einstein to the future — for a nighttime photo shoot at Wolfchase. Furr’s DeLorean is near movie-perfect, and Furr used photographs taken from movie stills to accurately design the car. After purchasing the DeLorean from a seller in Spokane, Wash., it took about six months for Furr to rebuild the car. “It’s got everything — a lux capacitor, a Mr. Fusion, all the things,” Furr said. In addition to being almost an exact replica, Furr said the nine mounts

used on the sides, top and back of the car are pieces pulled from molds from the original movie. Several actors and crew from the “Back to the Future” movies have signed the car’s dashboard. Even though Furr sold his other two DeLoreans, don’t expect him to sell his newest one any time soon. “I’m afraid that if I sold that car my grandchildren would disown me,” he said. Aside from being a fan of the movie, Furr also has a personal connection to “Back to the Future;” it was the irst movie he and his wife, Karen, went

to on their irst date. Despite being more than 30 years old, Furr said the car, which he bought for $18,000, was in “excellent shape” and has been driven less than 24,000 miles. When DeLoreans were irst manufactured in the early 1980s, about 9,000 were made. Today, Furr said there are less than 2,000 still on the road. For next year’s “Back to the Future Day,” Furr already has big plans in the works. Furr said he hopes to reenact the famous DeLorean car chase scene through Wolfchase JC Penny parking lot.

Photo by DonniS Sealey

In celebration of Back to the Future Day, Don Furr took his DeLorean to the Wolfchase JC Penny to reenact a scene from the hit 1980s movie.

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« Tuesday, October 27, 2015 « 13

Sports Football roundup

(6) WHITE STATION 38, GERMANTOWN 0

Spartans keep pace in region, beat Red Devils Defense shines for White Station By John Varlas varlas@commercialappeal.com 901-529-2350

With an ofense that averages more than 400 yards per contest, it would be easy to overlook the White Station defense. Easy, but a big mistake. The Spartans — ranked sixth in The Commercial Appeal’s Dandy Dozen — got a terriic defensive efort and (ho-hum) three touchdown catches from Dillon Mitchell to defeat Germantown, 38-0, Friday at the Fairgrounds. White Station improves to 6-3 overall and 5-1 in Region 4-6A to keep pace with Whitehaven and Cordova, both of which also won on Friday. “It may sound like coachtalk but I don’t overlook them,” said Spartans coach Joe Rocconi. “There may be some but we don’t listen to them anyway. Any time you can get a shutout in this league ... I’m proud of our guys.” The Spartans held the Red Devils (4-5, 3-3) to 98 yards, including just 43 on the ground. “It starts with the defensive line,” said defensive back Myles Baker, who blanketed Germantown’s Rodney Williams throughout the game and made a touchdown-saving delection in the second quarter to snuf out the Red Devils’ best threat of the night. “Our pass coverage is nothing without the defensive

line. I think we are (overlooked) because of the numbers we put up (ofensively) but we’re not worried about that. We don’t worry about the numbers or the rankings, one of that.” While the Spartans were thwarting the Red Devils at every turn, Mitchell was making the spectacular look routine. He caught eight passes for 156 yards and scored on receptions of 27, 29 and 51 yards. And — in a recurring theme this season — he had two touchdowns called back, both of which came in the irst two minutes of the game. “We had a little adversity in the irst quarter but I’m not going to talk about that,” Rocconi said. Mitchell — who is headed to Oregon — capped a 46-yard opening drive by catching a pass from Burk Williams. On the drive that followed Baker’s big defensive play, he took a little screen pass from Williams and tight-roped down the right sideline to make it 17-0 at halftime. Germantown fumbled on its irst drive of the third quarter and Mitchell made them pay, hauling in a 51-yard touchdown despite the best eforts of Red Devils’ defensive back Anterrious Branch. The Spartans extended their lead to 32-0 on the next possession when John Lyons blocked a punt and recovered it in the end zone. Williams capped a 279-yards night with a 40-yard touchdown pass to Ty Woods in the fourth.

PHOTOS BY NIKKI BOERTMAN/THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL

White Station’s Trevor Forbes tiptoes down the sideline as Germantown’s Anterrious Branch does his best to force him out Friday evening at the Fairgrounds.

White Station quarterback Burk Williams (right) scrambles for a first down as Germantown’s Trey Goins closes in from behind Friday evening at the Fairgrounds.

(1) Whitehaven 29, Collierville 6: Running and defense carried the Tigers (8-1, 5-1 Region 4-6A) as they tuned up for Friday’s game against Cordova. Darrion Cole had two short TD runs, Kylan Watkins ran for 172 yards and a score and Ray Booker had a 71-yard touchdown run as Whitehaven rolled up 312 yards on the ground. (3) MUS 42, Craigmont 22: Bradley Foley ran for 123 yards and scored on runs of 1, 4, 8 and 5 yards — all in the first half — as the Owls (7-2) coasted past the Chiefs (1-8). Maurice Hampton opened the scoring with a 25-yard interception return while Steven Regis connected with Thomas Pickens on an 80-yard touchdown in the third quarter. Marshall Massie threw two touchdowns and ran for a third for Craigmont. (7) Cordova 41, Houston 20: Devin Coleman threw three touchdown passes as the Wolves (8-1, 5-1 Region 4-6A) handled the Mustangs (1-8, 1-5). Coleman connected with Jarrius Anderson (26, 18) and Edward Johnson (16) while finishing with 283 yards. Shemar Collier scored on a 70-yard run for the Wolves. (8) Northpoint 41, FayetteWare 14: The Trojans wrapped up a 10-0 regular season by beating the Wildcats (4-5). Nelson Fabrizius had two short touchdown runs while Christian Saulsberry gained 120 yards on 16 carries and scored from 27 yards out. (9) St. George’s 49, MAHS 14: Chase Hayden ran for 225 yards on just 12 carries as the Gryphons (8-1) rolled over the Lions (4-5). Hayden scored on runs of 29, 10 and 37 yards and caught a 7-yard touchdown pass from Ben Glass. ECS 24, St. Benedict 21: Chandler Caughron hit a 19-yard field goal with 30 seconds left as ECS (3-6) edged St. Benedict (3-6). ECS quarterback Benton Garrison had a 30-yard touchdown run and scoring passes of 28 and 41 yards to Zach Genereaux. Colton Cochran had two touchdown runs in the second quarter for St. Benedict. Following the winning field goal, Ryan Pegg sealed it for ECS with an interception.

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Prep Sports PREP VOLLEYBALL

Harding, Briarcrest fall in championship Houston finishes fourth in Class AAA By John Varlas varlas@commercialappeal.com 901-529-2350

Even with the combined forces of the Memphis volleyball community behind them, Harding just didn’t have quite enough to win the state title Friday. Knoxville Webb captured the Division 2-A championship Friday in Murfreesboro, defeating the Lions 25-17, 25-14, 25-21. Playing the irst match of the day at the Murphy Center, Harding (40-8) had plenty of support with players and fans from Briarcrest, Houston and White Station — which played in the AAA tournament — augmenting the

student section. “1/3 Lions, 1/3 Briarcrest, 1/3 White Station and 100 % Memphis,� was how the Harding Twitter feed put it. But it wasn’t enough to prevent Webb from winning the title for the third straight year. Antoinette Lewis put down six kills to lead the Harding ofense while Lauren Deaton chipped in with ive. Deaton also had 13 digs while Katie Short added nine digs and three blocks. In D2-AA, the fourth time was the charm for Father Ryan as they won the championship with a 25-22, 23-25, 25-16, 25-21 victory over Briarcrest. The teams had played three previous times this year with the Saints (45-5) winning all three. “If we had played to 85 percent of what we’d done all year we’d

Harding Academy finished second in the Division 2-A state volleyball tournament. The Lions fell to Knoxville Webb in the state finals.

be coming home state champions,� said Saints coach Carla Anderton. “We had some indi-

viduals that played up to their potential but as a team we didn’t. I think we’re all a little shocked;

it’s not the ending we wanted.� Kendal Strand had 20 kills to pace the Saints while freshman Alyiah Wells added 12. Callie Anderton had 44 assists while Hannah Cox paced the defense with 26 digs. In AAA, Houston battled through the loser’s bracket to reach the semis before falling. The Mustangs — who won a late match against Ooltewah on Wednesday to stave of elimination — started the day with a 25-21, 25-23, 25-19 victory over Knoxville Bearden. They then fell in ive to Farragut (losing the inal game 15-13) to end their ninth trip to state in 10 years with a fourth-place inish. “My girls are awesome and played their hearts out,� Mustangs coach Becky Pendleton tweeted after the match.

PREP GIRLS SOCCER

Reserve punches Dragons’ ticket to state By John Varlas varlas@commercialappeal.com 901-529-2350

Collierville QB Matt Connors looks upfield as he breaks a tackle during Friday’s home game with Whitehaven. The top-ranked Tigers defeated the Dragons 29-6.

Dragons fall to Tigers Collierville players signal that the Dragons have the ball during Friday’s game with Whitehaven. This Friday the Dragons play at Bartlett. PHOTOS COURTESY OF ROGERCOTTON.COM

Maybe it was the memory of her close friend, Collierville student Grant Roberson, who died last week after sufering injuries in a car accident. Or maybe it was just the fresh legs. But whatever it was, Olivia Czosek made the most of her opportunity Saturday. Czosek — a little-used sophomore — scored the only goal of the game in the inal minute of play as the Dragons advanced to next week’s AAA state soccer tournament with a dramatic 1-0 victory over host Arlington. “I was so confident,� Czosek said. “I’ve been waiting for my time to come, waiting all season long and I’m just so happy.�

With Collierville (144-1) creating chance after chance in the second half — but not scoring — coach Brittany Streger reached down deep in her bench to send Czosek on with about 15 minutes to go in the game with the words “I’m taking a chance with you.� And it paid of spectacularly as Czosek ran on to a nice cross from Elizabeth Slavinsky and buried it. “In warm-ups, all my shots were going over (the goal),� she said. “So I told myself, ‘You’ve got to get over this ball.’ � Said Streger, “We were struggling on the ield so I said, ‘Why not? Let’s go get this done.’ And she did it. “It was beyond frustrating. We talked to them in practice about doing the things we needed to do, and if we had done them

the whole time ...� A lot of Collierville’s frustration in front of goal was because of Arlington goalkeeper Ashton Shields, who made some terriic saves to keep it scoreless, including a great diving stop in the irst half to deny Slavinsky and another in the second half to turn away Kate Johnson. Czosek’s winner was the highlight on a big Saturday for local soccer, as three other teams from Shelby County qualiied for the state tournament. The Dragons will be joined in the AAA tournament by Houston, which had no trouble with Bartlett in the other sectional, winning 6-0. The Mustangs (19-0-0) will be playing for their second title since 2003. Briarcrest (16-2-1) advanced to the Division

2-AA tournament, defeating Nashville Father Ryan 1-0. Ashton Pugh’s secondhalf winner gave the Saints the victory. St. Agnes was eliminated with a 1-0 loss to Nashville Ensworth. In D2-A, ECS advanced with an impressive 4-0 victory on the road against Knoxville Webb. The Eagles — who inished third in the West Region — got goals from Lee Ellen Stanley, Graham Sippel, Ally Ellzey and Maddy Stolnicki. ECS will be joined in Murfreesboro by St. George’s, which defeated Franklin Road Academy 2-1 on Friday thanks to a pair of Sydney Brown goals. Memphis’ other D2-A hopeful, St. Mary’s, lost at Battle Ground Academy, 3-1.

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« Tuesday, October 27, 2015 « 15

Schools BRIARCREST

For two days, Collierville High students worked to address the erosion problem at the school and created a more environmentally friendly and functional outdoor classroom.

Athletic Hall of Fame inductees recognized By Beth Rooks Special to The Weekly

COLLIERVILLE HIGH SCHOOL

Students help outdoor classroom Special to The Weekly

On Oct. 8, Eboni Leake’s AP and physical science students at Collierville High School took action against the erosion problems and overall functionality of their outdoor classroom. The existing classroom, consisting of a wooden stage and benches, was practically unusable due to the severe erosion around the benches, and the area did not have any plants or trees for shade or to attract wildlife. For two days, 140 students volunteered to help

improve the outdoor classroom. Leake’s class took on the task as a service project, however, students from outside the class volunteered their time, as well. Students worked together to ill eroded areas with soil, install geotextile (permeable textile material used to increase soil stability, provide erosion control or aid in drainage) and place mulch around the benches and the stage, construct a raised bed for a butterfly garden, create two rain gardens with native plants and plant groupings of native trees and shrubs.

The students were joined by the Wolf River Conservancy and the town’s engineering division to develop and implement a plan to address the erosion problem and enhance the area with native plants. The town’s public services department also contributed to the project by digging and preparing the rain gardens and delivering mulch, soil and compost. Plants and materials were purchased through the 5 Star Urban Waters Restoration Grant, awarded to the town in August.

COLLIERVILLE

Pupils raise funds for Le Bonheur Special to The Weekly

Crowds of Collierville students gathered outside their schools Sept. 17 to cheer on News Channel 3 meteorologist, Jim Jaggers, as he and fellow cyclists rode to each school. This trek through Collierville, part of the “Go Jim Go” campaign, was to collect donations raised by the students for Le Bonheur Children’s Hospital. “Every year, Collierville Schools raise more money than they did the year before, well over $1,000 each,” Jaggers said.

News Channel 3 meteorologist Jim Jaggers rode through Collierville for his “Go Jim Go” campaign. Collierville Mayor Stan Joyer was on hand to welcome Jaggers to Collierville.

“Crosswind Elementary alone raised $7,600.” This year marks the 10th anniversary of “Go Jim Go” where Jaggers rides his bike 333 miles

across the Mid-South to raise money for the children at Le Bonheur. The campaign has raised more than $1 million over the past decade.

The Briarcrest Athletic Hall of Fame was established to recognize the various coaches, administrators, athletes, and friends who have contributed to the overall outstanding nature of the BCS athletic program. This year’s recipients are: Julie Rose Knowles, class of 1998, was a varsity girls basketball point guard and soccer forward player. She started in the eighth grade at Briarcrest and was a four-year starter in both sports in high school. She was the school’s all-time assist leader in basketball and her team went 33-0 her senior year, winning Briarcrest’s irst state championship in girls basketball. She was selected to play in the All-Star game for the state in both basketball and soccer in 1998. Knowles received Best of the Preps, All Region, All Metro, All Tournament and Super Five awards throughout her career. She was a Wendy’s High School Heisman nominee and named AA player of the year in 1997 and 1998. In addition, she won the Female Athlete of the Year for private schools in 1998. Brent Frayser, class of 2005, was actively involved with the football, basketball and baseball programs throughout his high school years. He served an equipment manager, statistician and coaches’ assistant under Hugh Freeze for football, Brian Stewart and Allen Pavette for baseball and John Harrington for basketball. Frayser was a part of two football state championships in 2002 and 2004.

Julie Rose Knowles

Brent Frayser

Michael Oher

Don Carson

of the NFL draft. He went on to spend ive seasons with the Ravens and was a starter on the winning 2013 Super Bowl team. In 201, Oher signed with the Tennessee Titans as a free agent and started the irst 11 games of the season. In March, Oher was signed by the Carolina Panthers where he remains on the roster. The Athletic Hall of Fame Service Award went to Don Carson. Carson served as president of Briarcrest Golden Saints Booster Club for several years in the 1980s and was instrumental in starting the first Golden Saints newsletter. He was innovative in ways to raise inancial support for athletics, and after one year, donations quadrupled, taking Briarcrest Golden Saints to a new level inancially. After receiving his PH.D., he held numerous positions at the University of Memphis, including dean of students, vice president for Student Affairs, adjunct professor of political science and interim athletic director. Carson was awarded the Martin Luther King Human Rights Award in 1990. In 1989 he founded the regional Memphis in May student afairs conference.

He attended the University of Mississippi and graduated in 2011 with a degree in business administration. He currently works at Northpoint Christian School in Southaven. Michael Oher is a member of the 2005 graduating class. Oher joined the Briarcrest football team his junior year. In his senior year, he took over as the starting left tackle and quickly became one of the top prospects in the nation. He was a multitalented athlete for the Saints being named state runner-up in the discus and helping lead the basketball team to a 26-6 record, which resulted in the district championship. He still holds the discus record in track and ield. Oher went on to Ole Miss where he was a four-year starter beginning his career at guard, then moving to left tackle his sophomore year. He ended his career with the Rebels with the third best active consecutive starting streak (47 games) among SEC players. He was a consensus irst-team AllAmerican and irst-team All-SEC choice as a senior in 2008 when he won the SEC’s Jacobs Award given to the conference’s top offensive lineman. Upon completing his collegiate career, Oher was selected by the Baltimore Ravens in the irst round

Beth Rooks is the director of communications for Briarcrest.

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Schools SNAPSHOTS On Oct. 7, students and teachers at Houston Middle School participated in a Glow Walk for National Walk to School Day. The group started at Grace Evangelical Church and everyone walked down Wolf River Boulevard to Houston Middle School.

Meredith Buchanan’s second-grade Germantown Elementary CLUE class got up close and personal to sharks at the Pink Palace while participating in a Shark Lab. Jaela Foster, Manix Chambers Jr., Maeve Couvillion, Soha Dharani and Aditi Arunprakash had a chance to touch a preserved shark. The Houston Band performed in the Vanderbilt Marching Invitational where they brought home the Chancellor’s Cup, signifying Houston as best overall in the large-band division. At the same competition, Houston also won irst place in band, color guard, percussion and ield commander. Houston is a 14year participant at VMI and a sevenyear winner of the Chancellor’s Cup.

Schilling Farms Middle School recently hosted the irst Invitational Speech Tournament. The Schilling students proudly show of their medals and trophies they won.

Tara Oaks students were given a word to look up in their thesaurus to see how simple it is to ind synonyms and antonyms and how this can better express their thoughts and ideas when writing.

The Collierville Rotary Club recently stopped by Bailey Station to deliver thesaurus books to third graders at Tara Oaks Elementary.

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T H E W E E K LY

« Tuesday, October 27, 2015 « 17

Community VOLUNTEER

Citizens asked to sign up for boards, committees Special to The Weekly

The Town of Collierville is accepting applications for Town Boards and Commissions for 2016. Any Collierville citizen interested in serving on any of the following advisory boards or commissions is encouraged to submit an application by Nov. 20.

Residents can sign up for: Arts Council: One atlarge citizen position Beer Board: Seven positions

Heritage Commission:

Four positions; one student position Historic District Commission: One position Library Board: Two posi-

tions

Construction Board of Appeals: Seven positions Design Review Commission: Six positions Environmental Commission: Seven positions; one

Parks and Recreation Advisory Board: Eight po-

sitions Planning Commission:

Eight positions

student position

Tourism

Committee:

Eleven positions Town Beautiful Commission: Up to 15 positions Zoning Appeals Board:

Five positions. If you are currently serving on a board/commission and your term will be expiring in December, it is necessary to complete an application form to ensure that the Board of Mayor and Aldermen

has complete information from which to review applications. Applications can be obtained at Town Hall, 500 Poplar View Parkway, or you can download at collierville.com. Return applications to the town clerk at Town Hall. If applications are mailed, address to: Town Clerk, Town of Collier-

ville, 500 Poplar View Parkway, Collierville, TN 38017. Applicants will be asked to supply an email address on your application so a conirmation receipt can be sent. If you do not receive confirmation by email, call 901-457-2212 to make sure your application was received.

COMMUNITY

Town employees served early morning breakfast Special to The Weekly

The Main Street Business Alliance served breakfast to Town of Collierville public/general services and parks department crews on Oct. 16. At 6 a.m., there were 100 boxes illed with hot breakfast foods lined up and ready to go to town employees who are accustomed to a very early start to their workday. “I don’t think the majority of us realize what these guys do,” said Laura Todd,

Alderman Billy Patton gave words of thanks to Town of Collierville employees for their committed eforts to make Collierville a great place to live and work.

COMMUNITY

C’ville mayor, aldermen honor town employees Special to The Weekly

Town of Collierville employees were thanked by the Board of Mayor and Aldermen Sept. 23 for their continued commitment to keeping Collierville a safe and desirable community to live, work and play. The town’s annual employee appreciation luncheon, held at the Collierville Community Center, brought together more than 400 employees for an hour of camaraderie and a chance for each department to win a prize.

Main Street Collierville director. “Some of them go to work at four in the morning.” While the town merchants had tables set up for employees, many of the crews picked up breakfast and hopped back in their trucks to get to work. “We are so thankful for the hard work they do, we are happy for a chance to give back” commented Nancy Bassett, assistant director of the Museum of Biblical History.

On Oct. 16, the Main Street Business Alliance served breakfast to Town of Collierville public/general services and parks department crews.

ACHIEVEMENT

Mayor Stan Joyner mentioned that Collierville is widely known across the state as a beautiful community that provides high levels of various services to its citizens and he always feels honored to represent the town. “You (town employees) are the ones who deserve that credit,” Joyner said. “For the safety of our community, the police and ire, and the beauty of the community, parks and public services, I feel humbled and have a great sense of pride for the work that you do.”

CPD earns second certificate of accreditation Special to The Weekly

On Oct. 1, assistant Chief of Police Jef Abeln represented the Collierville Police Department at the Tennessee Chiefs of Police meeting in Nashville. He was there to accept the department’s second certificate of accreditation from the Tennessee Law Enforcement Accreditation commission.

“In order to maintain accredited status, agencies must provide annual documentation of continued compliance and undergo an on-site assessment every three years,” said Abeln. “The Tennessee Law Enforcement Accreditation Program was created under the direction and authority of the Tennessee Association of Chiefs of Police, which

supports and endorses the continued improvement of law enforcement and emergency communications services by establishing professional standards of accountability, management, and operations.” The Collierville Police Department is one of only 26 law enforcement agencies in Tennessee to be accredited through the TLEA program. There are

375 law enforcement agencies in the state. Recognition of state accreditation provides objective evidence of an agency’s commitment to providing the highest level of service possible to their community and the best management of their available resources. The TLEA commended the CPD for maintaining these objectives.

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Community SNAPSHOTS

The YMCA at Schilling Farms recently held a Paint A Pumpkin class where children could decorate and paint their own pumpkin. Ashley Zucchero, 5, paints her pumpkin while her dad, Leonard, watches.

Joe Williams, founder and CEO of Agape North, spoke to the members of the Rotary Club of Germantown. Agape North is in apparel business that helps organizations print custom event shirts. Since 2010, they have donated more than 30,000 uniforms. Rotarians Jim Pope (left) and Casey Lawhead introduced Williams to the club.

At the YMCA at Schilling Farms Paint a Pumpkin class, Hana Brittenham, 7, paints pink hair on her pumpkin.

Srishaan Maddili, 5, paints a happy face on his pumpkin during the YMCA at Schilling Farms Paint A Pumpkin class.

Collierville Mayor Stan Joyner spoke to the Collierville Women’s Club at the home of Jeanette Taylor. Joyner talked with the group about current issues and projects around town such as the new No Solicitation Ordinance, the new high school, the status of road improvements and answered questions from the group. The meeting was coordinated by Dee Meschner.

SEND US YOUR SNAPSHOTS We’d love to see what you’re up to in your community. Send snapshots of family gatherings, community events, out-of-town adventures and more to share in The Weekly. E-mail JPEG images 1-2 MB in size to Matt Woo at woo@commercialappeal.com. Please include first and last names of everyone pictured and all the pertinent details.

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Calendar The

hosts Art Show and Sale Nov. 5-7. More than 60 national and regional artists display and sell a variety of original art, including sculpture, photography and paintings. Times are 7-9 p.m. Thursday, 5:30-9 p.m. Friday and 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday. Visit sgis.org or call 901457-2000.

Weekly

Cordova

community events Arlington The Arlington Senior Citizen Center, 6265 Chester, hosts Medicare Part D Enrollment today and Wednesday, from 8:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. The Aging Commission will help seniors choose and compare Medicare Part D plans and Medicare Prescription Drug Plans. Also, today, Jason Vinson, the director of St. Francis Pharmacy, will answer any questions regarding medications and/ or drug interactions. Free to attend. Bring Medicare card and prescription bottles.

Bartlett The Marguerite Francis Music @ Noon concert series at Bartlett United Methodist Church, 5676 Stage, continues through December. The free concerts are held from 12:10-12:40 p.m. each Wednesday in the church’s sanctuary, with a light lunch available for purchase following each performance. Visit bartlettumc.org. Wednesday: Dr. Andre Duvall, organist/pianist, director of handbell ministry, Mullins UMC. Our Hallow Him at Christ Church, 5955 Yale, will be Saturday, from 6-8:30 p.m. There will be carnival type games played for candy and trinkets. Bartlett Performing Arts and Conference Center, 3663 Appling Road, presents Barbara’s Blue Kitchen featuring Lori Fischer at 2 and 8 p.m. Friday. Set in a small Tennessee town, this slice-of-life comedic play with music features the proprietor, Barbara Jean, trying to igure out “When is it just plain crazy to hang on — to love.” Tickets are $25. Visit bpacc.org or call 901-385-6440.

Collierville The Collierville Burch Library, 501 Poplar View Parkway, presents the Great Thinkers Class Series starting Wednesday, from 4-5 p.m. This two-part series brings teachers from the Memphis area to teach kids ages 12-18 about the great thinkers in human history. Featuring a presentation by Ryan Sellers from MUS, as he talks about philosophy in ancient Rome and the legacy of Cicero. Visit colliervillelibrary.org or call 901-457-2600. Monday: Buddha: The Enlightened One, 4:30-5:30 p.m. Presentation by Dr. Mark Muesse of Rhodes College. Collierville’s annual Scare on the Square will be Friday, from 3:30-6 p.m., on the Town Square. Featuring a coat drive beneiting the children of Collierville Schools, trick or treating with Town Square merchants, from 3:30-5 p.m., and games and crafts, from 4:30-6 p.m. Call 901-481-7190. St. George’s Independent School, 1880 Wolf River,

Cirque Italia is Saturday and Sunday, from 7:30-9:30 p.m., at Wolfchase Galleria, 2760 N. Germantown Parkway. Experience that will take you to the wonders of Italy, the magic of an immersion into its culture, and into water. Circus features a 35,000 gallon water stage. Tickets are $20. Email oice.cirqueitalia@gmail.com, visit cirqueitalia.com or call 941-704-8572. Pitter Potter Studio, 845 N Germantown Parkway, will host its Halloween Party Saturday, from 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. There will be a candy bufet and great photo booths for scary pictures. The usual studio fee of $6 per painter will be reduced to $3. Come paint pottery and have fun on Halloween. Call 901-443-7718. The Mid-South Corn Maze will run through Oct. 31 at Agricenter International, 7777 Walnut Grove. Haunted Maze Fridays and Saturdays in October. Cost is $7-10. Visit midsouthmaze.com for times. Also coming up: ■ Saturday/Sunday: Discover the Dinosaurs, 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Explore the mystery of prehistoric life in an environment of learning, discovery and fun. Unique hands-on exhibit with up to 40 moving and replica museum-quality dinosaurs. Tickets are $18, $16 for seniors and $16 for children ages 2-12 (exhibit only), $22 for exhibit plus (rides, mini golf, inlatables). Active military personal $3 of. Spooky Nights closes out its 2015 run Friday and Saturday, from 7-10 p.m., at Shelby Farms Park, 500 N. Pine Lake. Haunted trail with zombies, scares, and spooks. Scare-free activities available for very young kids. Visit shelbyfarmspark.org/spookynights for complete event information. ■ Haunted Trail (ages 12 and up): Cost is $12 per person. The Pine Forest of Shelby Farms Park is transformed into the only haunted trail in Memphis. Are you brave enough to handle 2 miles of scares? ■ Nocturnal Nature Hikes (all ages): Cost is $10 per family, free for members. For those looking for a fun, but not frightening activity, guided nocturnal nature hikes will be held on a separate trail. These hikes are a great way to experience wildlife at night. In addition to the wildlife, hike leaders will teach participants how to use their night vision and other senses to navigate in the night. ■ Zombie Laser Tag and Walker Range: Cost is $5 per person, per game. For a high-energy experience, be sure to check out zombie laser tag or zombie paintball shooting range. Who will win — humans or zombies? ■ Zombie Paintball Hayride (all ages): Cost is $20 per person, $25 for Zombie Truck. Experience a new attraction at Spooky Nights that is sure to scare up some fun. Climb aboard a trailer outitted with paintball equipment and try to conquer zombies. Don’t worry — the zombies aren’t coordinated enough to use the paintball equipment, so you’ll have the upper hand. ■ Headless Horseman Hayride: Cost is $8 per person. Take a family-friendly hayride through the park, but be on the lookout for the legend himself. ■ Pumpkin Painting: Cost is $7 per large pumpkin,

$5 per small pumpkin. Get creative in the craft corner. ■ Spooky Food Trucks: Want to chow down on some creepy-crawlies or sip on some witch’s brew? Check out the creative treats vendors are cooking up. ■ Trunk of Treat: Little ghosts and goblins are invited to go trick or treating in safe environment during Spooky Nights on Saturday. Treats will be provided Memphis and Shelby County EMS. Costumes are highly encouraged. ■ The Haunted Web of Horrors will operate Friday through Sunday, starting at 7 p.m., at 700 N. Germantown Parkway. Three haunted house experiences in one place: Tormented House, Dark Matter House and Twisted House. Cost is $12-26. Visit hauntedwebofhorrors.com.

Germantown Germantown Community Theatre, 3037 Forest HillIrene, presents Ring of Fire: The Music of Johnny Cash at 2:30 p.m. Sundays and 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays through Nov. 8. Musical which weaves a generationslong story of home and family through the music of the Man in Black. Tickets are $50 for members, $75 nonmembers. Visit gctcomeplay.org. The Festival of Fun and Fright is Friday at Bob Hailey Athletic Complex, 8750 Farmington Blvd. Little ones are sure to enjoy the Fairy Tale Trail presented by Germantown Community Theatre. Or, dare to walk the Trail of Terror presented by Houston High School student government. Come in costume and enjoy concessions, free games and moon bounces. Fairy Tale Trail is open from 6-8 p.m.; Trail of Terror open from 7-9 p.m. Admission is $4 per person per trail. Jackson Baker will be the guest speaker at the Germantown Democratic Club meeting Wednesday. The club will meet at Coletta’s Restaurant, 2850 Appling Road. Dinner will begin at 6 p.m. and the program at 6:45. Club meetings are open to all who are interested and visitors are always welcome. Filmmaker Willy Bearden will speak about the history of cotton culture in the South at the Brown Bag Lunch Series at 11 a.m. Nov. 6 in the Mike Wilson Fellowship Hall at Germantown United Methodist Church, 2331 S. Germantown Road. When cotton was king, it created a society of characters and cads, the big time and small time, the rich and richer, the hangerson, anointed, powerful and busted. Lunch at noon. No reservations are needed. Just bring your sack lunch and enjoy the program and the fellowship. Call Luci Cromer, 901-755-0803, or Beverly Rhoads, 901-754-7216, ext. 107. Activities are open to anyone age 55 and up. Germantown Performing Arts Center, 1801 Exeter, presents ArtSavvy: Big Band Swing today, from 7-8:15 p.m. Jump and jive with a beginning swing dance lesson taught by instructors from Red Hot Lindy Hop. Participants will get insight into the big band era through various vintage styles of swing dance. Free with RSVP. Visit gpacweb.com or call 901-751-7500. Also coming up: ■ Friday: Big Bad Voodoo Daddy, 8-9:45 p.m. Swing big band style with Big Bad Voodoo Daddy. This contemporary swing revival band fuses classic American sounds from Jazz, Dixieland and big-band traditions. Tickets are $27.50 and up. Email information about upcoming community events to Matt Woo at woo@commercialappeal.com.

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Say Cheese!

We asked folks:

What is your favorite Halloween costume from childhood?

“An angel.” FAYE PRITCHARD

“Charlie Brown.” STEVEN GOISHI

“A gypsy.” JOYCE BOGGS

“A witch.” JUNE TAYLOR

“A cowboy.” DAVID PARKS PHOTOS BY EMILY ADAMS KEPLINGER | SPECIAL TO THE WEEKLY


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Home & Garden

GREAT INSPIRATIONS England’s Great Dixter gives Mid-South gardeners ideas

Spending a day hearing Ritch, who has already orFergus Garrett and Aaron dered three books written Bertelsen describing the by Christopher Lloyd, the gardens of Great Dixter late and great gardener and can leave you feeling great- co-owner of Great Dixter. ly inspired and a bit overAll of the 200 or so whelmed. ga rdeners “Watchattending ing slide the two-day after slide symposium of the most last week at CHRISTINE amazing the Dixon ARPE succesGallery and GANG sion plantGardens ings took know you GREEN THUMB my breath can’t import away,” said an English Liz Manugian, who was garden to Memphis and raised in England and expect to have the same now tends a lovely garden success. in East Memphis. Garrett, head gardener Numerous “rooms” at Dixter, knows it too and comprise the garden, recommends we use plants which is about 60 miles that work in our climate. southeast of London, in“Your landscape and cluding one with tightly culture speak to you,” he clipped topiary “sculp- said. “Use the plants that tures” and another for succeed for you year after fruits and vegetables. year.” Most of it, though, might He hoped we would be described as a cottage glean gardening principles garden on steroids, with and ideas from his talk, not phenomenal displays of speciic plant recommendistinctive perennials, dations. annuals, shrubs and trees “Gardening in England carefully chosen to bring is supremely easy,” said out the best in each other. Manugian, referring to the “Dixter is an overgrown gardening a typical homecountry garden with bor- owner might engage in, rowed landscapes from not the “high” form of garthe ields and meadows dening practiced at Great that surround it,” said Gar- Dixter. rett, adding that it has been “They don’t have described as a “wonderful the heat, the humidhandshake” between natu- ity, the bugs, the summer ral areas and those that are drought,” she said with the intensely maintained. certainty of one who has Memphis landscape ar- done it in both places. “It’s chitect Isobel Ritch admits much more diicult to use to feeling overwhelmed by perennials and do succesthe amount of information sion gardening here withconcentrated in a short out loads of help.” period, but said the expeI can almost hear readrience has changed the ers saying or thinking, way she plans to garden at “right on, no kidding and home. amen.” They might also “I’m more aware of what be asking what the heck is I can do when plants are in succession gardening? their dormant phases,” said It’s arranging plants so

CAROLINE BROWN

Plants in pots greets visitors at the entrance of the house at Great Dixter. This section of the structure dates to the 15th century.

that something’s blooming, showing great foliage, producing attractive berries or having compelling structure throughout the growing seasons. Even before he attended the symposium, Chris Cosby had taken steps to make some major changes in the display beds at Memphis Botanic Garden, where he is senior manager of gardens. Instead of focusing on beds planted in “carpeted” patterns with colorful annuals, the staf will begin a more dynamic method of mixing shrubs, trees and perennials with annuals in beds that change throughout the seasons. “Having lots of plants serving as supporting players gives us the opportunity to experiment with new plant materials,” Cosby said. “It will also require more collaboration among our ground troops.” He expects the new dis-

play beds to require about the same amount of work as the traditional carpets of annuals. But the labor will be spread throughout the season rather than concentrated at planting time and at midseason, when flowers are typically sheared of to ensure vibrant blooms from late summer through fall. Every garden experiences peaks and troughs throughout the year, Garrett said. Our job as gardeners is to lift those troughs as high as we can. Local “Dixterite” Linda Smith got to know Garrett and Bertelson during her frequent trips to the estate to attend seminars and to volunteer in its gardens. Last week, she hosted them in her East Memphis home and also took them to visit her new house near Overton Park where she and her husband are planning to move. Garrett sketched out a design for

the compact garden. “Our new house is more formal, so Fergus helped me see I can have a beautiful garden without planting a single lower,” said Smith, who is used to having lots of perennials and blooming shrubs. “He showed me how to make a hedge more romantic.” Despite having given presentations on Dixter’s gardens many times, Fergus still exudes passion and enthusiasm for it when he eloquently describes its details and nuances. “Don’t worry about making gardening mistakes and don’t let other people dictate to you,” he said. It’s an injustice to break down their talks into tidbits but since newspaper space is precious and my notes are scanty, here goes: ■ “Plants are more powerful for having the right neighbors, so we are always thinking about com-

panions. Choose a plant you like and then choose companions for each side that are diferent in texture. We’re anti-mass plantings.” ■ Plants should be interlocked so they “dance” together. Choose bold plants such as tall yellow verbascums to “punctuate” the garden. ■ Christopher Lloyd wanted excitement in the garden, a tradition that continues today. You may seek harmony and subtlety in yours. ■ Plants should work in their of season. Brown can be an important color in the garden during the winter. But too much of it at other times weighs the garden down. ■ Go easy on bulbs because they can smother the perennials that emerge later. At Dixter, tulips and other bulbs are dotted here and there among low growing plants that bloom at the same time. ■ Plants that self-sow are useful in the garden but must be managed to keep them from running rampant. Instead of using mulch to suppress them, Dixter gardeners hoe out the first germinations. The second crop is usually more sparse. ■ Three varieties of potatoes are grown at Dixter: Picasso for baking; pink ir apple for boiling and Charlotte, an early salad variety with yellow lesh. ■ Christopher Lloyd and his family kept dachshunds at Dixter and so does Bertelsen. He uses the long and low dogs to burrow into the massive compost piles, freeing the rich black soil enhancer at the bottom. Since they were bred to lush badgers from their burrows, the task is natural to them. Christine Arpe Gang; chrisagang@ hotmail.com

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Your awareness of this Sudoku — Not Model Behavior, BytoFrank Stewart — Not Model Behavior, Sudoku “Hotel Rwanda” titlefor forthis this & Ted said fabric friend go with you to you already see thatsee shetha “Hotel Rwanda” title & Ted && Alice” Alice” said...” ...” fabric Tribune Content Agency you already unpredictable behavior worries you. Queens, New York Tribune Content Agency Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) 27 Giant retail puzzle 120 — — nous 33 90 90 Century Queens, New York the mall or come to your is in rude mode focus— in in retail puzzle 120 nous 33Tastelessly Tastelessly Century isisin rude— mode e7 Giant lot about furniture 71 Talks glibly 121 Snack ★★★★ You could artistic be hearing a parts Sudoku a numberhouse and watch a movie. 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Whatever but she either refuses or the case,Send questions to and returned a diamond. South threw a 104 Like some “Common 62 Come-____ decorations 14 Spain’s Costa ued with the jack of hearts. tools 8 Defeat 61 Previously d “Lois & Clark” 119 Simile part askharriette@harriettecole.com shouldn’t make the e�ort South played low, East continputsSouth it o�.retreated The stepfather dummy and drew trumps, port vessels Sense”? 63 Nonkosher Dead-end delheart, ____ won in41 thisyour doesfriend not mean youor c/o Universal Send questions to Walinto a mull, Uclick, 1130 back 105 Levels 83 Post office? is still married tojack her of hearts. to shake 15 GoHe too led far a heart to position ued with the his queen, but Eastlunch got order o” askharriette@harriettec shouldn’t make the e�ort trying to gauge his opponent. Finut St., Kansas City, MO 64106. 108 ____ Fein 84 Hardly fancy Onetime title 42 Modern-day 16 Actress to reality. mom. ISouth can’t stand the fact two heart tricks. The result was 65 down retreated into a mull, or c/o Universal Uclick, 1 nally, hedoesn’t covered with the king, to shake your friend back 109 LAX figs. 86 “L’Amore dei for Obama and home of the O’Connor that she realize one, and the Cynic was frustrated and trying to gauge his opponent. Fi112 Jupiter’s locale: ____ Re” Clinton ancient Ashanti of “Xena: and West won and returned his nut St., Kansas City, MO to reality. hownally, this infuriates me. showed it. Abbr. (Montemezzi 66 “They got empire Warrior he covered with the king, last heart down two. This man for should be taken Horoscope “A fool and43 mySome money 114 “Got it!” opera) sitesare on soon me!” Difficulty level ★★★★★ Princess” andstreets West won and returned “If I’d played low on the his 115 Hankering 89 Sophocles 67 Preceded, the National 17 Saturn’s largest o� the regardless parted,” Cy grumbled. lastlong heart for down two. 116 Riled (up) tragedy second heart, and the man had Answer toHoroscope with “to” moonNO FINESSE Mall of how ago the abuse yesterday's By Jacqueline Bigarpuzzle “If I’d played low on the heldSudoku A-Q-J-x,” South shrugged, SOLUTIONS: SeeFeatures BELOW for solutions to these puzzles At the third trick, South does best to happened. How I get is ado numberKing Syndicate This year you seem to be un“heto would owned me man for- had second heart, and the take the ace of trumps. A finesse against her seek have counseling? placing puzzle based By Jacqueline Bigar usually fortunate in that you West, who preempted, is not a favorever.” — Concerned held A-Q-J-x,” South shrugged, on a 9x9 grid with sevip Chess Quiz Aries 21-April 19) tend to This King(March Features Syndicate exits with a trump, and East must lead a stumble rightt yearinto youthe seem ite. South next cashes the second high Could South logically find eral numbers. The me for“hegiven would have owned heart, letting South lose only one heart For the kids ★★★★ You might seem like place atusually the right time. Your fortunate in t diamond, ru�s a diamond, ru�s a club in Dear Concerned: Wethe object isplay? to place the winning ever.” and only three tricks in all. a changed person to some. daily and social life mightinto nott Aries (March 21-April 19) dummy and ru�s a diamond. know how upset you are, numbers 1 to 9 in the tend to stumble When East played the three Could South logically find have more South then ru�s his last club in empty squares sothat that but please remember always place play out You vigor mightand seem like on the first spade, South could You ★★★★ at as theyou’d rightlike, tim the winning play? Questions and comments: Email Stewart at each row, each column dummy. If East doesn’t overru�, South enthusiasm. this is not about you, and but ultimately everything will a changed person to some. infer that West had led from the daily and social life m When East played the three frs1016@centurylink.net and each 3x3 box conthe constant pressure on Taurus (April 20-May 20) and work out for the best. Ifasyou queen. You have more vigor always play out yo tains the same number on the firstundoubtspade, South could your girlfriend Take your time when are single, your upbeat perThat’s card-reading. But ★★★enthusiasm. only once. The difficulty but ultimately everyt infer that West had led from the edly makes her additionmaking decisions. You sonality draws people South must also assume a lie of level of the Conceptis Taurus (April 20-May 20) work outmany for the bes ally queen. uncomfortable and Sudoku might not be happy with theSudoku East-West cards that will let toward you. ARIES has a temincreases from ★★★ Take your time when are single, your stressed. 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You are play the day low-key. has shown the king of clubs Please email your questions to and you want Chris Herrington, 529-6510, herrington comfortable with w anniesmailbox@creators.com, sume thatsoEast hascan’t the give king.or But Q-J of hearts, South Gemini (May 21-June 20)Sagittarius full of Richens, energy and driven (Nov. 22-Dec. @commercialappeal.com, Mark 529-2373, or write to:didn’t Annie’s Mailbox, East the ace ofopen hearts. That’s and are hearing. You’ll d East the bidding ★★★★★ Zero in on what to hang out with friends. A 21) ★★★★★ Be sure of your richens@commercialappeal.com. c/o Creators Syndicate, 737 day’s Cryptoquip Clue: I equals E card-placing. has shown the king of clubs and play the day low-key you want or need. 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10-25-15

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Jacqueline Bigar is at www.jacquelinebigar.c

Sudoku

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Horoscopes

it might be diicult to shut down. Be intuitive. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22Dec. 21) HHH Try to lighten up. Recognize the real reason you might be argumentative; it has more to do with you than them. Stay focused on one matter at a time. Your intuition takes you down an intriguing path. A supervisor expresses appreciation. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHH Stop ighting an inevitable diference of opinion. You can’t seem to reconcile. Perhaps it is only an issue because of your unique perspective. Try to discuss this situation with a friend or colAnswer to yesterday's puzzle port vessels Sense”? ferent perspective that points to league. Open up to change. 105helps Levels you 83 understand Post office? results Sudoku is a number108 ____ Fein 84 determine Hardly fancy placing puzzle based several new possibilities. your choices. Express AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 109 LAX figs. 86 “L’Amore dei on a 9x9 grid with sev- 22) LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. your grounded perspective. 18) HHHH You have a tendency Chess Quiz 112 Jupiter’s locale: eral given numbers. The ____ Re” HHHH Allow someone else to to say what you want and mean GEMINI (May 21-June Abbr. 20) (Montemezzi object is to place the 114 “Got opera) Use the morning his or her own direction and it. Your bluntness tends to push HHHH forit!” im- go innumbers Difficulty ★★★★★ 1 to level 9 in the 115 Hankering 89 portant Sophocles the consequences. An after- people away or create sour feelmatters. You could dis- seeempty squares so that tragedy Answer builds to yesterday's discussion will be poignant ings. Pressure cover how awkward116 youRiled are.(up) You noon around yourp each row, each column each 3x3 important tobox be of. A home life. Make time to listen to might pick up this person’s need andand Sudoku is part aconnumbertainsmember the same number placing based someone else’s point of view. orpuzzle a domestic for space. You know what needs family only once. The difficulty on a 9x9 grid to happen, but taking action is matter needs attention. with sev- PISCES (Feb. 19-March Chess Quiz leveleral of the Conceptis given The20) HHHH Deal with a inancial SCORPIO (Oct.numbers. 23-Nov. another story. Trust your gut. Sudokuobject increases from is to place the Clear out errands situation early. You won’t want CANCER (June 21-July 22) 21) HHHH Monday to Sunday. numbers 1 to 9 in the cumbersome details to postpone this situation, as it HHHH You might feel pressured and otherempty squares so that You will want to irks you. Communication is likely right now. Part of the problem in the morning. each row, each column the afternoon could be a judgment that you be available andineach 3x3 box to con- to lourish in the afternoon. You WHITE about HAS AaCRUSHER CONTACT US calls andthe schedule meetare making situation. Try make might have a lot to say. Others tains same number Hint: Play for d8=Q. a conversation letting go of this preconception, ings. Once only once. The starts, difficultywill listen.


MG

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« Tuesday, October 27, 2015 « 23

T H E W E E K LY

Community public projects

SEND US YOUR SNAPSHOTS We’d love to see what you’re up to in your community. Send snapshots of family gatherings, community events, out-of-town adventures and more to share in The Weekly. E-mail JPEG images 1-2 MB in size to Matt Woo at woo@commercialappeal.com. Please include first and last names of everyone pictured and all the pertinent details.

G’town road plan gets stif reaction Opposition crowd is vocal By Jane Roberts robertsj@commercialappeal.com 901-529-2512

Germantown officials left a public hearing Thursday night with angry comments echoing in their heads after residents heard about plans to realign Germantown Road and West Street in the historic park of town. Dr. Donald Goldstein, whose dental oice is in the area that would be condemned for the new intersection, spoke irst. “I think there is lot of better ways to do this,” he said to council chambers packed with residents. “I am concerned about my investment I have made over the last 18 years in the shopping center. I am concerned about the impact on my business, my family, the relocation costs and making sure I will be compensated fairly. I fear I won’t be.” The damage to business from construction, he said, would be “much greater than any impact as far as convenience.” The city proposes moving Germantown Road to the west, intersecting with West Street at North Street. About seven businesses would be demolished in the project. The idea is to move traic lowing through the city to the five-lane Germantown Road and move slower traic, including pedestrians and bicyclists, to the narrower West, which

would meander through blocks zoned for Smart Growth retail. Ninety percent of the $5.1 million project, including the costs of purchasing rights of way, would be covered by federal and state funds the city has already been approved to receive. Construction would begin in 2017 and last about a year. Comments against the project ran about 3-to-1 Thursday, the irst hearing on a project that has been on the back burner since 2007. City Administrator Patrick Lawton stressed the public would have an opportunity to comment in the future as elected oficials make decisions that could advance the project. Several asked why the public couldn’t vote on the project. Lawton said he would have to confer with city attorney on the people’s right to a referendum. “How did it get this far without anyone knowing?” one resident asked. “This was discussed last year as the Board of Mayor and Aldermen discussed the city budget,” Lawton said. “This has not been done in a vacuum. ... To say this is a done deal and moving forward is simply not true.” The city budget for this year includes money to buy slightly more than an acre where the intersection is slated to be built. City budgets over the next two years would include the rest. “Is it being built for citizens of Germantown, or is it being built for the

people who want to pass through Germantown quickly?” asked Bill Strong to cheers and applause. The quicker in-and-out would make it easier “for the questionable element in Cordova and Hickory Hill to quickly get out of town,” he said to more applause. The purpose of the hearing was to gather comment on the environmental impact survey, which showed no measurable impact on air pollution or watershed area. City stafers did not respond to questions from citizens, but promised they would receive written responses to their questions at the end of the two-week comment period. The decision to move forward will ultimately be made by the Board of Mayor and Aldermen. Lawton encouraged citizens to make their feelings known. “This is how we gather public input. This is part of the decision-making process. I can tell you these publicly elected oficials are listening carefully.” The board will discuss the issue in a work session to be scheduled later. The city will also hold another public meeting to gather more comments. Residents who contacted Alderman Rocky Janda before the hearing were split 50-50, Janda said. Those who contacted Alderman John Barzizza were overwhelmingly against, at least 40-to-1, Barzizza said. “They’re people that want Germantown to keep its charm. I’m one of them.”

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24 » Tuesday, October 27, 2015 »

T H E W E E K LY

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MG

Collierville

Chamber of Commerce 2015 Collierville Business EXPO is a Huge Success!

Over 100 vendors participated in the 2015 Collierville Business EXPO. Hosted by the Town of Collierville and the Collierville Chamber of Commerce, this annual event is the largest showcase of businesses and non-profits in the area. The Collierville Chamber of Commerce hosted a ribbon cutting for Bazaar, With an estimated attendance in excess of 2,000, the 2015 EXPO is one of the A Crazy Little Food Shop located at 88 N. Main Street on the Historic Town most successful in history. Square in Collierville. Pictured cutting the ribbon are owners Sandy and “This was our 26th EXPO, and one of our biggest and best yet”, said John Barrios along with chamber board members, ambassadors, family and John Barrios, Chairman of the Chamber’s Board of Directors. “I attribute our friends. John and Sandy Barrios enjoy traveling and experiencing different success to the perfect weather, and all the hard work by the Chamber’s expo cultures. Their love for the Mediterranean scene sparked their dream of committee, ambassadors, and staff” opening Bazaar, the go-to store for olive oils, vinegars, and gourmet gifts. Sandy Barrios, wife of Chairman Barrios and owner of Bazaar – A Crazy Their experiences with cuisine from around the world inspired them to Little Food Shop, participated in the Expo as an exhibitor, showcasing her give others the chance to taste the exotic and enchanting flavors that oils gourmet olive oils and specialty foods. “It was a fantastic event! We were busy and vinegars have to offer. They strongly believe food should be a global giving-out samples all day. It was a perfect opportunity for me to showcase celebration of good health & indulgent living. Bazaar offers a wide variety my products, meet new potential customers, and let my old customers know of olive oils, vinegars and gourmet gifts. Sample the flavors before you buy! about my recent move”. Bazaar – A Crazy Little Food Shop recently relocated Visit www.bazaaroliveoil.com for more information. from Carriage Crossings to Collierville’s history town square. The EXPO was free to the public and featured free flu shots by Baptist Hospital Collierville, show specials from a wide variety of businesses and fun, free take-aways, like the Spider Web Cotton Candy offered by Webz Advertizing and the Gel Bead Hot/Cold Packs offered by Campbell’s Clinic. The event was made possible through a grant by the Town of Collierville and the support of the generous sponsors below. Gold Sponsors: First Tennessee Baptist Memorial Hospital Collierville Farms of Bailey Station/Kirby Pines Retirement Community Silver Sponsors: Carrier Corporation Classic Party Rentals Collierville Auto Center Collierville Chrysler Dodge Jeep Ram The Commercial Appeal Contemporary Media Landers Ford My Town Movers Paradigm Business Images, LLC Renasant Bank Sedona Staffing Simmons Bank Solutions Medical Triton Stone

Wireless Internet Sponsor: Net Integration, LLC Exhibitor’s Breakfast Sponsor: Hampton Inn of Collierville Exhibitor’s Lunch Sponsor: Moe’s Southwest Grill Hospitality Sponsors: Chick-fil-A Pepsi Beverages Company Southern Security Federal Credit Union Sugar Lips Sensational Sweets Media Sponsors: The Collierville Herald The Collierville Independent Comcast Spotlight, KWAM990

October General Membership Luncheon Pat Halloran, President/CEO of The Orpheum Theatre addressed the general membership at noon on October 7th at Ridgeway Country Club. For the past 35 years Pat has been the President & CEO of the Memphis Development Foundation, which operates the Orpheum Theatre. During his tenure. Pat oversaw two major renovations at a combined cost of $20 million, and brought Broadway to Beale Street. Most recently, Pat led the Orpheum’s largest project to date: the construction of the $14.5 million Halloran Centre for Performing Arts & Education, which opened in August of 2015. The luncheon was generously sponsored by Collierville Rotary Club. WELCOME NEW MEMBERS: • Chris Posey Restoration, LLC • Peak Potential Physiotherapy and Wellness

RIBBON CUTTINGS

The Collierville Chamber hosted a ribbon cutting for Amish Excellence located at 3601 S. Houston Levee Rd. Suite 106 in Collierville. At Amish Excellence you will find exquisite furniture, reasonably priced and handcrafted by the Amish— representing generations of deeply held belief in integrity of workmanship and concern for lasting beauty and usefulness thus confirming your discriminating taste for years to come. Everything is made to order. We are about YOUR CHOICES. Specific requests are welcome and encouraged. Visit our website at www.amishexcellence.com.

The Collierville Chamber hosted a ribbon cutting for new member, Kaliflower Boutique located at 4680 Merchants Park Circle at Carriage Crossing in Collierville. Pictured cutting the ribbon are owners, Kalista and Omar Adams, along with many family members and friends. Kaliflower Boutique offers handcrafted décor, art and specializes in custom gifts. Kaliflower Boutique believes the best gifts are thoughtful and made with love. Please visit www.kaliflowerboutique.com for more information.

UPCOMING RIBBON CUTTINGS Mid-South Ear, Nose & Throat and Hearing Aid Center Mid-South Ear, Nose and Throat has been in the business of caring for people since 1979. The practice has eight board-certified otolaryngologists dedicated to providing quality care and treatment to the pediatric and adult community in the mid-south. October 27, 2015 9:00 AM 1458 W. Poplar Ave. Suite 204 Collierville, TN 38017

UPCOMING CHAMBER EVENTS: November 11 - Collierville Chamber of Commerce General Membership Meeting. Come see what’s new at your Chamber! Learn about our new programs, explore our new website, meet our new staff members, and discover how you can get more out of your membership! Instead of a featured speaker, we’ll spotlight the leaders who will take your Chamber to the next level. We’ll show you how you can play a role in the quality of life and economic prosperity of our community. Sponsor: Dignity Memorial Funeral Home of Collierville 11:30 AM-1:00 PM at Ridgeway Country Club. Reservations required. Register online at colliervillechamber.com.

www.ColliervilleChamber.com Mission Statement: The mission of the Collierville Chamber of Commerce is to provide quality services and programs to its membership and to provide business leadership for the entire community in the vital areas of economic prosperity, education, and quality of life.


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