QUEST FOR THE CROWN Sir Michael Donahue reveals the
2014 Memphis Most winners.
IN SUNDAY’S COMMERCIAL APPEAL
FOOTBALL FEVERFind out how your favorite high school
football team is shaping up for this
season’s gridiron showdowns. INSIDE
Karen Pulfer focht/the commercial aPPeal
Danny Rae Williams still pumps gas for patrons of McGinnis Service Station on the Historic Town Square in Collierville. The station also is a gathering place for Williams’ friends to come and spin a yarn or two. Collierville and its square are featured as a cover story in last Sunday’s Parade Magazine.
By John [email protected]
901-529-2350
When you’re coming of a three-win season, there’s no such thing as a meaningless game.
And that’s why Bartlett was probably the happiest team at last Friday’s munici-palities jamboree.
Johnnie Shepherd’s long fumble return for a touch-down gave the Panthers a 7-6 victory over Germantown at Arlington. And even though the jamboree format — fea-turing 25-minute games and a running clock — didn’t to-tally lend itself to what the teams will face this week, it was good for Bartlett to be smiling at the end of the con-test.
“It feels good,” said Shep-herd, a 205-pound senior who doubles at linebacker and fullback. “We’ve worked hard in the weight room and in the ofseason. Now we’re hoping to get better each and every week.”
In the most competitive matchup of the evening, Ger-mantown took a 6-0 lead on a short keeper by quarterback Jacob Ivy. And the Red Devils were driving for another po-tential score when Shepherd scooped up a fumble around the 20-yard line and took it back the other way.
Manny Barrientos, the goalkeeper on the Panthers soccer team who only re-cently joined the football team, put the extra point right down the middle to provide the winning margin.
“That was great defense,” said Panthers coach Jef Mc-
PREP FOOTBALL
Final tuneup for local teamsJamboree is last chance to get ready
By Lela [email protected]
901-529-2349
Among chants of, “We’re No. 1. We’re No. 1,” about 250 Collierville residents and town oicials celebrated the news Monday of being named America’s Best Main Street in 2014 in a contest by Parade Magazine.
Collierville, which was featured on last Sunday’s mag-azine cover, beat the wine-country town of McMinnville, Oregon for the top honors among 16 contenders. Readers selected their favorite cities in an NCAA tournament-style bracket, voting daily over a four-day period.
“The eforts by Collierville’s citizens to have their Main Street voted the best downtown in America were nothing short of inspirational,” said Maggie Murphy,
COLLIERVILLE
‘Best Main Street’Named No. 1
by Parade Magazine,
Collierville’s Town
Square was a 20-year
process
The Commercial Appeal © Copyright 2014
Inside the Edition
WHOLE CLOTHNecessity spurs mom to invent cloth diaper business when she couldn’t ind any. GOOD HEALTH, 4
OUT OF FUNDS
Part rescue truck, part all-terrain vehicle, Germantown’s mini-ambulance bought with last of Homeland Security grant. NEWS, 2
MY LIFE/MY JOB
Dr. Suparna Mullick adds her skills to practice of Levy Dermatology. BUSINESS, 6
Germantown Weekly
FREEThursday, August 21, 2014 MG HH
By Patsy KeithSpecial to the Weekly
He has come to know Belize and some of its peo-ple have come to know and admire him. After leading a ive day dental mission trip to the area once a year for the last 13 years, Memphis dentist Dr. Jef Frizzell is pretty familiar with the Central American country.
“Although there are many places in Belize that are extremely poor, I have never felt the desperation that seems to drive people to leave other (Central American) countries,” said Frizzell.
Frizzell began minis-tering after his daughter
returned from a vacation Bible school mission trip with the teens from High-land Church of Christ in 2000.
“She suggested I go to Belize to help the people. There were maybe 10 den-tists in the whole country of Belize at that time,” said Frizzell. “But like now, there were no dentists practicing in the central part.”
The first year Friz-zell checked out the area where he wanted to prac-tice. He took one friend and borrowed equipment from another dental min-istry. Each year since that irst visit, Frizzell has tak-en various dentist friends from his church. They
have set up most years in Independence in a school building where they can minister to multiple villag-es and towns in the central part of the country. They go the same time that Highland Church’s teens go to hold a week of VBS.
Each year Frizzell has added a few more pieces of dental equipment. Now
13 years later, the dentists who make the trip from a large church in Cordova to the small town of Indepen-dence in Central America’s Belize, have three dental chairs, an autoclave and other equipment needed to set up a dental ministry for one week out of the year.
FAITH IN ACTION
Dentist, church aid villagers in Belize
Jef Frizzell has been traveling to Belize for 13 years to help perform dental work on those in need.
See DENTIST, 2
See JAMBOREE, 9
TOP MAIN STREETSout of thousands of nominations, here are the other top 14 towns with the best main Streets.
■ corinth, miss.: corinth’s fillmore Street ofers a charming blend of the old and new, thanks to historic buildings mixed with boutiques and galleries that “always keep their doors propped open.”
■ Siloam Springs, ark.: ten years ago, residents say, this main Street was dying. Since then, citizens have restored historic buildings and opened new businesses, and today the town is “alive with new energy.”
■ Deland, fla.; ellicott city, md.; excelsior, minn.; flagstaf, ariz.; Galena, ill.; Georgetown, texas; Greenville, S.c.; holland, mich.; montpelier, Vt.; Placerville, calif.; ridgeield, conn.; and rockland, maine.
See MAIN, 2
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In the News
2 » Thursday, August 21, 2014 » T H E W E E K LY «« M G
In brief
G E R M A N T OW N
Houston suspends student over knives
A Houston High School student got a 180-day suspension and a juve-nile summons Aug. 12 for bringing two knives to school in her purse.
According to German-town police, the school’s resource oicer received an anonymous tip that the girl had taken a picture of the knives in her purse and posted them online, saying she had forgotten to take them out of her purse and that she hoped she wouldn’t be searched.
The assistant principal pulled the girl out of class and conducted a search with the resource oicer present.
The knives were 3-inch and 3.5-inch stainless steel switchblades, according to the report.
Pedestrian hit by train remains critical
A Germantown man remained in critical con-dition Sunday after he was struck by a train near Pop-lar Pike and Southern.
Germantown Police Lt. Mike Grifus said Keoni Harris, 20, was one of two men walking or running near the tracks around 1 a.m. last Saturday when he apparently jumped in front of an eastbound train.
Germantown couple robbed in driveway
A Germantown couple reported two men robbed them last Thursday night in the driveway of their home in the 2200 block of Deodara Cove.
According to police, the man and woman, ages 69 and 66, arrived at their home around 9:15 p.m. and the husband went to check the mailbox. When he re-turned to the garage, two men wearing jeans, long sleeve shirts and home-made masks forced him and his wife to lay on the ground.
According to reports, the suspects stole several cred-it cards, gift certiicates, a purse, glasses, watches, rings, cellphones, keys, checkbooks and cash.
Karen Pulfer focht/the commercial aPPeal
Jef Beaman with Germantown Fire Department shows of a mini-ambulance to Dave Goudge, as he rides past on the Green-way. Germantown received grant money to purchase the ambulance, to help them reach areas such as the Greenway.
Germantown
By Jennifer [email protected]
901-529-2372
Germantown’s new mini-am-bulance turns quite a few heads, whether it’s cruising down Ger-mantown Road at 45 mph with a police escort or navigating the Greenway trail.
Part rescue truck, part all-terrain vehicle, the ambulance is fully equipped to handle any medical emergency and can squeeze into small spaces the big rigs can’t reach.
Germantown Assistant Fire Chief Jef Beaman said the vehi-cle is particularly useful along the city’s biking and walking trails.
“It’s always been our luck that when someone has a medical emergency, it’s usually not near one of the access points,” Beaman said.
The funds for the new ambu-lance came through a federal grant from the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, allocated by the Memphis Fire Department.
It may be the last emergency-management tool the German-town department, or any others in Shelby County or even the nation, sees from Homeland Security in the near future.
The funds came through a
Metropolitan Medical Response System grant, a project started in 2003 in response to the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. Hurricane Katrina in 2005 served as another driving force for the project.
Memphis Fire Lt. Jim Logan said Congress allocated the funds to 124 cities around the country every year to purchase new equipment and hold mass-casualty training sessions. Shelby County was awarded between $200,000 to $300,000 annually to be distributed to local depart-ments.
Logan, who serves as acting manager of the oice of emer-gency management for the city of Memphis, said Homeland Securi-ty informed him the grant would end after this year’s allocations.
“It’s so unfortunate, but we tend in America to be reactionary to things,” Logan said. “And that’s how things get funded.”
Logan said he was not informed why the grant was ending. Home-land Security public information officials in Washington, D.C., were unable to provide informa-tion about the grant last week.
Representatives from hospital systems and emergency response departments formed a coalition to plan for use of the funds. Lo-gan said the committee will re-main intact and will search for alternate funding. While the lo-cal emergency response systems have improved greatly with the
funding, Logan said this can’t be the end of the road.
“This is an efort that needs sustainability,” Logan said. “There’s new equipment, new training coming out daily. You can’t go buy it and sit it on the shelf. You have to grow it.”
The funds also paid for the county to purchase equipment to set up a temporary hospital dur-ing a disaster.
Collierville, Bartlett and Mem-phis also got mini-ambulances, which cost $73,975, thanks to pre-vious Homeland Security fund-ing. Beaman said they are good for special events like marathons as well as disasters that make roads impassable.
But the vehicle’s most frequent response destination in German-town likely will be the Greenway. Beaman said the vehicle can get from the ire station on Farming-ton Boulevard north to the Green-way along Wolf River Boulevard in six minutes.
On a trek down the trails this week, Germantown resident Dave Goudge stopped on his bike ride to admire the new ambulance.
Goudge, who is 66, said it made him feel better about his wife riding the trails on her own, and added it might encourage older people to come out to the trails, knowing they can be easily reached in case of an emergency.
“I bet you that will save a life or two,” he said.
Homeland Security grant comes to end
Funding runs out
THE
WEEKLY
Volume 2, No. 25
The Weekly, a publication of The Commercial Appeal, is delivered free on Thursdays to select residents throughout Germantown and Collierville.
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AUG. 11
■ Someone took assorted pieces of white piping from the construction site in the 7600 block of Wolf river at 10:27 a.m.
■ Someone took two pairs of sunglasses and an iPod from a vehicle in the 8600 block of ravenclif cove at 1:39 p.m.
■ Someone took a set of keys from gym bleachers in the 1800 block of exeter at 10:09 p.m.
AUG. 12
■ oicers arrested a female juvenile for possessing two switchblade knives in the 9700 block of Wolf river Boulevard at 9 a.m.
AUG. 13
■ oicers arrested an adult male for possession of marijuana at Poplar and miller farms at 1:42 a.m.
■ Victim received a call regarding property he had for sale and the buyer got him to send money via money cards in the 7800 block of cross Village at 12:30 p.m.
■ Someone damaged the paint on the door of the victim’s vehicle in the 9700 block of Wolf river at 3:20 p.m.
■ oicers arrested an adult female for taking merchandise from the business without paying in the 2000 block of West Street at 3:46 p.m.
■ male subject grabbed several shirts and left the store with out paying in the 7600 block of Poplar at 1:25 p.m.
AUG. 14
■ oicers arrested an adult male with illegal prescription medication in the 7600 block of Poplar at 2:44 p.m.
■ complaint advised a dog brought in for grooming in the 7600 block of Poplar at 3:22 p.m. appeared to have been neglected.
■ Someone entered the victim’s unlocked residence and took a gaming console in the 2700 block of Wickersham cove at 9:17 p.m.
■ two male subjects approached the homeowners in the driveway of their residence, taking their personal belongings in the 2200 block of Deodara cove at 10:46 p.m.
Germantown Police reports
Frizzell recalls those irst few years when work-ing on teeth without the needed equipment was very diicult. He has a pic-ture of himself extracting a child’s tooth while she leaned back against his thigh.
During the irst week in July, the Highland Church members made their an-nual mission trip to Belize. Sixteen teens and seven adults, including youth minister Buster Clemens, visited the small Central American country. They shared VBS and youth nights with children and teens from Independence and surrounding areas.
Along with the VBS team, dentists from High-land Church who made the trek this year included Frizzell, Dr. Sean Prine of Collierville, Dr. Mike Sav-age, dentist with the VA hospital and an instructor at UT, Dr. Ben McDonald, a recent graduate from UT now practicing in Ohio, and Morgan Gonder a third-year dental student.
During the last three trips Frizzell has mentored a Belizean youth, now 17. Partly due to his experi-ences assisting Frizzell, C.J. Foreman will attend Belize’s University in the fall with plans to become a dentist.
“I guess my favorite part of each year’s trip is seeing kids whose teeth I worked on 13 or so years ago. Now they are bringing their chil-dren to me so I can work on their teeth,” said Frizzell.
DENTIST from 1
Parade’s editor-in-chief. “As our cover shows, the town is a wonderful place to browse, shop, eat and enjoy a weekend stroll. We hope our story inspires other cities to take back their Main Streets.”
Monday morning’s “Pa-rade Magazine Mania” celebration at the Morton Museum of Collierville History is far cry from where Town Square stood in the late 1980s.
The Square faltered as businesses shut down or moved. Residents shunned the shuttered Square and drove to the newest shop-ping centers, big-box stores and indoor malls. The same was true for Mc-Minnville and other cities.
The very things that now make Collierville’s downtown area a jewel — the quaint gazebo, the antique-style clock, the brick-lined sidewalks and other amenities — drew
controversy when the town’s mayor and alder-men pushed to spend $1.2 million in revitalizing Town Square in 1994.
The revitalization “was 20 years in the making. It took 20 years of nurturing and vision to get it to this point,” said Town Planner Jaime Groce.
Many credit former Mayor Herman Wright Cox with revitalizing Town Square in the early 1990s.
In 1992, Alderman Jimmy Lott said he, Cox and the other aldermen took heat among some businessmen angry over a 25-cent-per-square-foot assessment on new com-mercial development.
Lott said the mayor’s vision “was to keep the town viable. As long as the Square remained active and viable, then we would keep that small-town at-mosphere.”
Patrice Frey, president of the National Main Street Center, called it gratifying to see not only
the two inalists, but also half of the contestants fol-lowing the center’s meth-odology for downtown revitalization.
“It is no surprise that this strategy, plus the hard work and passion main street leaders are known for, would result in places that resonate with Americans,” Frey said. Her group, a subsidiary of the National Trust for Historic Preservation, has worked to spur downtown and neighborhood revitaliza-tion for the past 30 years.
Frey added, “Stories like these are an important testament to the endur-ing power of Main Street to entertain, inspire and compete with online re-tailers and big box stores, even in tough economic times. There’s just some-thing magical about Main Street.”
It may be magical, but it also takes money.
McMinnvile Down-town Association manag-er Cassie Sollars said the McMinnville City Council
passed a $30 million urban renewal bond last year, of which $12 million is ear-marked for its downtown and the rest for a neighbor-hood next to downtown.
Sollars said they are sending Collierville a congratulations basket of homegrown goodies — in-cluding a local pinot noir and pinot gris.
“Is Collierville in a dry county?” she asked.
Town Administrator James Lewellen joked that he would intercept the wine before it reached Town Square, which is dry.
“The square is a great place to unwind, to read, or do nothing. We all need that,” he said.
“It is hard to put a price on the value of the square as a great public space, as an economic engine, or as a relection of our heritage and our values, but it is safe to say that the return on that $1.2 million dollar investment has been one of the great inancial in-vestment decisions in our history.”
MAIN from 1
By Jennifer [email protected]
901-529-2372
Investigators have cleared three Germantown police oi-cers of any wrongdoing in the shooting death of military veter-an Justin Neal Davis last month.
Deputy Chief Rodney Bright said all three oicers were tak-
en of administrative leave and returned to work at the end of last week. The department also identiied the oicers involved as Sean Carlson, 35; Robert Cook, 32; and Gene Herndon, 33. The oicers respectively have nine, four and seven years of service with the Germantown Police Department.
Davis, 24, was reported to have been suicidal and armed with a weapon when German-town police found him in his vehicle in Cameron Brown Park
on July 15.According to a police report,
oicers trained in crisis inter-vention tried to talk Davis out of his car, but Davis pointed a rile at the oicers and they opened ire, killing him.
The Tennessee Bureau of Investigation took the lead and compiled a report that was sent to the Shelby County District At-torney’s Oice.
A spokesman from TBI said the report was not a public re-cord, despite the completion of
the investigation.District attorney spokesman
Lawrence Buser said a records request for the report is under review, but also issued a state-ment on the case.
“We have received and re-viewed the entire TBI inves-tigative ile on this death,” the e-mailed statement says. “This case will not be presented to the grand jury of Shelby County, Tennessee. There is insuicient evidence of a criminal ofense by the oicers and insuicient
evidence to rebut that the shoot-ing was in self-defense or in the defense of others.”
Davis was a former Houston High School student who was living in Fayette County. Friends said Davis, who had 2-year-old daughter, was a military vet-eran who sufered from post-traumatic stress disorder, and that he had visited the Memphis Veterans Medical Center hours before his death.
Davis served two tours in Iraq, the most recent ending in 2012.
Germantown
Police oicers cleared in shooting of veteranProbe rules July 15 actions justiied
M G «« T H E W E E K LY « Thursday, August 21, 2014 « 3
A&E
By Lela [email protected]
901-529-2349
Collierville beauty spa owner Karima Suleman was just 15 when she irst decorated her own right hand with a henna de-sign. She and other female relatives and friends were celebrating the upcoming wedding of her cousin in Karachi, Pakistan.
Last Saturday, Suleman, now 36, spread her Middle Eastern tradition and the fun of having a tempo-rary henna tattoo to the general public at the Col-lierville Burch Library, 501 Poplar View Pkwy.
For 10 minutes and $10 cash, Suleman squeezed out the henna gel on a hand, arm or foot and inked a freestyle design or copied one that someone brought in.
Henna dye generally lasts from two to four weeks.
Suleman would not have ofered the program if the library staf hadn’t inadvertently found out she owned Angel’s Beauty Spa at 4205 Hacks Cross in Memphis.
Suleman called the li-brary in a panic thinking she may have placed her daughter’s personal book with a stack of borrowed books in the library drop-of box. During the con-versation with a librarian, Suleman mentioned that she operated her own spa and that she ofered henna tattoos.
“Henna tattooing was a
program we had all tossed around,” said library ref-erence associate Lauren Meier who arranged Sat-urday’s event. “At ‘Fair on the Square’ it was hugely popular.”
“All because of a lost book,” Suleman said. “God made the way.” Henna, made from a plant of the same name, has been used for centuries in Middle Eastern countries. People living in the desert made henna paste and rubbed it on their bodies because of the plant’s natural cooling
and sunblock properties.While henna tattoos are
still used traditionally by Middle Eastern women to celebrate holidays, birth-days or weddings, Sule-man is seeing women and young men of all nation-alities who want a tempo-rary tattoo.
She and her co-worker, Saima Erum of German-town, are slowing build-ing their spa client base. “I need to introduce this thing (henna tattooing) to everywhere,” Suleman said. “That’s my passion.”
COLLIERVILLE
Handy with henna By Keith Salter
Special to The Weekly
The classic children’s book that everyone knows and loves now comes to life at Collierville High School on Sept. 4.
“Charlotte’s Web: The Musical” is hitting the stage at CHS’s Draco Playhouse. Charlotte’s Web follows the story of a young pig named Wilbur, played by Jake McCutch-eon, as he is adopted by Fern Arable, played by Hannah Peeples, and is raised at the Zuckerman Barn, where he meets the goose and gander, Madi-son Pruitt and Luke How-ard, the sheep and lamb, Kristen Aune and Bekah
McFall, the cunning rat, Templeton, played by Mark Elich, and of course the elegant spider, Char-lotte, played by Charlotte Piper.
Not only is this the irst show of the Draco Play-house season, but it is also the big debut of many ac-tors and actresses. One of the new stars is Piper who will be playing Charlotte. Piper has been in many shows at CHS, but this will be her irst lead role on the stage. When asked how she feels about her irst leading role, Piper replied “I’m so excited! I remember seeing all of CHS’s productions my sophomore year and wish-ing how that could be me.
I just hope I can give some of that same inspiration back to the audience.”
The same is true for McCutcheon and Peeples. This is a student produc-tion, meaning the direc-tion, costumes, lighting, and set are all done by students. The musical is directed by Joseph Pierc-ey who is assisted by Anne Saunders. The show is a fun, family-friendly mu-sical with lovable char-acters, a heartwarming story, and many toe-tap-ping tunes. “Charlotte’s Web: The Musical” runs through Sept. 6. The show starts at 7 p.m.
Keith Salter is a teacher at Col-
lierville High School.
THEATER
‘Charlotte’s Web: The Musical’ will open at C’ville High School Sept. 4
By Trena StreetSpecial to The Weekly
The Miss Collierville Scholarship Organiza-tion and Collierville Arts Council held the annual Mid-South Fair Youth Tal-ent preliminary contest at the Harrell Theatre.
The show’s emcee was Elyssa Howell, reigning Miss Collierville, assisted by Collierville’s Outstand-ing Teen, Olivia Shawkey.
Performing a vocal solo titled “Get Out and Stay Out” from the Broadway show “9 to 5,” Bethany Beckham, 18, of German-town took home irst place in the senior division.
In the junior competi-
tion, Collierville resident, Emily Grace Hall, 12, took home the irst place tro-phy with her performance of the Etta James classic, “At Last.”
Both winners received a trophy and a paid entry fee to be part of the Mid-South Fair Youth Tal-ent Contest, which will run Sept. 19-28 at Land-ers Center in Southaven, Miss.
Proceeds from the con-test beneit Miss Collier-ville Scholarship Organi-zation and the Collierville Arts Council.
Trena Street is with the Town of
Collierville’s public information
oice.
PAGEANT
Miss C’ville talent show winnersto compete at Mid-South Fair
Bethany Beckham and Emily Grace Hall will compete at Mid-South Fair Youth Talent Contest, Sept. 19-28.
Temporary tats popular at ‘Fair on the Square’
Karen Pulfer foCHT/THe CommerCial aPPeal
Henna tattoo artist Karima Suleman, drawing a tattoo on client April Reed, demonstrated her art last Saturday at the Collier-ville Burch Library.
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Good Health
Good Health Memphis For more health stories, tips and recipes from The Commercial Appeal’s Good Health magazine, visit facebook.com/goodhealthmemphis
By Dr. Shameela N. AhmedSpecial to The Commercial Appeal
Pregnancy can afect many neurological disorders. Some may improve, others may wors-en and sometimes, a neurologi-cal disorder will make its irst appearance during pregnancy.
I advise my patients to use folic acid, prenatal vitamins and have adequate iron intake during pregnancy. Education regarding interactions between oral contraceptives and medi-cations is also important prior to pregnancy, as the mutual efectiveness of these drugs may change when combined. Some med icat ion s , including an-tiepileptic and migraine pre-ventive medica-tions, are associ-ated with fetal abnormalities. Therefore, alternative medi-cations are needed in women choosing to become pregnant or deciding to breast-feed.
One of the disorders that might appear in pregnancy is restless legs syndrome. Rest-less legs syndrome is charac-terized by an uneasy, creepy and crawling sensation in the legs, typically appearing to-ward the evening and accom-panied by an urge to move legs. Often, patients walk around to relieve the uncomfortable feeling. There is an associa-tion between pregnancy, iron deiciency anemia and restless legs syndrome.
Another condition that may surface in pregnancy is carpal tunnel syndrome, present-ing numbness and tingling in the hands and particularly worsening when the hands are in a prolonged dependent position such as during sleep. This is due to compression of the median nerve at the wrist, which supplies sensation and movement to the small hand muscles. The general luid re-tention during pregnancy may precipitate this condition.
Migraines and epilepsy can improve or worsen during preg-nancy. It is important to be com-pliant with medications and have as good as possible control of seizures. A prolonged seizure can result in low oxygen to the baby and be very detrimental to the health of both mother and child. Typical medications used for acute control of migraine may need to be substituted by other compounds. Some neu-rological illnesses like multiple sclerosis can actually improve during pregnancy. However, there is an increased chance of relapse after childbirth. It is possible for women sufering from multiple sclerosis to have a full term pregnancy and nor-mal delivery.
With proper medical sup-port and counseling, preg-nancy in women with chronic neurological illnesses can be healthy with a good outcome.
FROM THE DOCTOR
Pregnancy may afect neurological disorders
Shameela N. Ahmed
By Kathryn Justice LeacheSpecial to The Commercial Appeal
When Courtney Moser was pregnant with her irst child, she knew she wanted to put him in cloth diapers. When she found there wasn’t a brick and mortar store in Memphis that sold them, she decided to open one herself — in her liv-ing room.
“Sometimes people are ner-vous when they plug the ad-dress into their GPS,” laughed Moser, a thirty-something mother of two. “They call be-cause they think they’re lost. They wonder, ‘Is she going to pull a box of diapers out from behind her couch?’”
Moser is among a growing number of parents who are choosing to swap disposable diapers for cloth. While some are motivated by the relatively greater environmental impact of disposables, Moser said, “most moms are like me — they want to save money.”
Additionally, said Moser, some parents choose cloth be-cause their babies have sensi-tive skin.
“They are literally in tears because their babies have such horrible rashes and their doc-tors have said they can’t use disposables anymore,” Moser said. “For whatever reason they’re doing it, I get to help them, and that feels good.”
Before opening Over the Moon Diapers in her Ger-mantown home, Moser was a corporate accountant, travel-ing frequently and working long hours. She always knew she wanted to cloth diaper her
children like her mother, Jan-ice Bogott, had done with her and her two siblings, but she quickly learned that reusable diapers had come a long way since the prefold and safety pin days. She spent hours re-searching the various styles and brands online but was frustrated because you “can’t see them, can’t touch them,” she said.
She said she ended up hat-ing the ones she had selected once she actually started us-ing them on Matthew, born January 2012. When she be-moaned the lack of in-person shopping opportunities to her mother, Bogott suggested the new mom open such a store herself. While she was ini-tially dismissive of the idea, it wasn’t long before Moser was back online researching cloth diaper retail sites in cit-ies comparable in size to Mem-phis. She found that many of them, such as Oklahoma City, had home-based diaper stores. Partnering with Bogott, also of Germantown, Moser had a business license by spring 2012 and by July 2012 Over the Moon Diapers was open to the public three days a week.
For Memphis-area families interested in cloth diaper-ing, Over the Moon is a game changer. Rachel Carder, a Memphis mom who cloth dia-pered her son, now 2 ½, had to spend hours researching
diapers online as Moser had done. Though she was happy with her choice, she said, “I couldn’t shake the feeling that I was wasting hours of time that could have been saved if I had only been able to see all of the options laid out in front of me.”
Not only is it suddenly pos-sible to browse the nearly over-whelming number of diferent types and styles of diapers in person, but Moser and Bogott themselves are invaluable re-sources.
Bogott, or “Crunchy Nana” as she is known at Over the Moon, teaches Cloth Diaper University on the irst Monday evening of every month.
“She really goes through ev-erything from A to Z,” Moser said. “She answers questions and breaks it down so people feel like it’s manageable.”
Over the Moon’s website — maintained by Moser, who taught herself web design — is also chock-full of information new cloth diapering parents will ind useful, such as a run-
down of laundering techniques and advice on building a func-tional stash of varieties and brands.
Perhaps the unique ofering is Over the Moon’s two-week diaper trial program. For a small fee, parents can sample select brands and styles of cloth diapers and return the styles they don’t want for a full refund if returned in the speciied condition. They also ofer a newborn diaper rental service.
While Moser hopes one day to move Over the Moon out of her living room and into its own space, she said she is wait-ing until the time is right.
“I’m not rolling in money, but hey, that’s ok,” Moser said. “I feel like we started our busi-ness on a laughable budget — we spent the most amount of money on our logo.”
Sure, the accounting gig paid better, but, as Moser points out, “You just realize — what is more money going to buy you? More toys to clutter up your house?”
Over The Moon
PHOTOS BY BRANDON DILL/SPECIAL TO THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL
Courtney Moser said she decided to cloth diaper her son, Matthew, to save money. Sensing a need in the market, she opened a cloth diaper business out of her home in Germantown. Over the Moon holds “Cloth Diaper University” on the irst Monday of every month.
The tale of a Germantown mom turned diaperpreneur
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Before opening Over the Moon Diapers in her Germantown home, Moser was a corporate accountant, traveling frequently and working long hours.
ON THE WEBFor more information, visit overthemoondiapers.com
4 » Thursday, August 21, 2014 » T H E W E E K LY «« M G
Schools
M G «« T H E W E E K LY « Thursday, August 21, 2014 « 5
SNAPSHOTS
Beck and Van Arthur show of their Dogwood dolphin tattoos.
Emily Turner, Madeline Auger and Lila Wilkerson, all Dogwood Elementary students, hang around during the school’s Back to School party.
Dogwood Elementary students Drew Fondaw helps little brother, Jack, get ready for kindergarten.
Ryder Williams and Rhett
Stegall enjoy a little playtime
during Dogwood Elementary’s
Back to School Party.
Conner Armacost and Maracela Alcala both were excited about meeting new friends at Dogwood Elementary’s Back to School Party.
Freshman Houston Band member Emma Sulewski rides down the inlatable slide during the school’s summer camp.
The Houston Band’s summer camp wrapped up with water-day fun, complete with water-slide inlatables and a dunk tank. Jim Smith, Houston band director, took the irst plunge after students lined up for a shot at dunking him.
Tanisha Chaudhari, Lohit Naik and Sanat Naik, students at Sycamore Elementary, were excited about returning to school earlier this month.
The Kiwanis Club of Germantown has presented Christine Lee with
its Student of the Year Award. Lee, a recent graduate of Germantown
High School, was the valedictorian with a 4.6 GPA. Her many activities
include President of the Key Club, President of the National Honors
Society, Secretary of Model United Nations, Sergeant at Arms for the French Club, Student Government
Association, BETA club, Environ-mental Club, Habitat for Humanity,
a volunteer at the Memphis Zoo and science tutor at Germantown Middle
School. While at GHS she also par-ticipated in track and ield events.
She was also awarded a Kiwanis scholarship earlier and is a student at Duke University. Presenting Lee
her award is David, Jackson, Kiwanis selection committee chairman and
Kiwanis President Steve Green. Also in attendance were Lee’s parents,
Mandy and Chester Lee.
6 » Thursday, August 21, 2014 » T H E W E E K LY «« M G
Business
By Jeremy C. ParkSpecial to The Weekly
Everyday heroes rarely receive media attention; nor do they expect credit or seek limelight. Activi-ties like tutoring, mentor-ing, picking up trash, or taking care of the sick and hungry, tend to be indi-vidual eforts that garner impressive results over time, compared to larger events with more of an immediate impact. Last year we teamed with other stakeholders to launch the WKNO monthly television series, The SPARK.
I am excited to an-nounce that we are ex-panding The SPARK, and the Mid-South now will have a televised award show, The SPARK Awards which will celebrate indi-viduals, including youth, college students, adults, and teachers, as well as nonproits, corporations, and schools, in 13 difer-
ent catego-ries, who are making a diference in our com-munity.
A nyone may sub-mit nomi-n a t i o n s and it is all totally free.
This is your chance to say “Thank You” to our everyday heroes. Three inalists in each category will be chosen by a selec-tion committee from The Rotary Club of Memphis. Finalists will be invited to a free award luncheon where SPARK Award win-ners will be announced. The SPARK Awards will be taped for a special televised broadcast to air on WKNO the week of Thanksgiving.
Visit theSPARKtv.org to learn more and submit your nominations before 5 p.m. on Sept. 15.
GIVING BACK
Nominate candidates for SPARK Awards by Sept. 15
Jeremy C. Park
Name: Dr. Suparna Mullick of Ger-mantown
Title, position and company: Medi-cal, surgical, and cosmetic derma-tologist at Levy Dermatology
Company: Levy Dermatology welcomed me into the practice at its location of Poplar near Massey last summer. I am fortunate to have joined this practice that Dr. Alan Levy, a Memphis native, created. Since its inception in 2009, Levy Dermatology has lourished into a warm and welcoming full-service medical, surgical and cosmetic practice that treats the full range of dermatologic conditions across all age groups. For more information, visit levydermatology.com.
Education: Vanderbilt University, BS, University of Chicago Pritzker School of Medicine, MD
Personal: I have been married for 13 years to my amazing husband Dr. Matthew Lyons, a cardiologist at Sutherland Cardiology. We have two beautiful children — a 5-year-old girl and a 7-year-old boy.
Civic involvement: I participate in providing skin cancer screenings for
the public so that more people may have an opportunity to efectively treat issues via early detection.
First job: Faculty at University of Michigan in the pediatrics depart-ment teaching pediatric residents and serving as a pediatrician.
Most recent job: I currently prac-tice medical, surgical and cosmetic dermatology for all ages at Levy Der-matology.
Career highlights: Medical vol-unteer at Mother Teresa’s Home for Children and Mother Teresa’s Home for the Sick and Mentally Ill; pediatrician for the uninsured and underinsured at a federally qualiied health center in St Louis; caring for all of my wonderful patients at Levy Dermatology
Most satisfying career moment: The irst melanoma that I ever diag-nosed was on a middle-aged women under her arm that she did not even realize there was anything there to be worried about. For years, she al-ways introduced me when I saw her as “the doc that saved my life.”
Career advice: Make sure you love what you do. It was stressful to go
back to the rigorous hours of medi-cal training to pursue dermatology while raising two small children, but it was worth it because I am able to shape my career around something about which I am passionate every day.
Person I most admire: Mother Te-resa. Her sellessness in helping the most destitute people in a country that she was not even born in is in-spirational, and her legacy lives on despite her passing.
MY LIFE/MY JOB
Levy Dermatology welcomes Suparna Mullick of G’town
Suparna Mullick joined at Levy Dermatol-ogy last summer.
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PHOTOS BY KIM ODOM | SPECIAL TO THE WEEKLY
“My favorite movie is ‘Blue Hawaii.’ ‘I Can’t Help Falling in Love with You’ is my favorite song.”
MARY BOBBITT
In honor of Elvis Week, we
asked:
What’s your
favorite Elvis
movie and song?
“‘Speedway’ and ‘You Ain’t Nothing But a Hound Dog.’”
MARY KING
“‘Blue Hawaii’
and ‘Love Me Tender.’”
HEATHER
FRANCO
“‘Jail House Rock’ and ‘You Ain’t Nothing But a Hound Dog.’”
CHERYL HARRIS
“My favorite movie is ‘Love Me Tender’ and ‘Burning Love’ is my
favorite Elvis song.”
LINDA PHIFER
Say Cheese!
M G «« T H E W E E K LY « Thursday, August 21, 2014 « 7
Pets
8 » Thursday, August 21, 2014 » T H E W E E K LY «« M G
PETS OF THE WEEK GERMANTOWN ANIMAL SHELTER
Name: CaseyAge: 2 yearsBreed: Feist/Border CollieDescription: White and tan, and very active.
The Germantown Animal Shelter, 7700 Southern, is open 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday-Friday and 9:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday.
Name: Moo MooAge: 4 monthsBreed: Domestic short hairDescription: Moo Moo loves to snuggle.
Special to The Weekly
After a big storm blew through Collierville in mid-July, Christopher Da-vid and Jonah Cross and their dog, Bane, found a bird that was blown out of his nest.
He was scared sitting on their back porch. Not sure what to do with him, the boys’ mother, Robin Cross, spoke with her brother, Bart Howell, who found a number to the “bird-man.”
He told Robin Cross to try to get him back in a tree and see if the mother bird would come take care of him.
The Cross family placed the hawk on their fence post and that is where he stayed for two weeks. He called out to his mama, and she started to feed him several times a day. The family named him Hawkeye.
Several people would stop and look at him.
The family then posted pictures and updates of Hawkeye on Facebook and he had many followers. After two weeks, Robin Cross woke up to check on him and he was gone. They were sad to see him leave but then heard his call and found him in a tree in their backyard.
When the Cross family is in the yard, they hear him call out like he is say-ing “hello.” They are hop-ing that he will make their
backyard his home. This has been a great experi-ence for the boys.
COLLIERVILLE
Family helps hawk stranded in backyard
Over the summer break, Chris-topher David and Jonah Cross helped a hawk that fell out of its nest in their backyard.
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Sports
M G «« T H E W E E K LY « Thursday, August 21, 2014 « 9
By Sarah AcufSpecial to The Weekly
The volleyball team at St. George’s Independent School recently welcomed some familiar faces on the court. A group of SGIS alumnae volleyball play-ers came back to help the current team prepare for the upcoming season.
With a promising sea-son ahead, SGIS graduates felt compelled to help out before heading back to college. “The SG volley-ball team was my fam-ily in high school. I love coming back to support the talented girls on the team and to continue the St. George’s volleyball leg-acy,” said Taylor See. “It’s also fun to get back on the court with my old team-mates and to see Coach Emmy again.”
“It puts a smile on my face every time our alum-nae walk in the gym be-cause it makes me feel like I was a part of something special in the lives of these young women,” said varsi-ty volleyball coach Emmy McClain. “They obviously valued their time as a St. George’s volleyball player enough to do what they can to make sure those be-hind them have a similar experience.”
The alumnae were just as excited to be back. “I came back to help our team because I love seeing St. George’s volleyball suc-ceed. St. George’s is a very welcoming place and it’s always good to be back,” said Hannah Everett, who is a volleyball player at Emory University.
“I want these girls to know how great it feels to win a state championship. I can’t wait to see how well they do this season,” said
Katie McCormack, who currently plays volleyball at Birmingham Southern. “So far they look awe-some!”
VOLLEYBALL
Former St. George’s students return to help volleyball team
Recently, former St. George’s Independent School vol-leyball team members came back to help the new squad.
PHOTOS BY CHRIS DESMOND/SPECIAL TO THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL
Collierville High School’s Alex Stanield tries to keep a handle on the ball as the Dragons faced of with Millington Central during jamboree action at Arlington High School last Friday night.
Ferran, who was coaching against his alma mater.
“We inally popped a turnover and we had a chance at a couple of other balls that were in the air. Even though it’s (diferent) with the 25-minute run-ning clock ... we’re trying to change the culture and get back to being success-ful.”
Collierville’s running game was successful as well; the Dragons got a 10-yarder from Ryan Dougherty and then forced a turnover, leading to a 16-yard run by Tyler Garvey to complete a 14-0 victory over Millington.
“We’ve still got a long way to go,” said Dragons coach Mike O’Neill, whose team is coming of a 7-4 re-cord.
“When you compete, you compete. I thought our efort was good. We played hard. We’ve got a solid running back corps.”
Even though his team lost, Millington coach Chris Michael also accom-plished his goal: to get out of the jamboree unscathed.
“We’re so thin I just
didn’t want anybody to get hurt,” he said. “We only played our irst-string of-fense and defense for one
series. It’s exciting for the kids and the fans ... but I would have rather had a practice day.”
Joseph Stephenson had a scoring run to highlight Arlington’s 10-3 victory over Houston in the inale.
Freshman quarterback Tate Kolwyck moved the Tigers smartly down the ield to set up Stephenson’s score. And even though it won’t count in the statis-tics, it was awfully good to have football back.
JAMBOREE from 1
FridAy gAmeSThe regular season begins Friday for area teams. Collierville plays at Bolton, Germantown hosts Millington and Houston starts its season on the road at Cordova. All games begin at 7 p.m.
VARSITY PLAY DAYSDuring the summer break, Windyke Country Club hosted its Varsity Play Days. King Gri-santi, Sean Logan, Josh Thompson, Davis Irving and 12 others competed for points each Thursday. Irving won the season-ending shootout. Brock Shafer, director of instruction, organized the event.
Bartlett’s Johnathon Bowlan is pressured by Germantown’s Kennedy Sanders during the jamboree at Arlington High. Bartlett scored on a long fumble return and kicked an extra point for a 7-6 victory in its 25-minute contest.
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Puzzle solutions
WEEKENDPUZZLE
SOLUTIONS
This is the solution to the crossword puzzle in
Saturday’s editions.
This is thesolution to
the KingFeatures
crossword on
Page 2M.
This is thesolution to
The New York
Timescrossword
onPage 2M.
TODAY’S CRYPTOQUIP: I’D SAY FOLKS ARE TYPICALLY ABOUT AS ATTRACTIVE AS THEIR RELATIVES. AFTER ALL, BEAUTY IS ONLY KIN DEEP.
ACROSS 1 Viciously
criticize 6 Surgery
souvenir 10 Toil 11 Halley’s
sighting 13 Busy 14 Humiliate 15 Singer
— King Cole
16 Gibson of “Lethal Weapon”
18 Brownish gray
19 Early explorers
22 Mine rock 23 Enormous
24 Big water pipes
27 Does some modeling
28 Opposed to 29 New England
catch 30 Puts off 35 Quantity:
Abbr. 36 Rent out 37 Memorable
period 38 Slugger
Roger 40 Copper or
cobalt 42 Dodge 43 Celeb
roster 44 Penn of
“Milk”
45 Low cards in pinochle
DOWN 1 Duck
hunter’s cover
2 Islands veranda
3 Touches on
4 Urgent call 5 Quakes 6 Weigh-in
need
7 Corn core 8 Best
Picture of 1984
9 Make a comeback
12 Past, present and future
17 Cain’s mother
20 Volcano-shaped
21 Mary’s TV pal
24 Monsieur’s wife
25 Zoo residents 26 “Honest!” 27 Natalie of
“Thor” 29 Pool stick 31 Hall-of-
Famer Merlin 32 Arrive 33 Make blank 34 Sea dogs 39 Writer Tarbell 41 Quarterback
Manning
Sudoku
■ Former first lady Rosalynn Carter is 87.
■ Actor-director Robert Redford is 78.
■ Country singer Steve Wilkinson (The Wilkinsons) is 59.
■ Actor Denis Leary is 57.
■ Rock singer-musician Zac Maloy (The Nixons) is 46.
■ Rapper Masta Killa (Wu-Tang Clan) is 45.
■ Actor Christian Slater is 45.
■ Actor Edward Norton is 45.
■ Actor-comedian Andy Samberg (“Saturday Night Live”) is 36.
■Actress Mika Boorem is 27.
Dear Annie: My hus-band and I recently purchased a new home. It took us a while to reach this point. In the course of trying to purchase, we were o�ered help by a good friend, “Mary,” who lives 1,500 miles away. Mary referred us to her mortgage lender, also 1,500 miles away. We engaged the lender, who worked hard, but things didn’t move as quickly as we needed, and we lost a large deposit on the house, along with the costs of an appraisal and inspection. This was money we could ill-a�ord.
We recently found another house and used a local mortgage lender. Ev-erything went smoothly, and we’ll be moving soon. Here’s the problem: Last month, Mary called to chew me out because we didn’t use her mortgage person. I told Mary that we lost a lot of money, and we’ve moved on. Mary was mean and hung up on me. I haven’t heard from her since.
Mary and I have known each other for 30 years, and we’ve been through a great many of life’s ups and downs. She’s like a sister to me, and our hus-bands get along well, too. I was astonished that she would be so obtuse about what we’d been through. Mary often reacts like this when she’s angry, but I wonder why it’s up to me to make the e�ort to fix things. Should I reach out to her? It saddens me that such a longtime friend-ship would end this way, but I’m ready to let it go.
— Arizona
Dear Arizona: Mary is what we call high mainte-nance. She is emotionally demanding, cuts you o� when you don’t put her first and then forces you to do the hard work of repairing the friendship. Over time, this behavior becomes tiresome, and we don’t blame you for having had enough. Con-sider distancing yourself from the friendship, bit by bit. Let Mary make the next move, whenever that is, and you can maintain the level of friendship that best suits you.
Dear Annie: I found the letter from “A.” so refresh-ing. The mother told her son that certain events require a personal phone call instead of a text mes-sage, and then he did it. What magic did she use? Communication.
People can’t read your mind. Stop stewing in your own replay of past events, and communicate calmly.
— Not Karnack
Answer to Saturday’s puzzle
by Thomas Joseph
Crossword
8/18/14
Answer to yesterday’s puzzle
Chess Quiz
Sudoku is a number-placing puzzle based on a 9x9 grid
with several given numbers. The object is to place the
numbers 1 to 9 in the empty squares so that each row, each column and each 3x3
box contains the same num-ber only once. The difficulty
level of the Conceptis Sudoku increases from Monday to
Sunday.
WHITE MATES IN 2Hint: Sacrifice and mate.
Solution: 1. Rxa6ch! bxa6 2. Qc7 mate. If instead 1. ... Kxa6, 2. Qa5
mate [Sherman-Mayer ’85].
Please email your questions to [email protected], or write to: Annie’s Mailbox, c/o Creators Syndicate, 737 3rd Street, Hermosa Beach, CA 90254.
Jumble Daily Bridge Club
Cy the Cynic says that some ques-tions are so complex that you have to be highly intelligent just to be undecided.
Cy was dummy in today’s deal, watch-ing South cope with a contract of four spades. South ru�ed the third heart, pondered the situation and led a club to dummy’s queen. When the finesse won, South took the ace of trumps. The king fell from West, so South lost a trump and two hearts.
South made his game, but that wasn’t enough to satisfy Cy.
NOT BEST “Your play worked but wasn’t best,”
the Cynic asserted. “After you ru� the third heart, go to dummy and finesse in trumps. If East has, say, K-9-2, you cash your diamonds and end-play him with his trump trick to lead from the king of clubs.”
“My play was fine,” South insisted. “If the club finesse lost, I would hope East had K-x in trumps. When West had the king of clubs, I could a�ord a safety play in trumps.”
I think Cy’s play was better. I’ll let the mathematicians figure out the exact percentages.
By Frank Stewart Tribune Content Agency
Questions and comments: Email Stewart at [email protected]
Aries (March 21-April 19) ★★★★★ Say what you feel, and you will set the stage for a dynamic interaction. Others could be in the mood to talk. If someone says something strange, ask for confirmation. Tonight: Tell it like it is.
Taurus (April 20-May 20) ★★★★ Be more sensitive to the possibilities that surround you on the homefront. Your love of beauty is likely to emerge. Tonight: Pay bills and look at your budget.
Gemini (May 21-June 20)★★★★★ You might not believe the reaction you get from others, but you certainly won’t be displeased. Tonight: If you can dream it, you can manifest it.
Cancer (June 21-July 22) ★★★ You might feel lazy and self-indulgent. Set the stage and make plans accordingly. If you work, try to take a personal day. Tonight: Go for the moment.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) ★★★★★ You instinctively know which way to go when dealing with a friend. Your voice and facial expressions are what draw others in. Tonight: Enjoy a surprise call or event.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) ★★★★ Deal with someone in power di-rectly. Your instincts guide your thoughts and actions. You could be surprised by what emerges. Listen to a di�erent point of view more openly. Tonight: With favorite people.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)★★★★ You absolutely know what you want. Someone else might not be as predictable as you would like. Look past the obvious, and you will understand what needs to happen. Tonight: Opt for a di�erent experience.
Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)★★★★ You might find yourself in a com-petition to seize the limelight. Before you act, consider the ramifications; they could be more costly than what you are willing to deal with. Tonight: Till the wee hours.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) ★★★★ You might want to try a di�erent path to the same end result. Listen to a sug-gestion from someone who has a vested in-terest in the outcome of a present situation. Tonight: Defer to someone else.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)★★★ Your ability to organize and be e�ec-tive will be tested. Know that there is a pos-sibility of a misunderstanding. Tonight: Get in a good workout at the gym.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) ★★★★ Defer to someone you trust. Be aware that this person might have a bit of an attitude or seem preoccupied. Confirm an agreement. Tonight: Playtime!
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) ★★★★★ You could be pushing a lot harder than usual in trying to avoid a personal mat-ter. Understand that you need to deal with this situation. Tonight: Head home.
Horoscope
This year you express your feelings more openly, and your increased vulnerability draws many people to-ward you. In a sense, your openness makes it more difficult for people not to be authentic with you. If you are single, you will be surrounded by quite a few potential admirers. You will meet someone who will knock your socks off. If you are attached, the two of you become even better friends, and you will experience a great deal of closeness. Use care with financial matters, as there could be some confusion between the two of you. GEMINI can be very chatty.
What the stars Mean
★★★★★Dynamic★★★★
Positive★★★
Average★★
So-so★
Difficult
TODAY’S BIRTHDAYBy Jacqueline Bigar King Features Syndicate
Jacqueline Bigar is at www.jacquelinebigar.com.
MARCY SUGAR & KATHY MITCHELL
ANNIE’S MAILBOX
TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS
CONTACT US Peggy McKenzie, 529-2341, mckenziep@ commercialappeal.com. Become a fan of the M section on Facebook at facebook.com/ CAMemphisM.
Woman should make move to fix friendship
TODAY’S CRYPTOQUIP: I’D SAY FOLKS ARE TYPICALLY ABOUT AS
ATTRACTIVE AS THEIR RELATIVES. AFTER ALL, BEAUTY IS ONLY KIN DEEP.
Cryptoquip
Sudoku
For the kids
Sudoku is a number-
placing puzzle based on a
9x9 grid with several given
numbers. The object is to
place the numbers 1 to 9 in
the empty squares so that
each row, each column and
each 3x3 box contains the
same number only once.
SOLUTIONS: See BELOW for solutions to these puzzles
Premier Crossword | Big Mix-ups
CONTACT USPeggy McKenzie, 529-2341, [email protected]. Become a fan of the M section on Facebook at facebook.com/CAMemphisM; follow us on Twitter at twitter.com/memphismeditor.
SUNDAY BREAK
By Frank StewartTribune Content Agency
Sudoku
Bridge
Horoscope
ACROSS 1 Place a call
incorrectly 8 “Alley —!” 11 — toe in the
water 15 Spat 19 1979 Michael
Caine film 20 Sergeant’s
inferior 22 Arab leader 23 Had a different
opinion 25 Court plea, for
short 26 “— the Greek”
(1964 film) 27 Average mark 28 French
department 29 Ax parts 30 Mel of the old
Giants 31 1954 hit song
with a biblical title
35 Cyberspace letters
37 Sigh of satisfaction
38 Lott of football
39 Valued highly 42 “The Thing” star
Russell 43 Lose vigor 45 Ship out 46 Career-
completion celebrations
51 Canadian station name
52 Spanish arena cry
53 A — (slightly) 54 Haughtiness 58 “So it’s you!” 59 Bank offering
for creditworthy customers
66 Focuses in college
68 Kochi sash 69 Quarterback
Troy 70 Like some high-
quality models 77 “I’m cold!” 78 Bidding site 79 180 degrees
from SSE 80 — Lingus 81 Film director
Kazan 82 Formation of
new areas of oceanic crust
89 Mane locale 93 In the past 94 Minimal tide
type 95 Sudden pain 96 Oblong pastry 98 Bards’ dusks 99 Weight revealer 101 Trainers looking
for pins 105 Clumsy ship 108 Ticket details 109 Regular pay 110 Stable scrap 111 “Along —
spider ...” 113 With 11-Down,
settled for
114 Takes a defensive position
118 New — (Enya type)
119 Kiss 120 Divert 121 Actors Beatty
and Sparks 122 Bodega, e.g. 123 Profs’ helpers 124 Any of four long
pairs featured in this puzzle
DOWN 1 Seder bread 2 “— the Sheriff” 3 Terse 4 Paint crudely 5 Sitcom actress
Swenson 6 NCAA part:
Abbr. 7 Nutlike Chinese
fruit 8 Band of eight 9 Sound of awe 10 Med lead-in 11 See 113-Across 12 Dubliners, e.g. 13 1990s Toyota 14 Bar brew 15 Bone
attachments 16 Coca of comedy 17 Enters one
following another
18 Iced 21 Like some even
distributions 24 Eye, to Yves
29 Inflated self 31 Walk in shallow
water 32 — monde
(high society) 33 Old West’s
Wyatt 34 Hankering 35 Italian opera
singer Pinza 36 Debussy’s
“La —” 39 Piece of
audiophile equipment, briefly
40 Divvy up again 41 “This pays the
rent, at least” 42 Leg part 43 Sirius, say 44 Adjutant 47 “Li’l ol’ me?!” 48 Shade tree 49 Artery: Abbr. 50 Composer Erik 55 Nettle 56 “— Rose” (Nat
King Cole hit) 57 Eyeballing 59 Victimizes, with
“on” 60 Blog feed inits. 61 Electrojet bit 62 Heat’s org. 63 Up to,
informally 64 Downcast 65 Anger greatly 67 One — kind 71 Hose hitch 72 Lowdown 73 Barn hooter
74 Shocked reaction
75 Sales staffer 76 Opp. of
departure 81 Falco of “Oz” 83 English peer 84 Amoeba
composition 85 Wine: Prefix 86 Tabula — 87 Greek vowels 88 Pointed tool 89 Ted Koppel,
for one 90 Area of a plot
of land 91 Petitioned 92 Events after
Lents 97 Cheez- —
(crackers) 98 Breakfast china
item 99 Old Iranian VIP 100 Et — (and so
forth) 102 “In my dreams!” 103 Stupor: Prefix 104 Fowl sheds 105 “My Cherie —” 106 Oscar de la — 107 Casey of
countdowns 111 Irene of
“Fame” 112 Awestruck 114 Trig function 115 Have chow 116 RR depot 117 — Ho Lee
(scientist in 2000 headlines)
ACROSS 1 Count back? 4 Not the final
version 8 Lab report? 11 “Coffee
Cantata” composer
15 Role on “Frasier”
18 Clear the deck? 19 Acknowledge 20 Provo sch. 21 Singer with the
triple-platinum album “The Memory of Trees”
22 Shepherded she?
23 Book-jacket bit 24 *What to
call a female ambassador [the Johnsons]
27 Gen ___ 28 Table scraps 30 Hillock 31 Off-white shade 32 Very 33 Mexican wrap 35 It’s all uphill
from here 39 Very busy 41 Consider
necessary 42 Upright 43 Baseball’s
Alvarez and others
44 Damon and Dillon
46 ___ prosequi (“proceed no further” court entry)
47 Program carrier 48 Crude crowd 50 Motorcycle
demos, e.g. 53 One side of the
pH scale 56 Makes
unnecessary 58 French “Inc.” 59 Experiences
with great enjoyment
61 Expensive spoonful, maybe
62 What the answer to each of the six starred clues starts with
65 Old antipoverty agcy.
66 Purell target 68 Max Peel, for
example: Abbr. 69 Partner of
scratch 70 Slight 71 Days ___ 73 & 75 Bark 76 Prefix with
pressure 78 ___ Cup (candy
with a gooey center)
81 Utah ski resort 82 Director Nicolas 84 On-track Bobby 88 Common deli-
meat order: Abbr.
89 Modern know-it-all?
90 Mayberry kid 91 Between: Fr. 92 Dickinson of
TV’s “Police Woman”
93 “Not likely!” 94 Hardy heroine 95 How school kids
are grouped 96 Mike who
directed “Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire”
98 Some computers, familiarly
99 Hectic hosp. areas
100 What a packing person may pack
101 General public 103 Part of lye 104 It can make
waves 105 Lasagna
ingredient 113 Think 115 Any of nine
kings of Thailand
116 *Pairing up for safety [the Clintons]
117 Accusatory words
118 Pitcher Hershiser
119 Freedom trail?
120 Huntsman Center team
121 Earthy deposit
122 Climax 123 Whacks 124 Brighten
(up)
DOWN 1 Give some
relief 2 Many a ball 3 *Cleaning
supply [the Bushes 43]
4 “Phooey!” 5 City north of
Seattle 6 Doughnuts 7 Wows 8 Epitome of
simplicity 9 Alternative to
pumpernickel 10 Suffix with
art 11 Smartphone
sound 12 “The King and
I” heroine
13 One with an eye for a storyteller?
14 Cow chow 15 *“My Fair Lady”
co-star [the Reagans]
16 Must pay, as a debt
17 Two out of 100? 25 Some gas
atoms, informally
26 Domineered, with “over”
29 Adventure with a guide
32 Next 34 Two-person tool 36 Amount to
“kick it up” 37 Texas border
city 38 Taking the
place (of) 40 Move, as a
painting
45 Pub vessel 47 Old food label
std. 48 “Star Trek”
enemy, with “the”
49 Letter before Peter in a phonetic alphabet
51 Found 52 Last song
Rodgers and Hammerstein did together (1959)
54 French prayer addressee
55 One never stooping
57 Larger ___ life
60 Place to caucus
63 A big head may be on one
64 Pooper ___
67 *Singer with the 1964 #2 hit “My Boy Lollipop” [the Bushes 41]
70 *Egg order [the Obamas]
72 Some gold medals
74 Slight people 75 Composed 77 Contract-bridge
tactic 78 Zombie’s sound 79 Actress
nominated for a Golden Globe for “Rhoda”
80 Dancer’s wear 81 Pretty picture
connector? 83 Some fridges 85 Oscar, e.g. 86 Rowing
machine, for one
87 Stagger 97 Not interfere
with 100 Item in
Baudelaire’s oeuvre
102 March great 103 Editorial
instructions 104 Dance with
a king 106 Year John
Dryden died 107 West of the
screen 108 Information
gleaned from a dating site
109 Sugar suffix 110 Firebug 111 Starting 112 Double ___
Oreo 114 Perfume
ingredient Difficulty level ★★★★★
Answer to yesterday's puzzleSudoku is a number-placing puzzle based
on a 9x9 grid with sev-eral given numbers. The
object is to place the numbers 1 to 9 in the
empty squares so that each row, each column and each 3x3 box con-tains the same number only once. The difficulty
level of the Conceptis Sudoku increases from
Monday to Sunday.
The average solution time for this King Features crossword is 63 minutes.
8-17-14
In the club lounge, Cy the Cynic, a shameless chauvin-ist, and Wendy, our feminist, were arguing again — about whether men or women are better at math.
“Women are better,” the Cynic sni�ed. “They’re al-ways subtracting from their age and weight and adding to the price of what they paid for a dress or a purse.”
“Is it true that you’re the first member of your family born without a tail?” Wendy asked.
“How do you play the trump suit at this slam?” Cy challenged her, showing today’s deal. (North’s bid of three spades conventionally promised spade shortness and a heart fit.) “What are the mathematical odds?”
“The odds favor playing to drop the king,” Wendy replied promptly (and correctly). “A 1-1 break is a 52 percent chance, a 2-0 break is 48 percent.”
Before you read on, decide how you would play six hearts after West leads the jack of spades.
South can get two chances with a simple line of play: He can lead the queen of trumps to dummy’s ace. If the king doesn’t appear, he can try the club finesse.
South’s best chance — re-gardless of percentages — is to try for an end play. He takes the A-Q of spades to pitch a club from dummy, cashes the A-K of diamonds, ru�s his low spade in dummy and ru�s dummy’s queen of diamonds. South then leads the queen of trumps and lets it ride if West follows low.
South succeeds whether the finesse wins or loses. If East wins, he must lead a spade or a diamond, conced-ing a ru�-slu�, or lead a club from his king.
Dear Harriette: My ex-wife and I have been divorced for five years, and she has since remar-ried. We have a 13-year-old son from our former union. My son wants me to help purchase gifts for his mother for her birth-day, Mother’s Day and Christmas. I have asked my son if he talks to his stepfather about this, and he says no. I feel it is not my duty to do this, and I believe her current hus-band should be responsi-ble for this task. I am not comfortable with giving my ex-wife any “special” gifts. What should I tell my son when he sees no gifts from his dad?
— Under New Management, Salt Lake City
Dear New: It does not sound like your son is asking you to help him purchase a gift that would be from him and either his stepfather or from you. If he is asking for your input to help learn how to buy gifts for his mother from him, that is a completely di�erent
story. Sure, it would be great if he could cultivate that type of relationship with his stepfather, and that may happen over time. If the stepfather does not agree or your son is not ready to make such a request, I think it is fine for you to teach your child how to be a thoughtful gift giver.
Help him select gifts that would be appropri-ate for him to give his mother. The gifts should not reflect memories from your past. Instead, make the experience of helping your son a way for you to guide him in the art of thoughtfulness.
Father is not comfortable choosing gifts for ex-wife
HARRIETTECOLE
SENSE & SENSITIVITY
Send questions to [email protected] or c/o Universal Uclick, 1130 Wal-nut St., Kansas City, MO 64106.
Aries (March 21-April 19) ★★★★ You might need to check out an investment that could spice up your love life. Tonight: Why not take the first step?
Taurus (April 20-May 20) ★★★★ With the Moon in your sign, your vibrations have a magical quality that calls to others. Tonight: Could you be getting jeal-ous?
Gemini (May 21-June 20) ★★★ Make it OK to feel a bit o� today. In fact, you might want to screen your calls. Tonight: You are unstop-pable.
Cancer (June 21-July 22) ★★★★ Friends might invite you to join them. A dreamy quality will surround you. Tonight: You don’t need to be by yourself.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) ★★★ You will be in charge of organizing others today, whether it is for church or the movies. Tonight: Could be memorable.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) ★★★★ Catch up on others’ news. You could be making quite a few long-distance calls. Tonight: Paint the town red.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) ★★★★ Keep your schedule focused on one particular person who means a lot to you. Tonight: Be enter-tained.
Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) ★★★★ Others will seek you out to the extent that you might not even have time to read the Sunday paper. Tonight: Enjoy attention.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) ★★★★ You might need to complete a project, help a relative paint a room or do some other activity this afternoon. Tonight: Act as if it were Friday night.
C a p r i -corn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) ★★★★ Your sensit iv it y will emerge, which adds to others’ com-fort. No one will feel chal-lenged by you if you play it low-key. To-night: Know
when to call it a night.Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb.
18) ★★★★ You could be unusually driven to stay at home. Don’t fight your mood. Tonight: Respond to an invitation.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) ★★★★★ Consider how much you have heard. To-day, the chatter seems to continue. Tonight: Get some extra sleep.
What the stars mean:
★★★★★Dynamic ★★★★Positive ★★★Average ★★
So-so ★Difficult
Today’s birthdayThis year you reach out to oth-ers more often. In fact, your sensitivity to those in your immediate environment will remain high. If you are single, you could meet someone quite special. Enjoy the few single days you have left! If you are attached, the two of you mani-fest an important mutual goal. You both are unusually excited about life. GEMINI could over-whelm you with chatter!
The New York Times Sunday Crossword | No. 1 Friends
By Elizabeth C. Gorski / Edited By Will Shortz
8-17-14
Today’s Cryptoquip Chess Quiz
WHITE WINS A PAWNHint: A pin is key.
Solution: 1.Rxe5! Rxe5 2. f4! fol-lowed by 3. Bxe5ch.
O ’ M I S E A D P X I S C H Z E U O G S P P E
S K D V Z S I S Z Z C S G Z O Q H S I Z J H O C
C H P S Z O Q H I . S A Z H C S P P ,
K H S V Z E O I D F P E X O F M H H U .
8-17 Today’s Cryptoquip Clue: Z equals T
By Jacqueline BigarKing Features Syndicate
Jacqueline Bigar is at www.jacquelinebigar.com.
Premier Crossword | Big Mix-ups
CONTACT USPeggy McKenzie, 529-2341, [email protected]. Become a fan of the M section on Facebook at facebook.com/CAMemphisM; follow us on Twitter at twitter.com/memphismeditor.
SUNDAY BREAK
By Frank StewartTribune Content Agency
Sudoku
Bridge
Horoscope
ACROSS 1 Place a call
incorrectly 8 “Alley —!” 11 — toe in the
water 15 Spat 19 1979 Michael
Caine film 20 Sergeant’s
inferior 22 Arab leader 23 Had a different
opinion 25 Court plea, for
short 26 “— the Greek”
(1964 film) 27 Average mark 28 French
department 29 Ax parts 30 Mel of the old
Giants 31 1954 hit song
with a biblical title
35 Cyberspace letters
37 Sigh of satisfaction
38 Lott of football
39 Valued highly 42 “The Thing” star
Russell 43 Lose vigor 45 Ship out 46 Career-
completion celebrations
51 Canadian station name
52 Spanish arena cry
53 A — (slightly) 54 Haughtiness 58 “So it’s you!” 59 Bank offering
for creditworthy customers
66 Focuses in college
68 Kochi sash 69 Quarterback
Troy 70 Like some high-
quality models 77 “I’m cold!” 78 Bidding site 79 180 degrees
from SSE 80 — Lingus 81 Film director
Kazan 82 Formation of
new areas of oceanic crust
89 Mane locale 93 In the past 94 Minimal tide
type 95 Sudden pain 96 Oblong pastry 98 Bards’ dusks 99 Weight revealer 101 Trainers looking
for pins 105 Clumsy ship 108 Ticket details 109 Regular pay 110 Stable scrap 111 “Along —
spider ...” 113 With 11-Down,
settled for
114 Takes a defensive position
118 New — (Enya type)
119 Kiss 120 Divert 121 Actors Beatty
and Sparks 122 Bodega, e.g. 123 Profs’ helpers 124 Any of four long
pairs featured in this puzzle
DOWN 1 Seder bread 2 “— the Sheriff” 3 Terse 4 Paint crudely 5 Sitcom actress
Swenson 6 NCAA part:
Abbr. 7 Nutlike Chinese
fruit 8 Band of eight 9 Sound of awe 10 Med lead-in 11 See 113-Across 12 Dubliners, e.g. 13 1990s Toyota 14 Bar brew 15 Bone
attachments 16 Coca of comedy 17 Enters one
following another
18 Iced 21 Like some even
distributions 24 Eye, to Yves
29 Inflated self 31 Walk in shallow
water 32 — monde
(high society) 33 Old West’s
Wyatt 34 Hankering 35 Italian opera
singer Pinza 36 Debussy’s
“La —” 39 Piece of
audiophile equipment, briefly
40 Divvy up again 41 “This pays the
rent, at least” 42 Leg part 43 Sirius, say 44 Adjutant 47 “Li’l ol’ me?!” 48 Shade tree 49 Artery: Abbr. 50 Composer Erik 55 Nettle 56 “— Rose” (Nat
King Cole hit) 57 Eyeballing 59 Victimizes, with
“on” 60 Blog feed inits. 61 Electrojet bit 62 Heat’s org. 63 Up to,
informally 64 Downcast 65 Anger greatly 67 One — kind 71 Hose hitch 72 Lowdown 73 Barn hooter
74 Shocked reaction
75 Sales staffer 76 Opp. of
departure 81 Falco of “Oz” 83 English peer 84 Amoeba
composition 85 Wine: Prefix 86 Tabula — 87 Greek vowels 88 Pointed tool 89 Ted Koppel,
for one 90 Area of a plot
of land 91 Petitioned 92 Events after
Lents 97 Cheez- —
(crackers) 98 Breakfast china
item 99 Old Iranian VIP 100 Et — (and so
forth) 102 “In my dreams!” 103 Stupor: Prefix 104 Fowl sheds 105 “My Cherie —” 106 Oscar de la — 107 Casey of
countdowns 111 Irene of
“Fame” 112 Awestruck 114 Trig function 115 Have chow 116 RR depot 117 — Ho Lee
(scientist in 2000 headlines)
ACROSS 1 Count back? 4 Not the final
version 8 Lab report? 11 “Coffee
Cantata” composer
15 Role on “Frasier”
18 Clear the deck? 19 Acknowledge 20 Provo sch. 21 Singer with the
triple-platinum album “The Memory of Trees”
22 Shepherded she?
23 Book-jacket bit 24 *What to
call a female ambassador [the Johnsons]
27 Gen ___ 28 Table scraps 30 Hillock 31 Off-white shade 32 Very 33 Mexican wrap 35 It’s all uphill
from here 39 Very busy 41 Consider
necessary 42 Upright 43 Baseball’s
Alvarez and others
44 Damon and Dillon
46 ___ prosequi (“proceed no further” court entry)
47 Program carrier 48 Crude crowd 50 Motorcycle
demos, e.g. 53 One side of the
pH scale 56 Makes
unnecessary 58 French “Inc.” 59 Experiences
with great enjoyment
61 Expensive spoonful, maybe
62 What the answer to each of the six starred clues starts with
65 Old antipoverty agcy.
66 Purell target 68 Max Peel, for
example: Abbr. 69 Partner of
scratch 70 Slight 71 Days ___ 73 & 75 Bark 76 Prefix with
pressure 78 ___ Cup (candy
with a gooey center)
81 Utah ski resort 82 Director Nicolas 84 On-track Bobby 88 Common deli-
meat order: Abbr.
89 Modern know-it-all?
90 Mayberry kid 91 Between: Fr. 92 Dickinson of
TV’s “Police Woman”
93 “Not likely!” 94 Hardy heroine 95 How school kids
are grouped 96 Mike who
directed “Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire”
98 Some computers, familiarly
99 Hectic hosp. areas
100 What a packing person may pack
101 General public 103 Part of lye 104 It can make
waves 105 Lasagna
ingredient 113 Think 115 Any of nine
kings of Thailand
116 *Pairing up for safety [the Clintons]
117 Accusatory words
118 Pitcher Hershiser
119 Freedom trail?
120 Huntsman Center team
121 Earthy deposit
122 Climax 123 Whacks 124 Brighten
(up)
DOWN 1 Give some
relief 2 Many a ball 3 *Cleaning
supply [the Bushes 43]
4 “Phooey!” 5 City north of
Seattle 6 Doughnuts 7 Wows 8 Epitome of
simplicity 9 Alternative to
pumpernickel 10 Suffix with
art 11 Smartphone
sound 12 “The King and
I” heroine
13 One with an eye for a storyteller?
14 Cow chow 15 *“My Fair Lady”
co-star [the Reagans]
16 Must pay, as a debt
17 Two out of 100? 25 Some gas
atoms, informally
26 Domineered, with “over”
29 Adventure with a guide
32 Next 34 Two-person tool 36 Amount to
“kick it up” 37 Texas border
city 38 Taking the
place (of) 40 Move, as a
painting
45 Pub vessel 47 Old food label
std. 48 “Star Trek”
enemy, with “the”
49 Letter before Peter in a phonetic alphabet
51 Found 52 Last song
Rodgers and Hammerstein did together (1959)
54 French prayer addressee
55 One never stooping
57 Larger ___ life
60 Place to caucus
63 A big head may be on one
64 Pooper ___
67 *Singer with the 1964 #2 hit “My Boy Lollipop” [the Bushes 41]
70 *Egg order [the Obamas]
72 Some gold medals
74 Slight people 75 Composed 77 Contract-bridge
tactic 78 Zombie’s sound 79 Actress
nominated for a Golden Globe for “Rhoda”
80 Dancer’s wear 81 Pretty picture
connector? 83 Some fridges 85 Oscar, e.g. 86 Rowing
machine, for one
87 Stagger 97 Not interfere
with 100 Item in
Baudelaire’s oeuvre
102 March great 103 Editorial
instructions 104 Dance with
a king 106 Year John
Dryden died 107 West of the
screen 108 Information
gleaned from a dating site
109 Sugar suffix 110 Firebug 111 Starting 112 Double ___
Oreo 114 Perfume
ingredient Difficulty level ★★★★★
Answer to yesterday's puzzleSudoku is a number-placing puzzle based
on a 9x9 grid with sev-eral given numbers. The
object is to place the numbers 1 to 9 in the
empty squares so that each row, each column and each 3x3 box con-tains the same number only once. The difficulty
level of the Conceptis Sudoku increases from
Monday to Sunday.
The average solution time for this King Features crossword is 63 minutes.
8-17-14
In the club lounge, Cy the Cynic, a shameless chauvin-ist, and Wendy, our feminist, were arguing again — about whether men or women are better at math.
“Women are better,” the Cynic sni�ed. “They’re al-ways subtracting from their age and weight and adding to the price of what they paid for a dress or a purse.”
“Is it true that you’re the first member of your family born without a tail?” Wendy asked.
“How do you play the trump suit at this slam?” Cy challenged her, showing today’s deal. (North’s bid of three spades conventionally promised spade shortness and a heart fit.) “What are the mathematical odds?”
“The odds favor playing to drop the king,” Wendy replied promptly (and correctly). “A 1-1 break is a 52 percent chance, a 2-0 break is 48 percent.”
Before you read on, decide how you would play six hearts after West leads the jack of spades.
South can get two chances with a simple line of play: He can lead the queen of trumps to dummy’s ace. If the king doesn’t appear, he can try the club finesse.
South’s best chance — re-gardless of percentages — is to try for an end play. He takes the A-Q of spades to pitch a club from dummy, cashes the A-K of diamonds, ru�s his low spade in dummy and ru�s dummy’s queen of diamonds. South then leads the queen of trumps and lets it ride if West follows low.
South succeeds whether the finesse wins or loses. If East wins, he must lead a spade or a diamond, conced-ing a ru�-slu�, or lead a club from his king.
Dear Harriette: My ex-wife and I have been divorced for five years, and she has since remar-ried. We have a 13-year-old son from our former union. My son wants me to help purchase gifts for his mother for her birth-day, Mother’s Day and Christmas. I have asked my son if he talks to his stepfather about this, and he says no. I feel it is not my duty to do this, and I believe her current hus-band should be responsi-ble for this task. I am not comfortable with giving my ex-wife any “special” gifts. What should I tell my son when he sees no gifts from his dad?
— Under New Management, Salt Lake City
Dear New: It does not sound like your son is asking you to help him purchase a gift that would be from him and either his stepfather or from you. If he is asking for your input to help learn how to buy gifts for his mother from him, that is a completely di�erent
story. Sure, it would be great if he could cultivate that type of relationship with his stepfather, and that may happen over time. If the stepfather does not agree or your son is not ready to make such a request, I think it is fine for you to teach your child how to be a thoughtful gift giver.
Help him select gifts that would be appropri-ate for him to give his mother. The gifts should not reflect memories from your past. Instead, make the experience of helping your son a way for you to guide him in the art of thoughtfulness.
Father is not comfortable choosing gifts for ex-wife
HARRIETTECOLE
SENSE & SENSITIVITY
Send questions to [email protected] or c/o Universal Uclick, 1130 Wal-nut St., Kansas City, MO 64106.
Aries (March 21-April 19) ★★★★ You might need to check out an investment that could spice up your love life. Tonight: Why not take the first step?
Taurus (April 20-May 20) ★★★★ With the Moon in your sign, your vibrations have a magical quality that calls to others. Tonight: Could you be getting jeal-ous?
Gemini (May 21-June 20) ★★★ Make it OK to feel a bit o� today. In fact, you might want to screen your calls. Tonight: You are unstop-pable.
Cancer (June 21-July 22) ★★★★ Friends might invite you to join them. A dreamy quality will surround you. Tonight: You don’t need to be by yourself.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) ★★★ You will be in charge of organizing others today, whether it is for church or the movies. Tonight: Could be memorable.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) ★★★★ Catch up on others’ news. You could be making quite a few long-distance calls. Tonight: Paint the town red.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) ★★★★ Keep your schedule focused on one particular person who means a lot to you. Tonight: Be enter-tained.
Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) ★★★★ Others will seek you out to the extent that you might not even have time to read the Sunday paper. Tonight: Enjoy attention.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) ★★★★ You might need to complete a project, help a relative paint a room or do some other activity this afternoon. Tonight: Act as if it were Friday night.
C a p r i -corn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) ★★★★ Your sensit iv ity will emerge, which adds to others’ com-fort. No one will feel chal-lenged by you if you play it low-key. To-night: Know
when to call it a night.Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb.
18) ★★★★ You could be unusually driven to stay at home. Don’t fight your mood. Tonight: Respond to an invitation.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) ★★★★★ Consider how much you have heard. To-day, the chatter seems to continue. Tonight: Get some extra sleep.
What the stars mean:
★★★★★Dynamic ★★★★Positive ★★★Average ★★
So-so ★Difficult
Today’s birthdayThis year you reach out to oth-ers more often. In fact, your sensitivity to those in your immediate environment will remain high. If you are single, you could meet someone quite special. Enjoy the few single days you have left! If you are attached, the two of you mani-fest an important mutual goal. You both are unusually excited about life. GEMINI could over-whelm you with chatter!
The New York Times Sunday Crossword | No. 1 Friends
By Elizabeth C. Gorski / Edited By Will Shortz
8-17-14
Today’s Cryptoquip Chess Quiz
WHITE WINS A PAWNHint: A pin is key.
Solution: 1.Rxe5! Rxe5 2. f4! fol-lowed by 3. Bxe5ch.
O ’ M I S E A D P X I S C H Z E U O G S P P E
S K D V Z S I S Z Z C S G Z O Q H S I Z J H O C
C H P S Z O Q H I . S A Z H C S P P ,
K H S V Z E O I D F P E X O F M H H U .
8-17 Today’s Cryptoquip Clue: Z equals T
By Jacqueline BigarKing Features Syndicate
Jacqueline Bigar is at www.jacquelinebigar.com.
Premier Crossword | Big Mix-ups
CONTACT USPeggy McKenzie, 529-2341, [email protected]. Become a fan of the M section on Facebook at facebook.com/CAMemphisM; follow us on Twitter at twitter.com/memphismeditor.
SUNDAY BREAK
By Frank StewartTribune Content Agency
Sudoku
Bridge
Horoscope
ACROSS 1 Place a call
incorrectly 8 “Alley —!” 11 — toe in the
water 15 Spat 19 1979 Michael
Caine film 20 Sergeant’s
inferior 22 Arab leader 23 Had a different
opinion 25 Court plea, for
short 26 “— the Greek”
(1964 film) 27 Average mark 28 French
department 29 Ax parts 30 Mel of the old
Giants 31 1954 hit song
with a biblical title
35 Cyberspace letters
37 Sigh of satisfaction
38 Lott of football
39 Valued highly 42 “The Thing” star
Russell 43 Lose vigor 45 Ship out 46 Career-
completion celebrations
51 Canadian station name
52 Spanish arena cry
53 A — (slightly) 54 Haughtiness 58 “So it’s you!” 59 Bank offering
for creditworthy customers
66 Focuses in college
68 Kochi sash 69 Quarterback
Troy 70 Like some high-
quality models 77 “I’m cold!” 78 Bidding site 79 180 degrees
from SSE 80 — Lingus 81 Film director
Kazan 82 Formation of
new areas of oceanic crust
89 Mane locale 93 In the past 94 Minimal tide
type 95 Sudden pain 96 Oblong pastry 98 Bards’ dusks 99 Weight revealer 101 Trainers looking
for pins 105 Clumsy ship 108 Ticket details 109 Regular pay 110 Stable scrap 111 “Along —
spider ...” 113 With 11-Down,
settled for
114 Takes a defensive position
118 New — (Enya type)
119 Kiss 120 Divert 121 Actors Beatty
and Sparks 122 Bodega, e.g. 123 Profs’ helpers 124 Any of four long
pairs featured in this puzzle
DOWN 1 Seder bread 2 “— the Sheriff” 3 Terse 4 Paint crudely 5 Sitcom actress
Swenson 6 NCAA part:
Abbr. 7 Nutlike Chinese
fruit 8 Band of eight 9 Sound of awe 10 Med lead-in 11 See 113-Across 12 Dubliners, e.g. 13 1990s Toyota 14 Bar brew 15 Bone
attachments 16 Coca of comedy 17 Enters one
following another
18 Iced 21 Like some even
distributions 24 Eye, to Yves
29 Inflated self 31 Walk in shallow
water 32 — monde
(high society) 33 Old West’s
Wyatt 34 Hankering 35 Italian opera
singer Pinza 36 Debussy’s
“La —” 39 Piece of
audiophile equipment, briefly
40 Divvy up again 41 “This pays the
rent, at least” 42 Leg part 43 Sirius, say 44 Adjutant 47 “Li’l ol’ me?!” 48 Shade tree 49 Artery: Abbr. 50 Composer Erik 55 Nettle 56 “— Rose” (Nat
King Cole hit) 57 Eyeballing 59 Victimizes, with
“on” 60 Blog feed inits. 61 Electrojet bit 62 Heat’s org. 63 Up to,
informally 64 Downcast 65 Anger greatly 67 One — kind 71 Hose hitch 72 Lowdown 73 Barn hooter
74 Shocked reaction
75 Sales staffer 76 Opp. of
departure 81 Falco of “Oz” 83 English peer 84 Amoeba
composition 85 Wine: Prefix 86 Tabula — 87 Greek vowels 88 Pointed tool 89 Ted Koppel,
for one 90 Area of a plot
of land 91 Petitioned 92 Events after
Lents 97 Cheez- —
(crackers) 98 Breakfast china
item 99 Old Iranian VIP 100 Et — (and so
forth) 102 “In my dreams!” 103 Stupor: Prefix 104 Fowl sheds 105 “My Cherie —” 106 Oscar de la — 107 Casey of
countdowns 111 Irene of
“Fame” 112 Awestruck 114 Trig function 115 Have chow 116 RR depot 117 — Ho Lee
(scientist in 2000 headlines)
ACROSS 1 Count back? 4 Not the final
version 8 Lab report? 11 “Coffee
Cantata” composer
15 Role on “Frasier”
18 Clear the deck? 19 Acknowledge 20 Provo sch. 21 Singer with the
triple-platinum album “The Memory of Trees”
22 Shepherded she?
23 Book-jacket bit 24 *What to
call a female ambassador [the Johnsons]
27 Gen ___ 28 Table scraps 30 Hillock 31 Off-white shade 32 Very 33 Mexican wrap 35 It’s all uphill
from here 39 Very busy 41 Consider
necessary 42 Upright 43 Baseball’s
Alvarez and others
44 Damon and Dillon
46 ___ prosequi (“proceed no further” court entry)
47 Program carrier 48 Crude crowd 50 Motorcycle
demos, e.g. 53 One side of the
pH scale 56 Makes
unnecessary 58 French “Inc.” 59 Experiences
with great enjoyment
61 Expensive spoonful, maybe
62 What the answer to each of the six starred clues starts with
65 Old antipoverty agcy.
66 Purell target 68 Max Peel, for
example: Abbr. 69 Partner of
scratch 70 Slight 71 Days ___ 73 & 75 Bark 76 Prefix with
pressure 78 ___ Cup (candy
with a gooey center)
81 Utah ski resort 82 Director Nicolas 84 On-track Bobby 88 Common deli-
meat order: Abbr.
89 Modern know-it-all?
90 Mayberry kid 91 Between: Fr. 92 Dickinson of
TV’s “Police Woman”
93 “Not likely!” 94 Hardy heroine 95 How school kids
are grouped 96 Mike who
directed “Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire”
98 Some computers, familiarly
99 Hectic hosp. areas
100 What a packing person may pack
101 General public 103 Part of lye 104 It can make
waves 105 Lasagna
ingredient 113 Think 115 Any of nine
kings of Thailand
116 *Pairing up for safety [the Clintons]
117 Accusatory words
118 Pitcher Hershiser
119 Freedom trail?
120 Huntsman Center team
121 Earthy deposit
122 Climax 123 Whacks 124 Brighten
(up)
DOWN 1 Give some
relief 2 Many a ball 3 *Cleaning
supply [the Bushes 43]
4 “Phooey!” 5 City north of
Seattle 6 Doughnuts 7 Wows 8 Epitome of
simplicity 9 Alternative to
pumpernickel 10 Suffix with
art 11 Smartphone
sound 12 “The King and
I” heroine
13 One with an eye for a storyteller?
14 Cow chow 15 *“My Fair Lady”
co-star [the Reagans]
16 Must pay, as a debt
17 Two out of 100? 25 Some gas
atoms, informally
26 Domineered, with “over”
29 Adventure with a guide
32 Next 34 Two-person tool 36 Amount to
“kick it up” 37 Texas border
city 38 Taking the
place (of) 40 Move, as a
painting
45 Pub vessel 47 Old food label
std. 48 “Star Trek”
enemy, with “the”
49 Letter before Peter in a phonetic alphabet
51 Found 52 Last song
Rodgers and Hammerstein did together (1959)
54 French prayer addressee
55 One never stooping
57 Larger ___ life
60 Place to caucus
63 A big head may be on one
64 Pooper ___
67 *Singer with the 1964 #2 hit “My Boy Lollipop” [the Bushes 41]
70 *Egg order [the Obamas]
72 Some gold medals
74 Slight people 75 Composed 77 Contract-bridge
tactic 78 Zombie’s sound 79 Actress
nominated for a Golden Globe for “Rhoda”
80 Dancer’s wear 81 Pretty picture
connector? 83 Some fridges 85 Oscar, e.g. 86 Rowing
machine, for one
87 Stagger 97 Not interfere
with 100 Item in
Baudelaire’s oeuvre
102 March great 103 Editorial
instructions 104 Dance with
a king 106 Year John
Dryden died 107 West of the
screen 108 Information
gleaned from a dating site
109 Sugar suffix 110 Firebug 111 Starting 112 Double ___
Oreo 114 Perfume
ingredient Difficulty level ★★★★★
Answer to yesterday's puzzleSudoku is a number-placing puzzle based
on a 9x9 grid with sev-eral given numbers. The
object is to place the numbers 1 to 9 in the
empty squares so that each row, each column and each 3x3 box con-tains the same number only once. The difficulty
level of the Conceptis Sudoku increases from
Monday to Sunday.
The average solution time for this King Features crossword is 63 minutes.
8-17-14
In the club lounge, Cy the Cynic, a shameless chauvin-ist, and Wendy, our feminist, were arguing again — about whether men or women are better at math.
“Women are better,” the Cynic sni�ed. “They’re al-ways subtracting from their age and weight and adding to the price of what they paid for a dress or a purse.”
“Is it true that you’re the first member of your family born without a tail?” Wendy asked.
“How do you play the trump suit at this slam?” Cy challenged her, showing today’s deal. (North’s bid of three spades conventionally promised spade shortness and a heart fit.) “What are the mathematical odds?”
“The odds favor playing to drop the king,” Wendy replied promptly (and correctly). “A 1-1 break is a 52 percent chance, a 2-0 break is 48 percent.”
Before you read on, decide how you would play six hearts after West leads the jack of spades.
South can get two chances with a simple line of play: He can lead the queen of trumps to dummy’s ace. If the king doesn’t appear, he can try the club finesse.
South’s best chance — re-gardless of percentages — is to try for an end play. He takes the A-Q of spades to pitch a club from dummy, cashes the A-K of diamonds, ru�s his low spade in dummy and ru�s dummy’s queen of diamonds. South then leads the queen of trumps and lets it ride if West follows low.
South succeeds whether the finesse wins or loses. If East wins, he must lead a spade or a diamond, conced-ing a ru�-slu�, or lead a club from his king.
Dear Harriette: My ex-wife and I have been divorced for five years, and she has since remar-ried. We have a 13-year-old son from our former union. My son wants me to help purchase gifts for his mother for her birth-day, Mother’s Day and Christmas. I have asked my son if he talks to his stepfather about this, and he says no. I feel it is not my duty to do this, and I believe her current hus-band should be responsi-ble for this task. I am not comfortable with giving my ex-wife any “special” gifts. What should I tell my son when he sees no gifts from his dad?
— Under New Management, Salt Lake City
Dear New: It does not sound like your son is asking you to help him purchase a gift that would be from him and either his stepfather or from you. If he is asking for your input to help learn how to buy gifts for his mother from him, that is a completely di�erent
story. Sure, it would be great if he could cultivate that type of relationship with his stepfather, and that may happen over time. If the stepfather does not agree or your son is not ready to make such a request, I think it is fine for you to teach your child how to be a thoughtful gift giver.
Help him select gifts that would be appropri-ate for him to give his mother. The gifts should not reflect memories from your past. Instead, make the experience of helping your son a way for you to guide him in the art of thoughtfulness.
Father is not comfortable choosing gifts for ex-wife
HARRIETTECOLE
SENSE & SENSITIVITY
Send questions to [email protected] or c/o Universal Uclick, 1130 Wal-nut St., Kansas City, MO 64106.
Aries (March 21-April 19) ★★★★ You might need to check out an investment that could spice up your love life. Tonight: Why not take the first step?
Taurus (April 20-May 20) ★★★★ With the Moon in your sign, your vibrations have a magical quality that calls to others. Tonight: Could you be getting jeal-ous?
Gemini (May 21-June 20) ★★★ Make it OK to feel a bit o� today. In fact, you might want to screen your calls. Tonight: You are unstop-pable.
Cancer (June 21-July 22) ★★★★ Friends might invite you to join them. A dreamy quality will surround you. Tonight: You don’t need to be by yourself.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) ★★★ You will be in charge of organizing others today, whether it is for church or the movies. Tonight: Could be memorable.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) ★★★★ Catch up on others’ news. You could be making quite a few long-distance calls. Tonight: Paint the town red.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) ★★★★ Keep your schedule focused on one particular person who means a lot to you. Tonight: Be enter-tained.
Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) ★★★★ Others will seek you out to the extent that you might not even have time to read the Sunday paper. Tonight: Enjoy attention.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) ★★★★ You might need to complete a project, help a relative paint a room or do some other activity this afternoon. Tonight: Act as if it were Friday night.
C a p r i -corn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) ★★★★ Your sensit iv it y will emerge, which adds to others’ com-fort. No one will feel chal-lenged by you if you play it low-key. To-night: Know
when to call it a night.Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb.
18) ★★★★ You could be unusually driven to stay at home. Don’t fight your mood. Tonight: Respond to an invitation.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) ★★★★★ Consider how much you have heard. To-day, the chatter seems to continue. Tonight: Get some extra sleep.
What the stars mean:
★★★★★Dynamic ★★★★Positive ★★★Average ★★
So-so ★Difficult
Today’s birthdayThis year you reach out to oth-ers more often. In fact, your sensitivity to those in your immediate environment will remain high. If you are single, you could meet someone quite special. Enjoy the few single days you have left! If you are attached, the two of you mani-fest an important mutual goal. You both are unusually excited about life. GEMINI could over-whelm you with chatter!
The New York Times Sunday Crossword | No. 1 Friends
By Elizabeth C. Gorski / Edited By Will Shortz
8-17-14
Today’s Cryptoquip Chess Quiz
WHITE WINS A PAWNHint: A pin is key.
Solution: 1.Rxe5! Rxe5 2. f4! fol-lowed by 3. Bxe5ch.
O ’ M I S E A D P X I S C H Z E U O G S P P E
S K D V Z S I S Z Z C S G Z O Q H S I Z J H O C
C H P S Z O Q H I . S A Z H C S P P ,
K H S V Z E O I D F P E X O F M H H U .
8-17 Today’s Cryptoquip Clue: Z equals T
By Jacqueline BigarKing Features Syndicate
Jacqueline Bigar is at www.jacquelinebigar.com.
Premier Crossword | Big Mix-ups
CONTACT USPeggy McKenzie, 529-2341, [email protected]. Become a fan of the M section on Facebook at facebook.com/CAMemphisM; follow us on Twitter at twitter.com/memphismeditor.
SUNDAY BREAK
By Frank StewartTribune Content Agency
Sudoku
Bridge
Horoscope
ACROSS 1 Place a call
incorrectly 8 “Alley —!” 11 — toe in the
water 15 Spat 19 1979 Michael
Caine film 20 Sergeant’s
inferior 22 Arab leader 23 Had a different
opinion 25 Court plea, for
short 26 “— the Greek”
(1964 film) 27 Average mark 28 French
department 29 Ax parts 30 Mel of the old
Giants 31 1954 hit song
with a biblical title
35 Cyberspace letters
37 Sigh of satisfaction
38 Lott of football
39 Valued highly 42 “The Thing” star
Russell 43 Lose vigor 45 Ship out 46 Career-
completion celebrations
51 Canadian station name
52 Spanish arena cry
53 A — (slightly) 54 Haughtiness 58 “So it’s you!” 59 Bank offering
for creditworthy customers
66 Focuses in college
68 Kochi sash 69 Quarterback
Troy 70 Like some high-
quality models 77 “I’m cold!” 78 Bidding site 79 180 degrees
from SSE 80 — Lingus 81 Film director
Kazan 82 Formation of
new areas of oceanic crust
89 Mane locale 93 In the past 94 Minimal tide
type 95 Sudden pain 96 Oblong pastry 98 Bards’ dusks 99 Weight revealer 101 Trainers looking
for pins 105 Clumsy ship 108 Ticket details 109 Regular pay 110 Stable scrap 111 “Along —
spider ...” 113 With 11-Down,
settled for
114 Takes a defensive position
118 New — (Enya type)
119 Kiss 120 Divert 121 Actors Beatty
and Sparks 122 Bodega, e.g. 123 Profs’ helpers 124 Any of four long
pairs featured in this puzzle
DOWN 1 Seder bread 2 “— the Sheriff” 3 Terse 4 Paint crudely 5 Sitcom actress
Swenson 6 NCAA part:
Abbr. 7 Nutlike Chinese
fruit 8 Band of eight 9 Sound of awe 10 Med lead-in 11 See 113-Across 12 Dubliners, e.g. 13 1990s Toyota 14 Bar brew 15 Bone
attachments 16 Coca of comedy 17 Enters one
following another
18 Iced 21 Like some even
distributions 24 Eye, to Yves
29 Inflated self 31 Walk in shallow
water 32 — monde
(high society) 33 Old West’s
Wyatt 34 Hankering 35 Italian opera
singer Pinza 36 Debussy’s
“La —” 39 Piece of
audiophile equipment, briefly
40 Divvy up again 41 “This pays the
rent, at least” 42 Leg part 43 Sirius, say 44 Adjutant 47 “Li’l ol’ me?!” 48 Shade tree 49 Artery: Abbr. 50 Composer Erik 55 Nettle 56 “— Rose” (Nat
King Cole hit) 57 Eyeballing 59 Victimizes, with
“on” 60 Blog feed inits. 61 Electrojet bit 62 Heat’s org. 63 Up to,
informally 64 Downcast 65 Anger greatly 67 One — kind 71 Hose hitch 72 Lowdown 73 Barn hooter
74 Shocked reaction
75 Sales staffer 76 Opp. of
departure 81 Falco of “Oz” 83 English peer 84 Amoeba
composition 85 Wine: Prefix 86 Tabula — 87 Greek vowels 88 Pointed tool 89 Ted Koppel,
for one 90 Area of a plot
of land 91 Petitioned 92 Events after
Lents 97 Cheez- —
(crackers) 98 Breakfast china
item 99 Old Iranian VIP 100 Et — (and so
forth) 102 “In my dreams!” 103 Stupor: Prefix 104 Fowl sheds 105 “My Cherie —” 106 Oscar de la — 107 Casey of
countdowns 111 Irene of
“Fame” 112 Awestruck 114 Trig function 115 Have chow 116 RR depot 117 — Ho Lee
(scientist in 2000 headlines)
ACROSS 1 Count back? 4 Not the final
version 8 Lab report? 11 “Coffee
Cantata” composer
15 Role on “Frasier”
18 Clear the deck? 19 Acknowledge 20 Provo sch. 21 Singer with the
triple-platinum album “The Memory of Trees”
22 Shepherded she?
23 Book-jacket bit 24 *What to
call a female ambassador [the Johnsons]
27 Gen ___ 28 Table scraps 30 Hillock 31 Off-white shade 32 Very 33 Mexican wrap 35 It’s all uphill
from here 39 Very busy 41 Consider
necessary 42 Upright 43 Baseball’s
Alvarez and others
44 Damon and Dillon
46 ___ prosequi (“proceed no further” court entry)
47 Program carrier 48 Crude crowd 50 Motorcycle
demos, e.g. 53 One side of the
pH scale 56 Makes
unnecessary 58 French “Inc.” 59 Experiences
with great enjoyment
61 Expensive spoonful, maybe
62 What the answer to each of the six starred clues starts with
65 Old antipoverty agcy.
66 Purell target 68 Max Peel, for
example: Abbr. 69 Partner of
scratch 70 Slight 71 Days ___ 73 & 75 Bark 76 Prefix with
pressure 78 ___ Cup (candy
with a gooey center)
81 Utah ski resort 82 Director Nicolas 84 On-track Bobby 88 Common deli-
meat order: Abbr.
89 Modern know-it-all?
90 Mayberry kid 91 Between: Fr. 92 Dickinson of
TV’s “Police Woman”
93 “Not likely!” 94 Hardy heroine 95 How school kids
are grouped 96 Mike who
directed “Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire”
98 Some computers, familiarly
99 Hectic hosp. areas
100 What a packing person may pack
101 General public 103 Part of lye 104 It can make
waves 105 Lasagna
ingredient 113 Think 115 Any of nine
kings of Thailand
116 *Pairing up for safety [the Clintons]
117 Accusatory words
118 Pitcher Hershiser
119 Freedom trail?
120 Huntsman Center team
121 Earthy deposit
122 Climax 123 Whacks 124 Brighten
(up)
DOWN 1 Give some
relief 2 Many a ball 3 *Cleaning
supply [the Bushes 43]
4 “Phooey!” 5 City north of
Seattle 6 Doughnuts 7 Wows 8 Epitome of
simplicity 9 Alternative to
pumpernickel 10 Suffix with
art 11 Smartphone
sound 12 “The King and
I” heroine
13 One with an eye for a storyteller?
14 Cow chow 15 *“My Fair Lady”
co-star [the Reagans]
16 Must pay, as a debt
17 Two out of 100? 25 Some gas
atoms, informally
26 Domineered, with “over”
29 Adventure with a guide
32 Next 34 Two-person tool 36 Amount to
“kick it up” 37 Texas border
city 38 Taking the
place (of) 40 Move, as a
painting
45 Pub vessel 47 Old food label
std. 48 “Star Trek”
enemy, with “the”
49 Letter before Peter in a phonetic alphabet
51 Found 52 Last song
Rodgers and Hammerstein did together (1959)
54 French prayer addressee
55 One never stooping
57 Larger ___ life
60 Place to caucus
63 A big head may be on one
64 Pooper ___
67 *Singer with the 1964 #2 hit “My Boy Lollipop” [the Bushes 41]
70 *Egg order [the Obamas]
72 Some gold medals
74 Slight people 75 Composed 77 Contract-bridge
tactic 78 Zombie’s sound 79 Actress
nominated for a Golden Globe for “Rhoda”
80 Dancer’s wear 81 Pretty picture
connector? 83 Some fridges 85 Oscar, e.g. 86 Rowing
machine, for one
87 Stagger 97 Not interfere
with 100 Item in
Baudelaire’s oeuvre
102 March great 103 Editorial
instructions 104 Dance with
a king 106 Year John
Dryden died 107 West of the
screen 108 Information
gleaned from a dating site
109 Sugar suffix 110 Firebug 111 Starting 112 Double ___
Oreo 114 Perfume
ingredient Difficulty level ★★★★★
Answer to yesterday's puzzleSudoku is a number-placing puzzle based
on a 9x9 grid with sev-eral given numbers. The
object is to place the numbers 1 to 9 in the
empty squares so that each row, each column and each 3x3 box con-tains the same number only once. The difficulty
level of the Conceptis Sudoku increases from
Monday to Sunday.
The average solution time for this King Features crossword is 63 minutes.
8-17-14
In the club lounge, Cy the Cynic, a shameless chauvin-ist, and Wendy, our feminist, were arguing again — about whether men or women are better at math.
“Women are better,” the Cynic sni�ed. “They’re al-ways subtracting from their age and weight and adding to the price of what they paid for a dress or a purse.”
“Is it true that you’re the first member of your family born without a tail?” Wendy asked.
“How do you play the trump suit at this slam?” Cy challenged her, showing today’s deal. (North’s bid of three spades conventionally promised spade shortness and a heart fit.) “What are the mathematical odds?”
“The odds favor playing to drop the king,” Wendy replied promptly (and correctly). “A 1-1 break is a 52 percent chance, a 2-0 break is 48 percent.”
Before you read on, decide how you would play six hearts after West leads the jack of spades.
South can get two chances with a simple line of play: He can lead the queen of trumps to dummy’s ace. If the king doesn’t appear, he can try the club finesse.
South’s best chance — re-gardless of percentages — is to try for an end play. He takes the A-Q of spades to pitch a club from dummy, cashes the A-K of diamonds, ru�s his low spade in dummy and ru�s dummy’s queen of diamonds. South then leads the queen of trumps and lets it ride if West follows low.
South succeeds whether the finesse wins or loses. If East wins, he must lead a spade or a diamond, conced-ing a ru�-slu�, or lead a club from his king.
Dear Harriette: My ex-wife and I have been divorced for five years, and she has since remar-ried. We have a 13-year-old son from our former union. My son wants me to help purchase gifts for his mother for her birth-day, Mother’s Day and Christmas. I have asked my son if he talks to his stepfather about this, and he says no. I feel it is not my duty to do this, and I believe her current hus-band should be responsi-ble for this task. I am not comfortable with giving my ex-wife any “special” gifts. What should I tell my son when he sees no gifts from his dad?
— Under New Management, Salt Lake City
Dear New: It does not sound like your son is asking you to help him purchase a gift that would be from him and either his stepfather or from you. If he is asking for your input to help learn how to buy gifts for his mother from him, that is a completely di�erent
story. Sure, it would be great if he could cultivate that type of relationship with his stepfather, and that may happen over time. If the stepfather does not agree or your son is not ready to make such a request, I think it is fine for you to teach your child how to be a thoughtful gift giver.
Help him select gifts that would be appropri-ate for him to give his mother. The gifts should not reflect memories from your past. Instead, make the experience of helping your son a way for you to guide him in the art of thoughtfulness.
Father is not comfortable choosing gifts for ex-wife
HARRIETTECOLE
SENSE & SENSITIVITY
Send questions to [email protected] or c/o Universal Uclick, 1130 Wal-nut St., Kansas City, MO 64106.
Aries (March 21-April 19) ★★★★ You might need to check out an investment that could spice up your love life. Tonight: Why not take the first step?
Taurus (April 20-May 20) ★★★★ With the Moon in your sign, your vibrations have a magical quality that calls to others. Tonight: Could you be getting jeal-ous?
Gemini (May 21-June 20) ★★★ Make it OK to feel a bit o� today. In fact, you might want to screen your calls. Tonight: You are unstop-pable.
Cancer (June 21-July 22) ★★★★ Friends might invite you to join them. A dreamy quality will surround you. Tonight: You don’t need to be by yourself.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) ★★★ You will be in charge of organizing others today, whether it is for church or the movies. Tonight: Could be memorable.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) ★★★★ Catch up on others’ news. You could be making quite a few long-distance calls. Tonight: Paint the town red.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) ★★★★ Keep your schedule focused on one particular person who means a lot to you. Tonight: Be enter-tained.
Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) ★★★★ Others will seek you out to the extent that you might not even have time to read the Sunday paper. Tonight: Enjoy attention.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) ★★★★ You might need to complete a project, help a relative paint a room or do some other activity this afternoon. Tonight: Act as if it were Friday night.
C a p r i -corn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) ★★★★ Your sensit iv it y will emerge, which adds to others’ com-fort. No one will feel chal-lenged by you if you play it low-key. To-night: Know
when to call it a night.Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb.
18) ★★★★ You could be unusually driven to stay at home. Don’t fight your mood. Tonight: Respond to an invitation.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) ★★★★★ Consider how much you have heard. To-day, the chatter seems to continue. Tonight: Get some extra sleep.
What the stars mean:
★★★★★Dynamic ★★★★Positive ★★★Average ★★
So-so ★Difficult
Today’s birthdayThis year you reach out to oth-ers more often. In fact, your sensitivity to those in your immediate environment will remain high. If you are single, you could meet someone quite special. Enjoy the few single days you have left! If you are attached, the two of you mani-fest an important mutual goal. You both are unusually excited about life. GEMINI could over-whelm you with chatter!
The New York Times Sunday Crossword | No. 1 Friends
By Elizabeth C. Gorski / Edited By Will Shortz
8-17-14
Today’s Cryptoquip Chess Quiz
WHITE WINS A PAWNHint: A pin is key.
Solution: 1.Rxe5! Rxe5 2. f4! fol-lowed by 3. Bxe5ch.
O ’ M I S E A D P X I S C H Z E U O G S P P E
S K D V Z S I S Z Z C S G Z O Q H S I Z J H O C
C H P S Z O Q H I . S A Z H C S P P ,
K H S V Z E O I D F P E X O F M H H U .
8-17 Today’s Cryptoquip Clue: Z equals T
By Jacqueline BigarKing Features Syndicate
Jacqueline Bigar is at www.jacquelinebigar.com.
Amusement
10 » Thursday, August 21, 2014 » T H E W E E K LY «« M G
Horoscopes
By Jacqueline BigarKing Features Syndicate
ARIES (March 21-April 19) HHHH You might feel caught between doing what you would like to do and doing what needs to be done. Recognize manipu-lation for what it is. You might not want to play with those who are deeply embedded in this type of behavior.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HHHHH Your ingenuity will come forward and eliminate a diicult situation. You could be too tired to keep dealing with others who complicate your life. Give some thought to establish-ing stronger boundaries.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHHH Stay anchored when dealing with a domestic matter. Your ability to convert a diicult situation into one that is easier could be challenged. Be patient when dealing with others.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHHHH You inally will feel more up to snuf, only to have a loved one become touchy and withdrawn. Let this situation work itself out. Try not to be so uptight
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
HHH So much is going on be-hind the scenes that you could be overwhelmed. You know what you want, and you know where you are heading. It won’t be long before you feel more in control.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHHH A discussion can be put of only for so long. Your creativity will feed naturally into your day. What you see happen could please you. What you were concerned about won’t be an is-sue now.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHH A loved one could become very demanding regarding a i-nancial concern. The two of you clearly do not share the same values, and it will become very evident when money is involved. Tonight: Be willing to clear out extra work, even if it takes you all night.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHHHH You might feel as if you are caught between a rock and a hard place. You need to rethink a problem and come to a decision. Your ability to ne-gotiate a diferent solution will emerge once you detach. Take a walk to clear your mind.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-
Dec. 21) HHHH You could be overwhelmed by all the choices an associate presents. Some-how you’ll need to igure out how to make a decision. Under-stand that money doesn’t have to be the driving force. Take your time, and look at the big picture.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHHH You will be in the mood to do less and let others carry more of their weight with a project. Fortunately, they will be up for taking on more responsi-bility. It is important to prove to yourself that you can relax and assume a diferent role.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHHHH You’ll see a per-sonal matter diferently from how an associate sees it. Some-times discussing one’s personal problems with others does pro-vide a fresh perspective, but this might not be the case for you. Only you can decide that.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHHH You’ll become more resourceful in spite of someone who keeps saying “no.” Don’t waste time feeling disappoint-ed. There is an easier solution; you simply haven’t found it yet. Keep discussions open until you can bypass this obstacle.
By Judith MartinUniversal Uclick
Dear Miss Manners: My mother was from the South, and accordingly she impressed upon me the ine art of entertain-ing guests in one’s home. I love to cook, and I truly prefer to cook dinner for friends over meeting at a restaurant.
My problem is that, in-variably, every guest feels that an invitation for 6:30 can mean 6:45 or 7 p.m.
Right now I am sitting at my computer at 6:47 waiting for a guest who was supposed to be here at 6:30; she texted me at 6:25 saying she was just leaving her home, and from her lat-est message, she is still an-other 12 to 15 minutes away. Needless to say, the dinner is completely overcooked.
What should I say when inviting guests to dinner? Should I only cook food that can sit in the oven for
an additional hour without being ruined? Give up in-viting people to our home?
I would think it was a not-so-subtle commentary on the quality of my cook-ing if I didn’t get besieged with requests for my reci-pes.
Gentle Reader: Miss Manners is loath to ques-tion the hopes of Southern mothers, good cooks and hospitable hosts, and she lacks sympathy with tardy guests.
But you sound in need of a drink.
It doesn’t have to be al-cohol, and you don’t even have to drink it yourself. But you could save your-self angst by providing the usual half-hour in which those who arrive on time are served drinks and small nibbles.
Miss Manners is not absolving the latecomers; she is going to teach you to retrain them.
When you issue invita-
tions for 6:30, you should add, “We will be sitting down to dinner promptly at 7.” Not only will this warn the stragglers, but it will relieve those who time their arrivals to avoid the endless cocktail hours to which other hosts have subjected them.
You will have timed your food accordingly and should serve it at the announced time. Guests who arrive later should be seated then, and told gra-ciously, “I knew you would want us to go ahead.”
Lest you feel rude about doing this, Miss Manners assures you that there is distinguished precedent for this. That Southern gentleman George Wash-ington insisted that oicial dinners over which he pre-sided would be served at the announced time, ex-plaining that delay would upset the cook. In your case, you know that to be true.
MISS MANNERS
Serve notice, along with dinner, to tardy
Community
M G «« T H E W E E K LY « Thursday, August 21, 2014 « 11
In brief
G E R M A N T OW N
Adults’ anime Club
Adult fans of anime and manga are invited to watch new anime, try new foods and more at Germantown Community Library. Each month features a themed activity and video screen-ing. The club will meet Wednesday at 6:30 p.m. Preregistration required.
Healthy living support group
Baptist Rehabilitation-Germantown is hosting its next healthy living sup-port group meeting Mon-day from noon to 1 p.m. in community classroom 125, located at 2100 Exeter Road. “Body, Mind and Spine” will be the topic. A light lunch will be served and there is no cost to at-tend. For reservations, call 901-757-3428.
Adult kickball
The last day to sign up for adult coed kickball is
Aug. 31. The league is open to adults and older. Games will be played Monday evenings at Houston Le-vee Park, 9777 Wolf River Blvd. The team fee is $300. Register at the parks and recreation office, 2276 West St.
Small Fry Triathlon
Registration in now open for the sixth annual Small Fry Triathlon for children ages 2-6. Young-sters will run, bike and go through a firetruck spray at Farmington Park, 2029 Cordes. Everyone will receive a medal and the event is not competitive.
Kids must bring a bike or tricycle and a helmet. The triathlon is Sept. 13. Start time is 10 a.m. for kids ages 2-3 and 10:30 for older children. The cost is $5. Sign up by Fri-day to receive a T-shirt. There will be no event day registration. For more information, call Michelle McDonnell at 901-757-7382 or e-mail [email protected].
CO L L I E RV I L L E
‘Movie Mania’ at Carriage Crossing
Carriage Crossing’s free “Movie Mania” movie on Friday will be “Babe.” The movies begin at dusk and will be held at Carriage Crossing’s roundabout.
JDRF fundraiser
The Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation fun-draiser, “One Day” will be Friday, noon to 6 p.m. in the parking lot of Pickler Wealth Advisors, 1135 Hal-le Park Circle. There will be food, music, a dunk tank and more.
Pet adoptions
The Mid-South Grey-hound Adoption will have its adoption day Saturday at Hollywood Feed, 6722 Hwy. 70, from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m.
E-mail upcoming community
events to Matt Woo @woo@com-
mercialappeal.com.
By Trena StreetSpecial to The Weekly
They work hard, often very hard, on their week-day job. Yet when the weekend came around recently, four friends/co-workers at the town of Col-lierville gladly spent time participating in “Dodge This,” the annual dodge ball tournament fund-raiser benefiting Youth Villages.
The “Jager Bombers” dodgeball team includes four men who work in the Streets and Drainage Di-vision of Collierville Pub-lic Services Department. Jacob Harvey, Sandy Lay, Jacob Rapp and Clay Ticer were four of the six-man team who each paid $30 to participate in the Youth Villages benefit.
In their second year in competition, they won first place. In their first year, the team focused on really great team uniforms. That competition they won, but
didn’t even come close in the actual dodge ball tour-nament.
So this year, Ticer, who is the leader/captain, pulled the group together again and they grabbed T-shirt and shorts and head-ed to the court.
They were all smiles as the “Jager Bombers” won
the amateur division. All proceeds benefit Youth Villages, a private nonprof-it organization dedicated to helping emotionally and behaviorally troubled chil-dren and their families live successfully.
Trena Street is with the Collierville
Public Information Oice.
COLLIERVILLE
‘Jager Bombers’ win dodgeball tourney benefiting Youth Villages
Brady Irving ended an active summer by landing a 2.5-pound largemouth bass. Members of Germantown United Methodist’s Apostle Sun-
day school class volunteered to help feed a large group of students and staf at the Service Over Self of Memphis. The “Apostles” also did kitchen chores and dining hall cleanup. SOS works in Binghampton and Orange Mound. Helping serve are Glenn Goerke (left), Autumn Goerke, Heidi Joyce, Mike Goforth, Ginger Goforth, Bill Payne, Mike Carter, Kurt Graunke, Dotty Carter and Anna Graunke. The SOS group of students and adults were from Germantown United Meth-odist and Collierville’s The Orchard Fellowship churches.
Collierville Public Services Streets and Drainage employees Jacob Rapp (left), Sandy Lay (center), Jacob Harvey (in hat) and Clay Ticer (right) won the “Dodge This” dodgeball tournament beneiting Youth Villages.
SNAPSHOTS
SHARE YOURSE-mail details and JPEG images 1-2 MB in size to Matt Woo at woo@commercial appeal.com.
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12 » Thursday, August 21, 2014 » T H E W E E K LY «« M G
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