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Curlers hit the ice
FARRAGUT
Vol. 5, No. 2 • January 10, 2011 • www.ShopperNewsNow.com • 10512 Lexington Drive, Suite 500 37932 • 218-WEST (9378)
Vet needs a hero
By Wendy Smith
While much of West Knoxville was basking in the warm glow of the holidays, Fred Johnson was just wishing somebody would listen to him. Johnson, a Vietnam veteran, lives in the same house in which he grew up on Duncan Road. But he’s had a long string of bad luck that has left him weary of staring at its walls. He attended Rocky Hill Elementary School and was in the final class that graduated from Bearden High School when it was located on Kingston Pike. The class motto was “The greatest of the great – the class of ’68.” Johnson joined the Navy in 1969 to avoid getting drafted by the Army. He served on the final tour of the U.S.S. Bon Homme Richard and was able to live out a childhood fantasy of riding in a rickshaw in Hong Kong. He had stops in Singapore, the Philippines and Japan, and says his service during the Vietnam War was one of the best adventures he ever had. But it wasn’t all fun and games. Johnson’s job required him to go ashore to remove unexploded ordnances from carrier-launched air-
craft. During every night he spent at an airbase, he was fired on at 3 a.m. He eventually learned not to sleep until after the nightly trip to the bunker. He planned to stay in the Navy and attended flight school. But he opted out of flying when he learned he would be expected to participate in the bombing of Haiphong Harbor, which he considered a suicide mission. As retribution, he “got every dirty job” until his enlistment ended in 1973. After his Navy days, Johnson took a job, and a wife, in San Jose, Calif. He’s not proud of the way he lived at the time, and his marriage failed after three years. “You got to learn as you go,” he says sadly. “There’s no instruction book for this life.” In 1976, Johnson returned to Knoxville, where he struggled with pills and alcohol. The hardest part of the war was feeling like he couldn’t help when so many soldiers were losing their lives, and it made him angry. Pills helped dull the anger, he says. He eventually sought treatment at the V.A. hosFred Johnson stands outside of the Duncan Road home his father built. pital in Johnson City. After that, he worked as a techniPhoto by W. Smith
cian for several years, but liked having some variety in his work. He was a cook at Cracker Barrel when he had a heart attack in 2004. In 2008, he had a stroke that left him numb on his left side. His military training has helped him adapt, he says. Johnson’s only source of income is $243 per month of disability for his exposure to Agent Orange. He’s pursuing full V.A. benefits and hopes to start receiving checks by summer. But he’s struggling to pay his property taxes, and in the past several months, his car, his television and even his microwave have died. There’s no money to replace them. He now depends on his 77-yearold mother to drive him on errands. He wishes he could at least watch his favorite show, “The Simpsons,” to take his mind off his troubles. He’s grateful for Christmas gifts he received from his church, Cumberland Presbyterian, but doesn’t expect more. “Times are tough for everybody. They can’t do much to help.” Johnson applied for the state’s Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program two months ago but hasn’t heard back. He’s also contacted AMVETS, the American Legion, the Veterans of Foreign Wars and the Disabled American Veterans for help, but it seems like no one’s listening, he says. “I’m so tired of asking for help.” If you’d like to help or know someone who would, contact the Shopper-News at 218-9378.
Hard times and tragedy take toll on local builder By Betty Bean Most days but Sunday, Roy Anderson is down on Broadway sitting in his green 1971 Chevy C-10 pickup truck in the old Fountain City Kroger parking lot, loaded down with firewood for sale. He’s got red oak, white oak and hickory plus bundles of cedar kindling. Frequently one of his 10 children is riding shotgun. He knows he could make more money if he’d find a spot out toward Farragut, but the Chevy only gets about 11 miles to the gallon, so he stays closer to his home in Corryton and does the best he can. He’s waiting for spring when he, his son Roy Jr. and his friend Randy Harwell will be opening up “Our Father’s Garden,” a landscaping supply, lawn maintenance, remodeling and construction business on Cunningham Road in Halls, at the site of the old Munsey’s Lawn Care. A pewter ornament that his wife, Sylvia, gave him hangs from his rearview mirror. It says, “I love you all dearly. Now don’t shed a tear. I’m spending my Christmas with Jesus this year. In loving memory, Samuel Anderson, 2006-2010.” The little pendant commemorates their youngest son who died of neuroblastoma – a vicious form of cancer – on Nov. 4. Not that Roy needs reminders. The boy is never far from his mind. Just over three years ago, Roy Anderson was a licensed Realtor, a general contractor and a successful builder/developer who had built and sold 19 houses and started Shiloh Gardens, a subdivision on Pedigo Road. He’d built his family a house that they only owed $21,000 on (and that was for the land) and he drove a big F-350 King Ranch
dually that pulled a skid-steer loader. Samuel really liked that truck. The doctors at Children’s Hospital discovered Samuel’s tumor Aug. 31, 2007, and flew him to Vanderbilt for treatment. He was desperately ill from the beginning and spent more than 70 days on life support that year. His stomach swelled up like he’d swallowed a basketball and most of his vital organs, including his eyes, were compromised. Roy and Sylvia never left his side. “Down in Nashville they gave us a Ronald McDonald room about a quarter mile from the hospital. Might as well have been 1,500 miles away. We appreciated it, but we couldn’t be that far away from him, so we let somebody else use it. Every day they were telling us he wouldn’t live till tomorrow. The tumor didn’t shrink, he had breathing difficulties and they had to intubate him. But in January 2008, he went into remission, although with neuroblastoma, there’s really no remission. They just call it ‘No Evidence of Disease – NED.’ So we went back to work. “I was working as a trim carpenter and cabinet maker and I built our house debt-free as the Lord gave me the money. We cut down trees on our property for lumber and every time I got paid, if I had any extra money, I’d put it in the house. I also built my daddy a house on the property.” Roy had nearly finished a couple of houses in Shiloh Gardens when the bottom fell out of the market. He mortgaged the family home for $280,000 and used the money to pay the interest on his business debts and for living expenses. Finally, the Andersons walked away from their home and his dad let them have the
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Roy Anderson and his daughter, Bethany, sell firewood in the old Kroger parking lot in Fountain City. Photo by Ruth White house Roy had built for him. Roy got a loan on his truck to pay off the interest on a construction note, but things kept going south on him and on April 3, 2009, the repo guys pulled up to take the truck. “That’s the one thing that bothered Samuel the most. He’d say, ‘Daddy, when are they going to bring back our truck?’ I told him that wasn’t going to happen and he’d say ‘We’ll get another truck, daddy. I got money, Daddy.’ He got a Social Security check from where he’d been sick and he wanted to give it to me, but that money was just to be used for him.” Roy filed for bankruptcy in September, about the time Samuel’s cancer came back. “A week before he passed away,
I’d saved up $1,400 but the guy was wanting $3,000 for this truck. Samuel had money in the bank that people had given him out of compassion, and he said, ‘Mommy, give Daddy some of my money so he can go buy that truck.’ When we got home from church on Wednesday night my wife said, ‘Why don’t you just go ahead and buy that truck,’ and handed me money from Samuel’s account,” Roy said. The next day he and two of his other children, Joshua and Hannah, went to Sevier County to get the truck. They were on their way back when his mother-in-law called and said that Samuel had quit breathing “I told her to turn his oxygen rate up and she said she already had. ‘He’s gone, Roy.’ My wife was
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crying, saying, ‘I’ve killed him. I killed him. He asked for a drink of water and he stopped breathing.’ I told her she didn’t kill him. How many times had she given her children a drink of water? “I didn’t even want the truck then, wanted to take it back. But she told me the Lord didn’t want me to be there because he knew that Josh and Hannah and I wouldn’t have been able to handle watching Samuel pass away. She told me not to throw the truck away, just fix it up.” So he kept the old green truck and got it into working order. He kind of wished it were blue because that was the color of Tommy the Tank Engine, Samuel’s favorite cartoon. One day he was working on the passenger side door and noticed something odd in the door jam – a strip of bright blue, which he realized was the truck’s original color. Restoring it is high on Roy’s to-do list. And he wants to make something very clear: “We’re born again and we’re trusting in the Lord and we realize that there’s trials and tribulations that everybody has to go through. This isn’t an accident that we’ve lost our business and our son. We know that we’ll see him again. We loved him as much as you could love anybody, so when we had to let him go back to the Lord, we gave him all we could. “We’ve got clothes, groceries, a place to stay and TennCare’s paying for our medical, so our needs are all met. We’d love to have your business, but we don’t need a handout. And we’re just thankful that God picked us to be Samuel’s parents out of all the billions of people to choose from.”
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A-2 • JANUARY 10, 2011 • FARRAGUT SHOPPER-NEWS
Rubbing shoulders with music history Guitarist/songwriter to release CD, continue at Elvis show
That weather If there is anything more gratifying than watching local TV weather persons blow a forecast, it’s listening to them explain why they got it wrong. OK, so the latter has never happened, but it’s fun to fantasize. Despite the pleasure they provide viewers with these public demonstrations of incompetence, weather persons (WPs) are responsible for 99.87 percent of the deterioration in intelligent use of the English language, and they must be brought to justice for their criminal promotion of inarticulate speech. Take, for example, the phrase “your Monday” (or Friday, for that matter). In fact, I hope you do take it, because if it’s your Monday, I certainly don’t want it. I want my own Monday, thank you, and I’d appreciate it if you’d keep your days to yourself. Sometimes WPs will try to make amends by referring to “our Monday.” I don’t know about you, but I never agreed to share my Monday with the public. If the Monday in question belongs to the WPs and their colleagues at the station, they should say so. And if it’s their Monday, why should I care anyway? More vexing still are the WPs profligate use of “that” and “those.” There are only so many thats and thoses to go around, and squandering these useful words in nonsense phrases like “those temperatures” (are there other temperatures we should be concerned with?) and “that rain” (if it isn’t that rain, which rain is it?) will inevitably lead to a shortage. How bad could it get? Imagine the
simple act of explaining to an auto dealer which of two nearly identical cars you want to test drive. “I’ll take … one.” “Which one?” “Uh, over there.” “Which one over there?” After a few more fruitless exchanges of this sort, you stalk off wondering why if we can put a man on the moon we can’t invent a synthetic “that” to fill the void created by wasteful WPs. And consider the horrifying prospect of the WPs’ language mangling extending to newspaper reporting due to creeping verbal osmosis (CVO), an incurable and invariably fatal disorder of the syntax system. A report on the mayor’s presentation to County Commission might go something like this: Today, that mayor pledged to bring those expenses under control by keeping that eye on our budget. “Your mayor is determined to try that strategy,” our mayor said in those words. A chilling scenario indeed, but it’s not too late to do something about it. Write, email, telephone, text or telegraph your local WPs. Threaten to boycott the station’s advertisers unless they pledge to stop abusing our revered English language. That is all for those opinions. This week we bring you a compelling story from Betty Bean about the losses suffered by a former developer, and Wendy Smith writes of a disabled veteran who could use some help. Contact Larry Van Guilder at lvgknox@mindspring.com.
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Ross Southerland has rubbed shoulders with music history. From country crooners to Vegas superstars to virtually anybody associated with Elvis Presley, he knows what it feels like to gab (and jam) with the greats. Enjoying a burger and a cup of soup at Litton’s on a suddenly snowy afternoon last week, Southerland was saddened over the passing of one of them, soul singer Myrna Smith. You may not recognize the name. But chances are you’ve heard her voice. Smith was a longtime member of the Sweet Inspirations, an R&B/soul group that at one point included Cissy Houston (Whitney’s mother), Estelle Brown and Sylvia Shemwell. In addition to having their own top 20 hit, “Sweet Inspiration,” the Sweets also sang backup on records for Aretha Franklin (“Chain of Fools”), Jimi Hendrix (“Burning of the Midnight Lamp”), Dusty Springfield (“Son of a Preacher Man”) and Van Morrison (“Brown Eyed Girl”). From 1969 to 1977, the Sweets sang backup and opened concerts for Elvis Presley. Smith died Dec. 24 at a hospice near Los Angeles. She had fallen ill while on tour overseas with “Elvis in Concert,” a show that features video performances by Elvis, who is projected onto a screen, to the live accompaniment of surviving members of his band. Southerland, who can eerily channel Presley’s last lead guitarist James Burton, performed with Smith throughout the world as part of the touring group with Elvis tribute artist Shawn Klush. “Myrna was just a good ol’ girl,” Southerland says. “She was a good woman. On tour, we’d eat breakfast together every morning. We’d laugh and tell jokes.” Southerland says that Smith, like virtually everybody else associated with Elvis, would clam up if you started pumping her for information about the King. “But if you don’t say anything, (stories) just come flying out. She told me secrets not known to the public.” He says he once asked Smith what one thing she would change about her life. Unexpectedly, she told him she wished she had her friendship back with opera singer Kathy Westmoreland, who also toured with Presley in the 1970s. The two eventually had a falling out and were not on speaking terms. A 1982 Halls High graduate who now lives in Powell, Southerland spent much of the 1980s and early 1990s in California touring with his rock and roll band, Outta Line. While in Los Angeles, on rocker Sammy Hagar’s birthday, Oct. 13, 1989, Southerland met that other Sammy – Sammy Davis Jr. – by chance when Davis’s Cadillac was stopped at a red light. It’s a funny and poignant story. Southerland and his girlfriend had parked on Santa Monica Boulevard and
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The city of Knoxville is partnering with several organizations including the Optimist Club of West Knoxville and the Knoxville Volunteer Rescue Squad to host a “Plug Into Your Community” computer
Singer Myrna Smith with guitarist/songwriter Ross Southerland. Southerland performed with Smith, who was a longtime backup singer for Elvis Presley, at various tribute shows throughout the world. Smith died on Dec. 24. Photo submitted
Jake Mabe were walking toward a convenience store when Southerland spotted the popular singer sitting in the back of his red two-door Caddy. “The light had turned red. I yelled ‘Sammy!’ All of a sudden, my girlfriend, who is wearing high heels, goes running past me toward the car. She’s holding my camera, leans up to the car and when he rolls the window down, says, ‘Oh …’ and walks on into the store. She thought it was Sammy Hagar.” Southerland shook Davis’s hand – he remembers it felt really warm on what was a cool night – and Davis replied, “You mean a longhaired white cat like you knows who I am?” “Of course I do,” Ross replied. “You’re the greatest singer who ever lived!” The two talked. Southerland kept waiting for his girlfriend to return with the camera. She didn’t. The red light turned green. Davis motioned for his driver to stay put. “Everything that I said to him was stupid. I kept saying things like, ‘Remember when you were on “I Dream of Jeannie”?’ ”
Follow Ross Southerland on MySpace at http:// www.myspace.com/ rosssoutherland. Davis kept talking in what was by then a raspy voice ravaged by the cancer that would kill him the following year. Just before he left, Davis looked at Southerland and said, “Well, if a long-haired white cat like you knows who I am, I guess I didn’t turn out to be a Mr. Bojangles after all.” “He shook my hand again and I told him that I loved him.” After Davis’s death, Southerland caught a TV interview on a Jerry Lewis telethon in which Davis said, “My biggest fear in life,” (pause) “was to turn out to be a real Mr. Bojangles.” “Chills ran up my neck.” Outta Line had three record deals on the table from Capitol, RCA and Enigma Records when the Gulf War broke out in 1991. Southerland says that Hollywood promptly “shut down” and when things got back to normal, grunge had replaced hard rock in popularity.
recycling event 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 22, at Chilhowee Park. Knox County residents recycling their computers, laptops or other electronic items won’t have to leave their cars as this is a drivethrough event, taking place regardless of weather conditions.
So Southerland headed home. By chance his old friend Jay Thomas, who at one point moved to California with Outta Line, was working the lights at Memories Theatre in Pigeon Forge. The show was looking for a new lead guitarist to play for Eddie Miles’s Salute to Elvis. Thomas recommended Southerland and he got the job. It was a position he would hold, on and off, until Memories shut its doors Jan. 1. Along the way, Southerland played for Miles and Elvis tribute artists Pete Willcox, William Stiles and Lou Vuto, and met and befriended Elvis’s best buddy, Charlie Hodge (the guy who would hand the King water and scarves on stage). They became close and Southerland served as a pall bearer and delivered a eulogy when Hodge died in March 2006. “He really taught me how to sing harmony. He taught me the high harmony parts on ‘Peace in the Valley.’ ” While at Memories, Southerland also played with country legend Johnny Paycheck, sang with Elvis’s backup quartet J.D. Sumner and the Stamps, and, on one great night, was visited by country singer Johnny Russell (“Rednecks, White Socks and Blue Ribbon Beer”), who said he showed up just to hear Ross play. Southerland will continue to perform with the Memories show, which is relocating to a new theater in the coming months at the former site of Eddie’s Heart and Soul Café, next door to Country Tonite in Pigeon Forge. He is also touring with Klush (another South American trip is on tap for the fall) and putting the finishing touches on his second album, which he hopes to release in late summer or early fall. “My first album, I was more of a singer/songwriter, writing songs for other people. But that ain’t me. I’m going back to my Southern roots.” Southerland promises it will be guitar-oriented and influenced by his heroes, Jerry Lee Lewis, Elvis and Waylon Jennings, and by the 1970s outlaw country music he loves. “I hate sounding like everybody else. I have passed up several (recording) opportunities. I might be hardheaded, but I would rather save face and be proud of something I do than jump on the same ol’ cookie-cutter bandwagon and wear a big cowboy hat. I’m gonna say what I want!” Call Jake Mabe at 922-4136 or e-mail JakeMabe1@aol.com. Visit him at jakemabe.blogspot.com.
In addition to this event, residents can recycle their electronics for free at the Household Hazardous Waste Collection Center, 1033 Elm St. Info: www. plugintoyourcommunity. info and www. cityofknoxville.org/ solidwaste/hazwaste.asp.
FARRAGUT SHOPPER-NEWS • JANUARY 10, 2011 • A-3
Arts Council plans private school competition
community
During last week’s meeting, the Farragut Arts Council discussed upcoming events. Rapidly approaching is the art show for Christian Academy of Knoxville, Catholic High School and Webb School.
Natalie Lester Student art will be displayed in the Farragut Town Hall rotunda from Feb. 7-18. On Feb. 8, a reception will take place from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m., with award winners announced at 6. The council hopes to receive 20 pieces per school and will award the top four creations. The group also continued to plan Book Fest and its participation in the Dogwood Arts Festival. The Arts Council next meets on Feb. 1.
Mary Agnes Schaefer and Sandy Dean compare notes at last Tuesday’s Arts Council meeting.
Seniors exercise with Tai Chi On Tuesdays and Thursdays every week, a group of senior adults exercise through Tai Chi classes at the Strang Senior Center. Beginner class is offered at 8:45
a.m. and advanced members classes taught at the Strang practice at 10. Karin Kauchak Center. is the instructor. The show begins today at the town hall with a recepWatercolor exhibit tion planned for 4-7 p.m. Wednesday. The show and at town hall The “Joy of Watercolor” reception are free. For more Instructor Karin Kauchak leads her class, including JoAnna exhibit will showcase Hazel information, contact Anne Webb, Judy Linn and Sheila Slimbarski, through a Tai Chi routine. Photos by N. Lester G. Johnson’s pieces from art LaGrow at 966-7057.
CALENDAR OF EVENTS
Chef Garrett greets fans in Farragut By Natalie Lester Chef Garrett Scanlan quickly redirects attention for his East Tennessee PBS show, “Cooking with Chef Garrett,” to those behind the camera. “All I do is show up. I’m the funny one with the accent that knows how to cook,” Scanlan said last Thursday at the Irish Times Pub in Turkey Creek. The Master Chef was trained in Europe. Sauces are his self-proclaimed specialty and he prefers to prepare seafood dishes. “Cooking with Chef Gar-
rett” is in its second season on PBS, picking up a sponsorship from the Tennessee Department of Tourism. Each episode starts in a new city and travels 90 miles in any given direction looking for good, odd and awful food. In its first episode this season, the chef visits the only shrimp farm in Tennessee. The show airs at 8:30 p.m. on Thursdays. Garrett’s Downtown Deli has two locations in Knoxville: at 1400 Centerpoint Plaza, Suite 174, and on Gay Chef Garrett Scanlan thanks his fans for their support Street in the First Tennes- heading into his second season of “90 Miles with Chef Garsee Plaza. rett.” Photo by N. Lester
Econ committee approves strategic plan committees will continue In their first meeting of working to develop a busi2011, Farragut’s Economic ness-friendly atmosphere Development Committee in Farragut. The recruitment comended months of deliberation on the Strategic Plan mittee will target areas of and approved the presen- the town for possible busitation made by Bill Johns ness growth. The relationwith a few grammar and ships committee will reach out to potential developers wording changes. The final plan included and work on maintaining task lists for the Board of the town’s brand. Tourism/ Mayor and Aldermen, town Events members will hanof Farragut staff and the ad- dle promotions and town ditional subcommittees the events, as well as develop EDC will establish. Pend- an inventory of historic ing the board’s approval, sites in the community. Goals for the entire comrecruitment, relationships and tourism/events sub- mittee are: increase the tax
By Natalie Lester
base, become proactive to opportunities, improve relations with the region’s economic development organizations, provide strategic direction for the town’s long-term and tactical goals and provide an integrated marketing communications plan. “This is a pretty good preparation and a great marching order,” said Alderman Bob Markli. “It’s a great accumulation of everything we’ve talked about,” added Pamela Treacey. As questions about the
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2011
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details arose, EDC chair Jim Holladay encouraged members to pace themselves and wait for approval from the town board. “We’re at the top of the funnel, but once we get going, we’ll nail all of the details,” he said.
Info: 966-7057. All events are held at the Farragut Town Hall unless otherwise noted.
■ Knitting 101: Knitting with Looms, 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 18.
■ Strang Senior Center Art Show “The Joy of Watercolor,” 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Monday through Friday, Jan. 10-14, and Tuesday through Thursday, Jan. 18-20.
■ Lasagna Gardening, 6:30 to 8 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 20.
■ Municipal and Traffic Enforcement Court, 6-9 p.m. Monday, Jan. 10. ■ Board of Plumbing and Gas/ Mechanical Examiners, 5-6 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 11. ■ Field Use Work Session, 6-7 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 11. ■ Parks and Athletics Council, Field Use Allocation Meeting, 7-8 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 11. ■ Strang Senior Center Art Show Reception, 4-7 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 12. ■ Stormwater Advisory Committee, 3:30 to 4:30 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 13. ■ Board of Mayor and Aldermen, 7-10 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 13. ■ Farragut Skate Date, 3-5 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 15, at the Icearium. ■ Personnel Committee, 6 p.m. Monday, Jan. 17. ■ Town Hall Closed, Monday, Jan. 17.
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■ Mask Making, 9:30 to 11:30 a.m. Saturday, Jan. 22, for ages 8 and up. ■ Paper Mache, 12:45 to 2:45 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 22, for ages 6 and up.
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A-4 • JANUARY 10, 2011 • WEST SIDE SHOPPER-NEWS
New holidays you can’t live without
Haslam bids Knoxville adieu If Bill Haslam had a detectable mean streak, the audience at his farewell address might have thought that a portion of his speech was aimed straight at the guy sitting squarely in before him in the front row, center section – Knox County Mayor Tim Burchett:
Betty Bean “We must continue to find the best practices to effectively deal with homelessness. It is a major issue for our city and our community. I believe that permanent supportive housing is the right approach. We must not forget, however, that it is not the only tenet of the Ten Year Plan. The plan has given us better ways to work at effectively dealing with the problem of homelessness in our community. And it is working. It is essential that we continue to search out and implement methods to prevent and address the
day to day challenges homelessness presents, and we must not let homelessness become an issue that divides us and appeals to the worst of our impulses.� But Haslam, who is so religious that he once contemplated becoming a minister, doesn’t have an abundance of malice in his makeup, so he probably wasn’t calling Burchett out over the threat to end county support of the Ten Year Plan if residents of permanent supportive housing are allowed to drink in their apartments – success rates, scholarly research and respect for the law be damned. And nobody seemed to take it that way, even though Haslam followed up his defense of the Ten Year Plan by sort of channeling Lincoln’s plea to the better angels of our nature and not to look for wedge issues to divide us: “Finally, one of the greatest challenges we face is to keep from pitting one area against another and one group against another. If we look at success as a zerosum game, where one’s gain
Gov.-elect Bill Haslam greets well-wisher Albert Baah.
Betty Bean
is only at another’s loss, we all eventually lose. ‌� The governor-elect singled out and commended the contributions of his estimable deputy Larry Martin, who, along with policy wonk-in-chief Bill Lyons, has kept the city’s wheels turning while Haslam barnstormed the state in pursuit of higher office. He started to choke up when he described marching in his last Christmas parade and struggled for composure when he said that his heart would never be far from Knoxville. After the speech, he waded into the friendly crowd,
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shadowed by two hard-eyed men who make up the security contingent assigned to him on election night. They watched intently as the hugging commenced. Someone warned him to watch out for Stacey Campfield. Current members of City Council (most of whom want to become interim mayor) were there to see and be seen. The most perfect plus ça change, plus c’est la même chose moment of the morning came when he couldn’t make it out of the room without being buttonholed by former City Council member Joe Hultquist.
Former mayor gives advice Cherokee Country Club? Are you a member? What is the right answer if you are a candidate for mayor? Two candidates belong to Cherokee, a gathering place for past and present civic leaders, and were recently asked about it by Betty Bean. Marilyn Roddy quickly asserted that she does not belong but it is her husband, Patrick, who has the membership. This response is disingenuous. It ignores the question of whether Marilyn regularly uses the club on her husband’s membership, which, of course, she does and has done for years. Foster Arnett proudly told us that his great-grandfather helped found the club and he thinks Cherokee now has three black members. That was his total response. Both also told us they want to continue Bill Haslam’s record as mayor. Part of the Haslam record includes resigning from Cherokee in 2003 when he decided to run for mayor. He has not rejoined. When Winfield Dunn ran unsuccessfully for governor in 1986, his membership in Nashville’s Belle Meade Country Club was an issue. He eventually resigned. There is a reason these resignations occurred.
Victor Ashe
Roddy and Arnett might want to ask why. For the record, I belonged to Cherokee 27 years ago but resigned in 1984. There is a reason both Haslam and I resigned (and it was not inability to pay the dues). In 1984 Cherokee still had de facto policies of exclusion based on gender, religion and race. Women were not voting members at that time and certainly African-Americans were not members nor were Jews. Remember the stunning and unfortunate quote from Doug Dickey that membership for Wade Houston was not an option when UT coaches were being given complimentary memberships at the club? I did not feel I could ask all Tennesseans to support me for U.S. senator if I belonged to a club where most Tennesseans could not enter. Today, that is no longer true at Cherokee. People willing to pay the price can apply and be considered
without regard to race, creed or gender. Perhaps today’s Cherokee membership is no longer an issue in a Knoxville mayor’s race. Cherokee members today certainly would strongly oppose the discrimination the club once practiced. Nevertheless, the issue comes up. Candidates are asked. Both Arnett and Roddy missed the chance to deplore discrimination with their poorly conceived answers. Roddy should not have tried to escape the issue by acting like it was just her husband who belonged and, by inference, only he uses it. Voters are not that naive. Arnett claiming Cherokee today has three black members and that somehow resolves the matter insults voter intelligence. Eight years ago Cherokee demolished the historic J. Allen Smith House across Lyons View Pike from the main club house. In litigation, they successfully prevailed on property rights while incensing many historic preservationists with the manner in which they approached the issue. This is a very different issue from the one of exclusion. Arnett or Roddy failed to voice strong opposition to discrimination and support
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for fair treatment of all. This is sad as our mayor must be prepared, willing and enthused in fighting discrimination in all its ugly forms. Both should have said they deplored past practices at Cherokee. Both should have said that they and their spouse would not belong to a club which condoned or practiced discrimination. In fact, neither said a word in their interviews on the whole issue of discrimination – a missed opportunity for both. Meanwhile, the other four current mayoral candidates have not rushed to secure a membership application. Long distance? For those wondering why Roddy would list a RSVP phone number located in New Hampshire (area code 603) for her Jan. 6 Hot Jazz party, don’t get alarmed. She is not outsourcing jobs to the Granite State. The number belongs to a volunteer friend of her daughter who attends college there. But does it count as a long distance call? Could no one in Knoxville handle this? Next time better to use a local 865 number and use Knoxville city voters as primary volunteers if you are running for mayor or city council.
Christmas is history, New Year’s Day has faded in the rearview mirror, and many of you are saying to yourselves: “I wouldn’t wear that tie to a dogfight.� Some among you, indeed, are taking a most uncharitable view of holidays, happy to be back in your workplace where excessive tinsel decorating is frowned upon and possession of eggnog is grounds for termination. To you I’m pleased to say that you’re wrong, that a few more holidays on the local calendar are just what’s needed. Sure, the 4th of July and Boomsday are fine for plastic surgeons and emergency room physicians paid by the finger, but what of the many deprived of a medical school education? For their benefit I propose the following: The Running of the Bull: This is destined to become everyone’s favorite holiday season. During election years, beginning with the primary season and continuing until the day of the general election, candidates and voters will assemble at Market Square on Sundays. Using (what else?) a bullhorn, Stacey Campfield or a reasonable facsimile thereof will proclaim, “Let’s get ready to r-r-r-umble,� and the fun begins! While shouting campaign slogans (examples: “I’ll eliminate waste!� “Me too!� “No tax increase!�), candidates will chase voters around the square. The first candidate to gore or trample a majority of the fleeing voters will be declared the winner and henceforth be known as “El Toro.� Required dress: candidates, three-piece pinstriped law suits; voters, a bright red polo called the “complete bull shirt.� (Holiday not observed in the town of Farragut, where wearing a complete bull shirt is prohibited by ordinance.) Cinco de Midway (literally, “a fifth of Midway�): This holiday derives its name from the now well-
Larry Van Guilder
established fact that only 20 percent of the population in the vicinity of the proposed Midway business park favored the project, and of that number all were either deceased or had moved to Hamilton County in 1957. Gaily decorated road signs reading “7-4� are erected in the Thorn Grove community at sunrise on Cinco de Midway. These remain in place until The Running of the Bull begins or until pigs fly, should the latter occur first. The County Commissioners who voted in favor of the project (dubbed “The Four Horsemen of the Chamber� during Cinco de Midway) are mounted on ponies and paraded through the Thorn Grove area until dark. The commissioners are then directed to The Development Corporation’s mostly idle existing business parks and ordered not to return until they’ve recruited three hightech companies and a Starbucks. The Ten Year Plan Bowl: What holiday calendar would be complete without a bowl game to enjoy? The TYP Bowl game pits County Commissioners and City Council members against not only one another, but the citizens of Knox County at large. The game will be divided into halves, one each in the county and the city. Posturing, grandstanding and pandering are worth three points each, and a successful NIMBY six points. If tied at the end of regulation, teams will be allowed one week to see which can evict the most tenants from Minvilla and convert the apartments into luxury condos. Happy holidays! Contact: lvgknox@mindspring.com.
Televised inauguration East Tennessee Public Broadcasting System (PBS) will air the “2011 Tennessee Inaugural: Governor Bill Haslam� noon Saturday, Jan. 15. The live broadcast from Nashville will include the inauguration ceremony and parade.
The arts honor MLK Knoxville Symphony Orchestra resident conductor James Fellenbaum and the Knoxville Symphony Chamber Orchestra, along with the Holiday Celebration Choir, MLK Children’s Chorus, Night With the Arts Players and the Austin-East Chamber Ensemble, will perform East Tennessee’s annual Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Night With the Arts Celebration Concert 6 p.m. Sunday, Jan. 16, at the Bijou Theatre. The theme of this year’s celebration is “Illuminate the Dream: Enlighten the World.� The concert is free and open to the public. Info: Jennifer Barnett, 521-2305.
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WEST SIDE SHOPPER-NEWS • JANUARY 10, 2011 • A-5
Week of decisions A casualty of printing a Monday paper on Friday evening is this writer’s previously stellar power of prediction. So no predictions this week, just hopes. Here’s hoping Jim McIntyre sticks around. He’s got some good work underway and the programs deserve his leadership. To leave for Nashville now is akin to birthing a litter of wolf cubs in the woods and leaving them to fend. Some will make it; others won’t. And here’s hoping McIntyre and his pals at the Great School Partnership (or whatever they’re calling
Sandra Clark it now) can come up with the money to put the STEM high school in the old L&N Station. Somebody asked why I want to blow up an old building in favor of new construction at Carter Elementary while supporting renovation of a train station/restaurant for a high school downtown. Hey, at Carter we’ve got a badly-built-to-start-with cave
where we’re stuffing little kids in classrooms too small. At the L&N we’ve got nothing less than a cathedral to the commerce and technology of its time where we can enable our nerds – you-all know who we, errrrr you, are – to do more with high school than simply survive it. School board meets Wednesday at 5. Watch it on Comcast Cable Channel 10. It’s the best reality show around. On the agenda are approvals for: ■ A special audit at Powell Elementary (did something go missing?)
■ A site for the STEM high school ■ A contract with Community Tectonics Architects Inc. for roof upgrades at Bearden High, $94,500 ■ A batting cage for Halls High softball, $20,200 (from softball account) ■ Contract with Studio Four Design for roof upgrades at West High School, $80,000 ■ Halls Elementary to buy and install ActivBoards, $12,709, funded by PTA ■ Brickey-McCloud Elementary to purchase an Apple MacBook, Promethean ProMobile and more, $51,598, funded by Regal Foundation.
COLLEGE NOTES Pellissippi State China: the culture, the country, the language. The Defense Department’s senior language authority has identified Chinese as one of the languages most in demand, and an estimated 100 million people worldwide are learning to speak Chinese. To meet demand, Pellissippi State is expanding Chinese language course offerings. Applications will be accepted through Feb. 1 for the school’s Global Ambassadors program, a sum-
mer study program. Info: Jonathan Bethard, 539-7138 or jdbethard@pstcc.edu.
UT Knoxville Race relations: It’s been 50 years since three African-American students enrolled at UT. The public is invited to campus at 10:30 a.m. Tuesday, Jan. 11, to launch a yearlong anniversary celebration. The group will march from the Torchbearer to Ayres Hall where Theotis Robinson Jr., one of the first black undergrads, and Benita Fitzgerald-Mosley, a UT grad and Olympian, will speak.
Resolutions for life I admit to being a procrastinator. January is when I do two things: mail my Christmas cards and make a list of “New Year’s notions.” They’re the same every year: get organized, lose weight and ex-
Lorraine Furtner
ercise. By each July I’ve lost more resolve than clutter or weight because I had grand ideas but didn’t make any lifestyle changes – except one. After losing an aunt to cancer, and having a greataunt and grandmother who both had breast cancer, I do not put off my mammograms or check-ups. Ladies, you shouldn’t put these tests off either, because 207,090 women and 1,970 men were diagnosed with breast cancer last year. You gentlemen who care for your mother, sister, wife, daughter or friend should encourage them to take care of themselves. Three staff members at Blue Grass Elementary feel that their survival is a result of early detection through annual doctor visits, routine mammograms and self breast exams. Ironically, each of them found the cancer in one of the three separate methods listed, so it is important to do each type of test.
Pink Ribbon Dance Susan Whitaker, Debbie Varnes and Julia Houston at Blue Grass Elementary inspired staff and families at the school to join the Susan G. Komen Race for the Cure in October. Whitaker, the last of the three to be diagnosed with breast cancer, worked through the school year while undergoing chemotherapy until having surgery Dec. 9. Whitaker said that she had walked in the race in 2009 to support Varnes and Houston who share office space at Blue Grass and were both diagnosed in 2008. “This year, they walked to support me,” said Whitaker.
MR 2S[\ZMPPI S R /
Two teachers, Amy Maxwell and Becca Russell, helped lead the Bosom Buddies team campaign at the school. Maxwell organized the 75-member team of staff and student families, raising $1,220 (above registration fees) for the Susan G. Komen Foundation for research. Russell coordinated and posted the “Pink Ribbon Dance,” seen on the school’s website. Students and staff showed support by wearing pink hats, shirts, scarves and even wigs. “The support was so encouraging,” said Whitaker. “Debbie and Julia, who understand and have survived this, have helped me stay positive.” Varnes, an intervention teacher, said “I feel like God has used this illness to help at least three people since I was diagnosed. It is pure terror when you first hear those words. It is very reassuring to hear from someone you know has been there.” Houston, a psychologist, said posting on Caring Bridge helped her explore her feelings. She relied on and found uplifting from the responses to her posts on that site. So how has this ordeal changed them? Houston said “Carpe Diem. Seize the day. I feel it’s a blessing this was found early. I don’t live in fear of it returning, I feel cured.” Varnes tries to exercise and eat right, but if she wants a dessert, she has one. “The most important thing is that I do not take a single day for granted. Also, I really don’t sweat the small stuff like a difference of opinion or bad traffic,” she said. For Whitaker, the biggest regret is being apart from most of her family during this time. Whitaker moved here from Iran decades ago and met her husband while both attended the University of Tennessee. She looks forward to recovering from her surgery and for her immune system and the political climate to both be well enough for travel. “I tell my family, and encourage all women, to go to
A.L. Lotts 5th graders learn world traditions and make resolutions for 2011: (front) Kayla Foltz, Ashton Idles, Vaishnavi Prashant, Michael Jones; (back) Weston Standifer, Beatrice Horobet, Lauren Miller, Daniel Dos Santos and David Acton. Photos by L. Furtner
Blue Grass Elementary School cancer survivors embrace a new year: Susan Whitaker, Debbie Varnes and Julia Houston. the doctor on time. Don’t wait. Don’t put it off. It could change the outcome,” she said. Whitaker made an appearance at the school Dec. 17, announcing the tissue biopsy was a “piece of cake” (compared to chemotherapy) and made plans to return to work. Info: bluegrasses. knoxschools.org, ww5. Komen.org, cancer.gov.
5th graders resolve to brush teeth What do 10- and 11-yearolds at A. L. Lotts resolve for 2011? Macqueline Foss’ class plans to “do better” at everything from brushing their teeth and drinking more water to practicing sports, music and reading their Bibles. The class studied New Year’s celebrations from around the world because Foss has students from Brazil, Japan, Korea, Mexico, Romania and Vietnam. Emily Readett said her favorite tradition was in Korea where they give children money, but also liked that in Italy they eat zampone
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Also at Lotts, Ashton Idles portrays Miyax, a character from “Julie of the Wolves,” by Jean Craighead George. All the girls in Macqueline Foss’ class wrote and performed a play based on the book.
or “stuffed pig trotter.” Emily didn’t know what it was (a deboned pork leg filled with sausage, pork rinds and spices), but thought it sounded interesting. Foss’ 5th graders learned about goals and keeping promises and then wrote five
New Year’s resolutions as part of American tradition. They also listed how they would achieve those goals. For example, one young man was going “to not get mad as much” simply “by breathing.” (This is actually not a bad idea.)
Weston Standifer had the key to annual pledges. Weston said he plans “not to make promises I can’t keep.” Keep that in mind when making your own list of New Year’s resolutions. I think mine could use some revising.
Medicine cabinet clean out
Hanging onto old, expired or unused medications can increase the chances of taking the wrong one. Medications can also lose their potency over time, thus reducing or providing no value to the condition being treated. Unused medications have the potential to be abused. Suggested tips are disposing of anything not
used in the past 12 months; dispose of medications no longer in their original container or that can no longer be identified and do not flush medications or pour them down the drain. Remove and destroy all identifying personal information from all containers before recycling or throwing them away. Info: www.smarxtdisposal.net.
The American Pharmacists Association (APhA) suggests an annual medicine cabinet cleanout as a New Year’s resolution. The APha recommends proper disposal of all unused and expired medications that have accumulated over the previous year.
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A-6 • JANUARY 10, 2011 • WEST SIDE SHOPPER-NEWS
Walking ‘through the friendly years’
Captain W.W. Woodruff
Dr. Carter H. Jones, then minister at Atlanta’s Second Baptist Church and former minister of Knoxville’s First Baptist Church, was fishing with two fellow ministers one summer day but not catching anything.
Jim Tumblin
One of them proposed they pick an All-American “team” of deacons. Dr. Jones nominated Capt. W.W. Woodruff for his lifetime of service to the church and related the incident years later at Woodruff’s memorial service. Jones told of his first meeting with Capt. Woodruff just after he had been named pastor of First Baptist at only 27 years of age and of Woodruff’s unblemished character and service to his church and his community. William Wallace Woodruff was born at Bardstown, Ky., March 21, 1840, the son of Ezra and Katherine Woodruff (1810-1900) who had three sons, George H., Ezra Jr. and W.W. Young William Woodruff was educated in the Louisville, Ky., schools and soon found employment as a clerk in a mercantile establishment. With the firing on Fort Sumter on April 12, 1861, and President Abraham Lincoln’s subsequent call for volunteers, W.W. Woodruff knew what he had to do. He joined the Union Army as a member of the 13th Ken-
tucky Volunteer Infantry. His education and his experience soon enabled him to assume the key position of Company D’s adjutant, the staff officer who writes the orders dictated by his superiors. Capt. Woodruff served with the 13th Kentucky as they fought at the Battle of Shiloh, Tenn., (April 6-7, 1862) and, after action throughout 1862 back in Kentucky around Louisville and Munfordville, joined in pursuing the evasive Gen. John Hunt Morgan’s Raiders. His unit then became part of Gen. Ambrose Burnside’s march over the rugged Cumberland Mountains for the campaign in eastern Tennessee (Aug. 16-Oct. 17, 1863). During the Siege of Knoxville (Nov. 17-Dec. 5, 1863) the 13th Kentucky was brigaded with Ohio, Michigan and Illinois units on the brow of Fort Hill overlooking Flag Pond at the far eastern end of the arc of fortifications surrounding downtown Knoxville. Woodruff would have heard the distant sound of the artillery as the 79th New York defended Fort Sanders during that ill-advised dawn attack by Gen. James Longstreet’s battle-scarred Confederates from the Army of Northern Virginia on Nov. 29. Longstreet suffered 800 casualties in only 20 minutes while Burnside’s casualties in the well-defended fort totaled only 13. Longstreet soon abandoned Knoxville and, after enduring one of the coldest winters in history in upper East Tennessee without adequate provisions, returned to the battlefields of Virginia leaving the city under Union control for the remainder of the war.
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Capt. William Wallace Woodruff (1840-1926). Capt. Woodruff served in the Union Army during the Siege of Knoxville (November 1863) and returned after the Civil War to found W.W. Woodruff ’s Hardware Co. on Gay Street.
Woodruff Mansion at 1401Cumberland Ave. The mansion was built in the 1870s on the large plat between Cumberland and White, now the site of the UT Hoskins Library. Photos courtesy C.M. McClung Historical Collection.
The 13th Kentucky joined Gen. William T. Sherman’s grinding campaign through Georgia and was among the 100,000 Union soldiers who faced Gen. Joseph E. Johnston’s 70,000 Confederates at the Battle of Resaca, Ga. (May 14–15, 1864). They then accompanied Sherman to Kennesaw Mountain (June 27, 1864) and the Siege of Atlanta (July 22-Aug. 25, 1864). After a month of operations around Atlanta, Woodruff’s regiment was ordered to return to Kentucky in September and was mustered out of the service in January 1865. Although the eventual surrender at Appomattox would not occur until April 12, 1865, it was obvious to those soldiers who had endured four years of war that the war was won and the Union had been preserved. Just mustered out of the service, a bearded young Capt. Woodruff met a friend named Snyder on the street in Louisville. Snyder asked, “Now that the war is over, what would you like to do?” Woodruff replied, “I’d like to go back to Knoxville; I like that country and the people there.” He opened a small store in the Fouche Building at the corner of Gay and Clinch on
Jan. 20, 1865. The space was only 8 feet by 20 feet, but the business grew rapidly as farmers came from the surrounding counties to buy plows, harnesses and tools to help restore the damage caused by four years of war that had raged up and down the valley. More room was found in a new location at 624 S. Gay St. Woodruff soon needed still more room and a new store was erected in 1876 at the site familiar to Knoxvillians for many years, 424-426 S. Gay St. His always progressive business sense is illustrated by his action upon arrival of the People’s Telephone Co. in 1894. Woodruff installed the company’s first phone (#1) in the business and second at his home. “Call #1,” his ads said. On April 8, 1897, most of the businesses on the east side of the 300 and 400 blocks of Gay Street including Woodruff’s were destroyed in Knoxville’s “Million Dollar Fire.” An emergency call for assistance from the Chattanooga Fire Department had an amazing result. A special train delivered a ladder truck with chemicals and nine firefighters with 3,000 feet of hose, covering the 114 miles in 112 minutes.
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In spite of the supreme effort, three lives were lost and the Hotel Knox, where the fire started, and 24 other buildings were destroyed and 21 damaged. The rapid rebuilding was called miraculous but, by 1904, another fire had destroyed Woodruff’s and several adjacent businesses. They again rebuilt and continued to grow. After more than a half century of service to his church and his community, Capt. W.W. Woodruff died at 85 years of age at his home at 1401 Cumberland Ave. on Jan. 31, 1926. His minister at First Baptist Church, the Rev. F.F. Brown, memorialized him with these words, “Quietly
and steadily he has walked through the friendly years. His long life has been one of rich, fruitful service. We thank God for Capt.Woodruff – his presence (was) an inspiration and benediction to all.” He was buried in the family plat at Greenwood Cemetery. Having survived two disastrous fires and the panics of 1897 and 1907, Woodruff’s Hardware Store was now under the able leadership of the next generation, W.W. Woodruff Jr. It would survive the Great Depression and remain a stalwart Knoxville business until 1992 when its doors finally closed after the flight to the suburbs and the advent of the shopping mall.
Summitt gets a star By Betty Bean Bruce Pearl listened quietly as Pat Summitt was heaped with praise during the invocation at the Big Orange Tip Off Club luncheon last week. It was game day for his slumping Vols, who would face the Memphis Tigers that night and were hoping to break out of a December slump that hung four Ls on their record. He had just come in from the ceremony down on the Riverwalk where Summitt was awarded with the first star on the new Riverwalk of Fame. He wanted to get back to his team, but he also wanted to honor Summitt and make a little contact with the fans who had come to hear her speak at the Tip Off Club. Pearl, who is facing an eight-game suspension for lying to NCAA, was sandwiched between the invocation and the legend that is Pat Summitt, and did a masterful job of handling the orange-clad crowd of superfans: “That was a wonderful prayer,” he said. “Except. Have you not been paying attention to my record and her record this year? The girl don’t need your prayers. I do. We need Him. We need her. We need everybody.” Pearl was pitch-perfect, and so was Summitt, who let her guard down so the crowd could see how touched she was by the honor she had just received. “What a day! The star – I didn’t know what it was going to mean,” she said. Her voice cracked and she fought back tears as she said she wished that the stern man who raised her, her late father, Richard Head, could have been there to see the ceremony. “I know he’s smiling.” She talked about the hayloft basketball court her dad built, and how she had no choice but to be tough when she played hoops with “three older brothers who beat the crap out of me. I decided I was going to fight back.”
Pat Summitt launches into an a cappella rendition of “Rocky Top” upon being awarded the first star on the Riverwalk of Fame. The ceremony was Bill Haslam’s last official act as mayor. Photo by Betty Bean She told the crowd that she is pleased with her team’s progress and said she believes they have turned a significant corner. She singled out freshman guard Meighan Simmons, whom she called the toughest player on the team, for special praise – to a point. “Meighan has never seen a shot she didn’t love – I’ve seen some of her shots I didn’t love. But she has a chance to be one of the best guards that ever played here.” She talked about her relationship with the late John Wooden, who took Summitt and her players under his wing when they would visit Los Angeles. “I went to his apartment probably a dozen times. He got on the bus with us and took us to his favorite restaurant, and when he’d talk to us, you could hear a pin drop.” Summitt hinted that recruiting efforts are going to bear fruit. “Everybody in this room is going to be happy with our recruiting. I’m leaving here Friday to go visit one of the best post players in the future. There’s no doubt we’re going to be a much, much better team in the next two years.”
faith
WEST SIDE SHOPPER-NEWS • JANUARY 10, 2011 • A-7
What child is this? And Jesus increased in wisdom and in years, and in divine and human favor. (Luke 2: 52 NRSV) Jesus is our childhood’s pattern; day by day, like us he grew; he was little, weak, and helpless, tears and smiles like us he knew; and he feeleth for our sadness, and he shareth in our gladness. (“Once in Royal David’s City,” Cecil Frances Alexander, 1848) The Gospel writers drive me crazy sometimes. They take us straight from Jesus as a baby in a manger to Jesus ready to begin his ministry at the age of 30. With the exception of Luke, who lifts the curtain on Jesus’ childhood just for a moment to give us that tiny glimpse of the Child in the Temple at the age of 12, we hear nothing about Jesus the boy. I understand that writing in those days was difficult and expensive. They didn’t have computers and printers and flash drives. They didn’t
CONDOLENCES ■ Click Funeral Home (675-8765): ELeda Mae Gentry Brumback Willa Mae Williams Long James “Shakey” Nelson Sanders Alice Culpepper Whittmer Philip “Phil” F. Williams Jr. ■ Stevens Mortuary (524-0331): Alvin Edward Bell Marjorie Lyle Jack R. Milligan Juanita G. Bailey Smith
CHURCH NOTES Cancellation ■ The January support group meeting of Concord Adult Day Enrichment Services’ (CADES) has been cancelled
Cross Currents
Lynn Hutton even have paper! One can forgive them for getting right to the heart of the story. So we are left to our imaginations. Especially at this time of year, when the Babe in the manger is still fresh in our minds, I wonder about the years in Egypt, the days at his mother’s knee, the hours
in the carpenter’s shop, the teen years. I wonder if he remembered anything about Egypt? Did he carry memories of the pyramids, the Sphinx, the Nile? How had Joseph and Mary explained that sojourn to him? I wonder what he thought about when he climbed to the rim of the cup that is Nazareth and looked out over the valley below. What did he dream of when he lay on the roof of the carpenter shop on a summer night and watched the stars wheeling above him? Who were his playmates? His friends? What games did they play? Did they play jokes on each other? What secrets did they share? Did he ever see snow? (Jerusalem lies on the same latitude as Brunswick, Ga., but it does occasionally snow in Israel.) Did he make up stories for his younger brothers and sisters (prelude to his mastery of the parable form)?
6900 Kingston Pike, will host Was he serious? Funa training seminar with Dr. loving? Pensive? What was Steve Corbett, co-author of he afraid of? What was his “When Helping Hurts, How favorite food? Did he have a to Alleviate Poverty Without sweetheart? Hurting the Poor … and When did he begin to Yourself,” 9 a.m. until noon sense that he was special? Saturday, Jan. 15, followed by Had his mother told him lunch and open discussion stories of shepherds and noon to 1:30 p.m. RSVP: Gina, angels? A star and travelers 251-1591, ext. 2 or e-mail gina@compassioncoalition. from the East? org. When did he realize his destiny? How early did he ■ First Baptist Concord, 11704 Kingston Pike, will host “The feel the weight of his speFamily ID” workshop 9 a.m. to cialness? When did the first 3 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 5. The sense of foreboding arrive? course will include a blend of I wonder about these instruction, fun and fellowship things because the whole to help identify God’s purpose point of the Incarnation is and values for each family atthat Jesus came to be with tending. Cost is $40 per family. us, to be one of us, to be Info: www.fbconcord.org. for us, as well as to be an example for us. I think it Women’s groups behooves us to consider the baby, the child, the teenager, ■ Concord UMC, 11020 Roane Drive, will host a “Morning the man. Moms” group 9:15 to 11:30 And I know it is helpful a.m. each Friday in room to remember what poet Ce296. Bible or book studies cil Alexander taught us: that will be discussed relating to “he feeleth for our sadness, women’s lives in general. Child and he shareth in our gladcare is provided. Info: www. concordumc.com. ness.”
Men’s groups due to the holidays. Concord UMC, 11020 Roane Dr., will host the next meeting 10 a.m. Tuesday, Feb. 8, in room 226. Anyone who gives care to an elderly individual is invited. Info: 675-2835.
Special Services ■ Sequoyah Hills Presbyterian Church, 3700 Keowee Ave., will host GriefShare, a weekly grief support group for people grieving the death of a loved one beginning 6:45 p.m. Monday, Jan. 10. Info: www. griefshare.org. ■ Concord UMC, 11020 Roane Drive, will resume its Wednesday night gatherings Jan. 12, with the band Eclectic. Info: www.concordumc.com. ■ Fellowship Church, 8000 Middlebrook Pike, will host GriefShare Thursdays at 6:30 p.m. Get support from the group while recovering
from a loss and rebuilding your life. Registration: Laura, 470-9800. ■ Journey Builders, a new group for young professionals, couples and singles, will meet 9:50 a.m. Sundays in room 133 at Concord UMC, 11020 Roane Drive. Info: Jennifer DeTar, 719-1626 or 966-6728, ext. 242. ■ Bearden UMC, 4407 Sutherland Ave., invites everyone to “Jubilee Praise and Worship” 6 p.m. every second Sunday in the fellowship center. Park in the back of the church and enter through the gym. Fellowship and a snack-supper follow the service. Info: www. beardenumc.org. ■ Two Rivers Church, 275 Harrison Lane, Lenoir City, will host “the Launch” 5-7 p.m. Sundays in the Fireside room. Come experience community and connect with others in
a Growth group. Info: www. tworiverschurch.org.
Courses ■ Heska Amuna Synagogue, 3811 Kingston Pike, will host a six-session class on “Jewish History and the Arts: Ancient Jewish Coins and the History of the Second Commonwealth” with instructor Stephen Nagler 8:30 until 10 p.m. beginning Wednesday, Jan. 12. Info: www.heskaamuna.org. ■ First Baptist Concord, 11704 Kingston Pike, invites new believers, those considering FBC membership or anyone raised in an “unchurched” home to attend Starting Point, a four-week course led by Dr. Doug Sager. First session begins 6 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 12, in room F207.
■ Concord Woodcarvers will meet the first and third Friday mornings of each month at Concord UMC, 11020 Roane Drive. Info: www.concordumc. com. ■ Episcopal Church of the Ascension, 800 Northshore Drive, will host “The Brotherhood of St. Andrew” 7-8 a.m. each Thursday for prayer and study. Info: www. knoxvillascension.org.
Youth ■ First Baptist Concord, 11704 Kingston Pike, will host “DNOW” for students in grades 6-12 Friday through Sunday, Jan. 21-23, where they will be challenged to step into a deeper relationship with Christ. Info: www.fbconcord. org. ■ Rocky Hill Baptist Church,
7409 Northshore Drive, invites kids to the Word of Life Club on Sundays at 5:45 p.m. There will be games, Bible study and more. Info: www. rockyhillchurch.org.
Fundraisers ■ The Restoration House is in need of a van or car for a single mom with four children to travel to work and school. Also needed are $10 gas gift cards for moms to get to and from school. Info: Amanda Love, 332-0309 or e-mail Amanda@ therestorationhouse.net.
Rec programs ■ The Spirituality Book Club of Faith Lutheran Church, 239 Jamestowne Blvd., will meet 7 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 11, to discuss “The Wisdom of Donkeys: Finding Tranquility in a Chaotic World” by Any Merrifield. Info: 966-9626. ■ The book club of Trinity UMC, 5613 Western Ave., will meet 7 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 13, in the church library. The group will discuss “Always Time to Die” by Elizabeth Lowell. Everyone is invited. Info: Pat Land, 525-2700 or phland@comcast.net. ■ FX Book Club of Cornerstone Church of Knoxville, 1250 Heritage Lake Blvd., will meet 7-9 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 27, to discuss “God in the Dark” by Os Guinness. Info: www. cornerstonechurchofknoxville. com. ■ First Farragut UMC, 12733 Kingston Pike, invites everyone to “Wednesday Night Live,” 5:30 to 6:15 p.m. each Wednesday. Enjoy a home-cooked meal with your family and have some fun and fellowship. A family of four can have dinner for only $22. Info: www.ffumc.org. ■ Heska Amuna Synagogue, 3811 Kingston Pike, is collecting aluminum cans to recycle and purchase new energy-efficient lights for their upstairs hallway. Info: www. heskaamuna.org.
■ Messiah Lutheran Church,
Kubeja joins Sigma Alpha Lambda
Precious cargo It is odd feeling simultaneously excited and depressed. I was happy leaving the sub-zero temperatures of Brunswick, Maine, to move home to Tennessee in time for Christmas. On the other side of that coin, I faced a six-month separation from my fiancé, Chuck, who was in the Navy. His ship was built and would make her maiden voyage to her new homeport in San Diego. We were both lost in thought, packing quietly. That suddenly changed. “Honey, where are my Mamaw’s canned green beans?” I asked. I was talking about two quart jars of Blue Lake green beans that my grandmother had given me when I moved to Maine. They represented the end of an era to me. “Mamaw Elsie” grew Blue Lake green beans for as long as I could remember. My uncle Keith says no one could get them to produce like she did. She canned enough for herself, her kids’ families and the neighbors, besides. But,
Lorraine Furtner
40 years of gardening had taken their toll: her knees needed replacing. She surrendered the pressure cooker to my aunt and trimmed the garden back to a lone zucchini, one cucumber vine and a couple of tomato plants. Mamaw Elsie was one of a handful of people who supported my decision to move cross-country for love (perhaps because she’d done the same during World War II). When I was 27, I shocked everyone. I quit my job and moved from Tennessee to coastal Maine for Chuck, a divorced sailor, nine years my senior. We’d only dated for three months long distance – I’d seen his face a total of 28 days – yet I knew he was “the one.” When I told Mamaw Elsie he’d proposed and I was leaving, she shrieked and
hugged me. She ran to the back porch and retrieved two of the last quarts in her pantry for me to “start housekeeping.” Those jars might as well have been filled with gold. I took the beans back to Brunswick but hadn’t cooked them because I was saving them for something special. I assumed they’d accompany me to San Diego, but since they were both necessary and precious cargo (like my curling iron and jewelry) they’d stay with me in Tennessee until I joined Chuck in July. Chuck solved the case of the missing beans: “I gave those to the guy next door.” My hands reached the dangerous level of my hips. I said, “You go over there and tell him I want them back.” Chuck argued. They might get broken. Couldn’t we just buy green beans in California? There wasn’t room in the car. He could have suggested there wasn’t room for the hair on my head. Some things are not negotiable. When we moved to into our apartment in San Diego, you better believe
those green beans were on my shelf. It was comforting having them there. Christmas arrived, my first as Mrs. Furtner, and the first Christmas Eve in 28 years that I was not at Mamaw Elsie’s house. It was “sunny and 70” with holiday lights wrapped around palm trees. I needed to cook those green beans (complete with fatback) and serve them with sweet tea and cornbread. Fourteen years have passed and I’m back in Tennessee, and I never buy fatback. I’ve even given up sweet tea. But the one thing I’d really love to have is not available anymore, anywhere. No, matter where I go or how hard I look, I’ll never find another quart of my Mamaw Elsie’s Blue Lake green beans.
Sigma Alpha Lambda has announced Courtney E. Kubeja of Johnson City has been recognized as a member of Sigma Alpha Lambda, a national leadership and honors organization at East Tennessee State University. Kubeja is a graduate of Farragut High School. Her parents are Gail and Dave Kubeja of West Knoxville.
Wendy D Schopp Financial Advisor 12744 Kingston Pike Suite 103 Farragut, TN 37934 865-671-1318 www.edwardjones.com
Member SIPC
VALUES | SCHOLARSHIP | CHARACTER Open House for families interested in
Race Against Racism
visit www.ywcaknox.com.
The YWCA’s Race Against Racism will be held 1-3 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 15, at Phyllis Wheatley Center, 124 S. Cruze St. as part of Diversity Day. Pre-race entertainment begins at 11:30 a.m. The YWCA’s Diversity Day allows all community members to come together to celebrate each other. There will be entertainment, health screenings, a kids’ Home Depot workshop and free food. Info: 523-6126 or
Tennesseans will receive 10 free flowering trees when they join the Arbor Day Foundation during January. New members will receive two white flowering dogwoods, two flowering crabapples, two Washington hawthorns, two American redbuds and two goldenraintrees. The trees will be shipped postpaid at the right time for planting, Feb. 1 through May 31. The 6- to 12-inch
Free Trees
tall trees are guaranteed to grow or they will be replaced free of charge. Arbor Day Foundation members also receive a subscription to the foundation’s bimonthly publication, Arbor Day, and The Tree Book, which includes information about tree planting and care. To join, send a $10 contribution to Ten Free Flowering Trees, Arbor Day Foundation, 100 Arbor Ave., Nebraska City, NE 68410, by Jan. 31. Info: www.arborday. org/january.
MIDDLE SCHOOL
Tuesday, January 11 – 6:30 pm
HIGH SCHOOL
Tuesday, January 11 – 7:30 pm 529 Academy Way Knoxville, TN 37923 (865) 690-4721, Ext. 190 wmullins@cakmail.org www.cakwarriors.com
Campus Tours Daily! Call Wanda at Ext. 190
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sports
A-8 • JANUARY 10, 2011 • WEST SIDE SHOPPER-NEWS
Eric Kortebein of the Great Smoky Mountains Curling Club shows newcomer Kathleen Clark how to start sliding the curling stone. Photo by T. Cabage
Curling sweeps Knoxville away This past Wednesday evening, when most people in Knoxville were trying to get home and out of the snow, the Great Smoky Mountains Curling Club was hosting its first open house of the year.
Travis Cabage
The club meets at the Ice Chalet off Kingston Pike, and the open house drew a gathering of 25. Some participants had been with the club since its 2004 inception, while a few newcomers rounded out the rest of the crowd. “We had about 33 members in the fall session,� said member Eric Kortebein. “We also have 15 to 17 members from the University of Tennessee curling club.� The group is a mix of curlers from northern cities
and those from Knoxville who are interested in the ice sport. According to Kortebein, the club started as pick-up games between friends, and it gradually grew the first couple of years. Typically the club meets on Sundays, but they are adding Wednesday night in in hopes of attracting more people. “Some people don’t want to give up their Sundays,� Kortebein said, “but with Wednesdays, some people take up softball and other sports, so we’re hoping for a bigger turnout.� The Smoky Mountain Curling Club saw a tremendous spike in popularity last winter, thanks in large part to the Winter Olympics and the U.S. teams’ involvement in both men’s and women’s events. “We had roughly 120 to 150 people come out to our clubs during the Winter Olympics,� said Kortebein. Curling, according to Kortebein, is one of the easier
sports to learn. Unlike most ice sports, curling does not require any skating ability. In fact, tennis shoes are worn by participants while playing. Those that are unfamiliar with the sport can come out to learn from Kortebein and the other regulars. The club is open to all who would like to join. They will start their league play in the middle of January and work in any newcomers around the middle of the season. In June, the club and the Ice Chalet will host an open event called Bonspiel. During this event, about 24 teams of men and women will compete alongside the Knoxville club. The club will meet at the Ice Chalet, located next door to the Shops at Western Plaza, every Sunday and Wednesday from 8:30 to 10:30 p.m. More information can be found on the club’s website, curlknoxville.com, or on its Facebook and Myspace pages.
Customers with utility emergencies or other immediate needs will still be able to In observance of the Martin Luther King contact KUB by phone Jan. 17 by calling Jr. holiday, KUB’s payment centers at 524-2911. Online payments can be made 4428 Western Ave., 445 S. Gay St. and anytime at www.kub.org and secure 4218 Asheville Highway will be closed payment drop boxes are also available at each payment center location. Monday, Jan. 17.
KUB closed on MLK Day
Adult Education
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Bearden’s JaiJai McLaughlin presses down the court around Maryville’s Megan Jenkins during the Bulldogs’ 54-40 loss against the Rebels.
High school hoops return to regular season action By Greg Householder With holiday tournaments over and the new year beginning, many area high school basketball squads returned to regular season action last week. In girls action last Tuesday, Powell knocked off Anderson County 43-34; CAK beat the Knoxville Ambassadors 37-33; Halls topped Central 49-38; Hardin Valley Academy fell to Oak Ridge 49-47; Maryville beat Bearden 54-40; West downed William Blount 5852; Webb rolled over Kings Academy 65-14; Catholic fell to Lenoir City 48-44; Karns was mauled by Fulton 68-29; Grace Christian Academy lost to Tellico Plains 67-36; and Gibbs fell to Austin-East 44-41. In boys play last Tuesday, Central beat Halls 91-81; Karns lost to Fulton 71-47; Gibbs lost to AustinEast 70-45; Catholic topped Lenoir City 47-39; Bearden downed Maryville 64-46; West beat William Blount 72-50; Webb downed Kings Academy 45-31; Powell beat Anderson County 73-62; CAK topped the Knoxville Ambassadors 78-47; Hardin Valley Academy fell to Oak Ridge 70-51; and Grace Christian Academy topped Tellico Plains 100-80. Games scheduled for last Friday: Powell was to host Halls; Karns was to visit Central; Gibbs was to travel to Pigeon Forge; Hardin Valley Academy was to host Clinton; Farragut was to visit Bearden; Catholic was to host West; CAK was to visit Scott; Webb was to host Donelson Christian Academy; and Grace Christian Academy was to entertain Midway. Results of Friday’s scheduled games were unavailable at press time. Webb was scheduled to
Bearden’s Will Winton goes up for a dunk and two of his 16 points against Maryville High School in the Bulldogs 64-46 victory over the Rebels. Photos by Justin Acuff host the Webb School of Bell Buckle last Saturday. The result was unavailable at press time. On Tuesday, Jan. 11, Halls hosts Oak Ridge; Hardin Valley Academy visits Central; Gibbs travels to Cosby; Powell is at Fulton; Karns hosts Campbell County; Farragut travels to Maryville; Bearden entertains Lenoir City; West hosts Heritage; Catholic travels to William Blount; CAK hosts Alcoa; Webb travels to McMinn Central; and Grace Christian Academy travels
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to Berean Christian. On Thursday, Jan. 13, Gibbs travels to Anderson County, and CAK entertains Kingston. On Friday, Jan. 14, Halls travels to Campbell County; Gibbs hosts Grace Christian Academy; Karns visits Powell; Hardin Valley Academy travels to Anderson County; Farraugt hosts West; Bearden visits Catholic; and Webb entertains CAK. On Saturday, Jan. 15, Central visits Austin-East, and Webb visits Mount Juliet Christian Academy.
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WEST SIDE SHOPPER-NEWS • JANUARY 10, 2011 • A-9
Football overachievers
Bearden’s trio of captains, Sam Phillips, Yasmond Fenderson and Jordan Anderson, has led the Bruins to share first place in the KCMSBC and a perfect 12-0 record. Photo by N. Lester
Bearden’s big trio now a savvy force Bearden Middle School boys basketball coach Ben Zorio has watched Yasmond Fenderson, Jordan Anderson and Sam Phillips literally grow up before his eyes.
Ken Lay
Fenderson and Anderson first came onto the Knox County Middle School Basketball Conference scene three years ago as 6th graders. Phillips joined the Bruins a year later as a 7th grader. The two 6th graders toiled in a very competitive schedule in 2008 and 2009. Wins were few, but the Bruins stunned some teams and Zorio knew he had a pair of special players. The following season, Phillips joined the fray at center and had a breakout game in a tough loss at South-Doyle. He’s been a dominant inside force ever since. Now the trio is comprised of seasoned veterans, and the Bruins appear to be a favorite along with West Valley and Powell to cut down the nets at Karns Middle School next month. “This is great,” said Fenderson, Bearden’s power forward. “I’ve never been on a winning team like this before. “We play more as a team this year.” Teamwork truly has been
a key to the Bruins’ success this season. “These guys are concerned more about the team than they are about themselves,” Zorio said. “You can have a superstar player and it can be a disaster. “These kids are all great kids. There’s nothing Yasmond can’t do with a basketball at the middle school level. When he plays up to his potential, he’s one of the best in the county. Jordan is the most coachable kid that I’ve ever had and no one works harder than Sam. I’m really lucky to have these guys. They’re always willing to give (starting guards) Will Morrow and Alex Kerr and all the guys who come off the bench the credit.” The three big men are tricaptains this season, and the Bruins were 12-0 at press time and shared the league lead with West Valley. The Wolves, defending champions, and the Bruins had 6-0 league records. Bearden was set to play at Powell last Friday. No one at Bearden is taking anything for granted despite the team’s status as a preseason favorite to win the James A. Ivey Jr. Memorial Middle School Tournament Championship. “We’ve been working hard to prove that we’re a good team, and we’ve won some big games,” said Anderson, who poses a threat both inside and beyond the 3-point arc. “We have some big games coming up, and we need to stay humble to do what we need to do to win
Bruins win tourney, face tough road By Ken Lay Bearden Middle School’s boys basketball team recently kept its perfect record intact. The Bruins knocked off a pair of Knox County Middle School Middle School Basketball Conference rivals to win the Farragut Tournament over the winter break. Bearden defeated the host Admirals 51-33 Dec. 30 to claim the inaugural tournament title. In the championship contest, Bearden (12-0 overall, 6-0 in the KCMSBC) had perhaps its most balanced offensive game of the season. Yasmond Fenderson led the way with 18 points. Jordan Anderson added 10. Will Morrow had nine, Sam Phillips scored eight and Alex Kerr had five. Michael Travis had five for Farragut. The Bruins advanced to the championship tilt with a 64-48 victory over South-Doyle Dec. 29. Phillips scored 18 points. Fenderson added 17 and Anderson had 16. Fenderson, Phillips and Anderson were named to the all-tournament team. Anderson won the 3-point shooting contest, and Nathan Yeo won the skills competition. With the tournament behind them, the Bruins face a tough stretch of games. They were set to travel to Powell Friday to face a Panthers team that is off to a fast start. Bearden hosts conference co-leader and defending champion West Valley (7-0, 6-0) Thursday, Jan. 13. The Bruins entertain the Admirals in a rematch Thursday, Jan. 20, before traveling to South-Doyle to face the Cherokees on Tuesday, Jan. 25. Bruins coach Ben Zorio knows things won’t be easy. “West Valley is a good team, and we’ll have to play our best game to beat them,” he said. “South-Doyle has great guards and Farragut has size. They’re long and they have a good rebounding team.”
those games.” Phillips, a late arrival, wasted little time making an impact as one of the league’s top rebounders and scorers. He wasn’t always equipped to play his role. “When I first started playing, I was a little scared,” he said. “Then I played AAU with the Lakers over the summer and then I started lifting (weights). “I overcame my fear and now I use it as energy.” Dominant post players are nothing new to Knox County Middle School basketball. Bearden, however, is unique this season as Fenderson, Anderson and Phillips are all scoring in double figures. “It’s great because I may have an off-night and Yasmond and Jordan play well, or they may be having an offnight and I may play well,” Phillips said. “One player doesn’t always have to carry the load. “Our defense is also helping us win games.” The Bruins will have a tougher task over the second half of the season as West Valley, Farragut and South-Doyle remain on the schedule. “West Valley will probably be our toughest game of the season,” Anderson said. “It will be a great game even if we both aren’t still undefeated.”
It sure is fun trying to determine where Nick Reveiz fits among Tennessee’s alltime overachievers. I’ve been working on this for years. Nick and I go back a long ways. I voted for him when the Greater Knoxville Sports Hall of Fame selection committee was choosing a prep player of the year 2006. He won and looked sharp in a tux. At Farragut High, Nick was really strong in citizenship, wrestling and football. Good student. Exemplary character. Polite. Considerate. Refined. Tough guy, too. He wanted to be a college linebacker. Alas, he was too short. And maybe too slow. Coaches all over America agreed. Nobody – nobody – offered him a scholarship. You know what happened. He defied the odds and fooled a bunch of us. He walked on at Tennessee. He hit famous Vols so hard, Phillip Fulmer felt compelled to call him down. Cool it, kid, you’re going to hurt somebody. In private confusion, Reveiz wept. At 5-8 and a fraction, playing hard was all he had. You know what else happened. Nick made the team. In kick coverage, he knocked opponents for a loop. He moved up a notch and got to play some defense. He became a starting linebacker. He overcame the despair and pain of a terrible 2009 knee injury. He led the 2010 team in tackles. He led it in heart and soul and closing comments: “I know I gave Tennessee everything I had. I worked as hard as I could and there’s no way I can look back and say there’s anything else I could have done.” Reveiz said there was no other place in the world he would have rather been than at Tennessee, playing football. “It meant the world to me. I’m all Vol and just very blessed.” Trusting memory, Nick was the first former walkon to become a captain since J.J. McCleskey in ’92. So, where does Nick rank
Marvin West
among overachievers? Cody and Cory Sullins went from career scrimmage resistance to firstteam offensive linemen in 2009. Billy Ratliff does not fit the typical format but he didn’t have a lot of recruiting stars by his name back in Magnolia, Miss. His overachievement was in never giving up. Ratliff endured three reconstructive knee surgeries. He had a terrifying spinal cord injury and lost all feeling in his body for several hours. He made the winning play against Arkansas in the national championship season of 1998. The next year, as a senior, Billy suffered a fractured leg against Auburn. He was finally finished but he didn’t give up. He was a captain. He came to the sideline on crutches. He wore his helmet. Others got the message. Never say die. Chris White was an overachiever or a very late discovery. He came from Cleveland as a walk-on and, to tell the truth, I didn’t really notice him until he was a fifth-year senior. In 1985, White made his first career start, safety in the opener against UCLA, as an injury replacement. Three interceptions later, he had a regular job. He picked off six more that season to lead the NCAA. He had a whole bunch of tackles and three fumble recoveries. He was honored as an All-American. He didn’t think of himself as an overachiever. He thought he could have been doing it all along. Overachievers always exceed expectations. Daryl Dickey? Bill Bates? Jim Maxwell? Tim Townes was the ultimate. He came from Bearden as a 168-pound walk-on. Not very big. Not very
fast. Nobody offered him anything. “Other than that, I thought I had a pretty good chance.” He arrived in the Doug Dickey era. He was fifthteam strong safety – on the freshman team. Townes recalls praying that he might do his best and if that was good enough, fantastic. If it wasn’t, at least he would know he had tried. Tim made it. He was a hitter. He became a starter. I thought he was a co-star. One play remains symbolic of his career. A Georgia Tech tight end, 270 pounds, caught a pass behind a linebacker and in front of Tim Terrific. “I got a pretty good head of steam and make a good hit.” Indeed he did. The giant tight end fell backwards, took a long time getting up and wobbled off in the wrong direction, into the Tennessee defensive huddle. Years later, Steve Sloan, former offensive coordinator at Tech, and Gary Wyant, former Vol secondary coach, were discussing that spectacular 1972 knockout. Sloan asked Wyant: “Who was that cold-blooded killer?” The killer became a lifesaver. Townes received three degrees from UT, including a master’s in zoology and a doctorate in microbiology. As chair of the biochemistry and molecular genetics department at the University of AlabamaBirmingham, he is a worldrenowned tackler of cancer and, specifically, sickle cell anemia. There are other Tim Townes stories in Marvin West’s first book, “Tales of the Tennessee Vols.” Signed copies are available from WESTCOM, P.O. Box 28, Maynardville, TN 37807. The cost is $20.
SPORTS NOTES ■ CYF Warriors tackle youth football will hold a parent-only information meeting 7 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 18, at Christian Academy of Knoxville High School. Parents of potential players ages 7-11 are encouraged to attend. Info: Jeff Taylor, 765-2119.
A-10 • JANUARY 10, 2011 • WEST SIDE SHOPPER-NEWS
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• KNOXVILLE, TN - 4216 N. BROADWAY, 4805 N. BROADWAY, 7202 MAYNARDVILLE HWY., 11501 HARDIN VALLEY RD., 9565 MIDDLEBROOK PIKE, 5941 KINGSTON PIKE, 8905 KINGSTON PIKE, 284 MORRELL RD. • POWELL, TN - 3501 EMORY RD.
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Palliative care: Cloaking those affected by life-threatening illnesses More than 1 million people will die this year – most not having made known their wishes for care at the time of their death. At Parkwest, the Palliative Care Program focuses on education about the situation, symptom management, communication among all involved parties and examination of end-of-life choices. The Palliative Care team consists of a physician, nurse practitioner, chaplain, primary nurse, case manager, social worker, dietitian and pharmacy staff. “The word palliate, which originated in the 1500s, means to cloak. That’s what we do here – we wrap our arms around the patient and the family and we cover their needs,� said Mary Sowell, Nurse Practitioner and Coordinator of the Parkwest Palliative Care program. “Our support begins at diagnosis or anytime during disease progression.� The difference between palliative care and hospice is that with palliative care there is still hope for a cure – it is not a withdrawal of treatment. In hospice, the focus changes from cure to care, generally when a patient has six months or fewer to live. Sowell’s entire career is built around easing patients’ pain and fear. Prior to working in palliative care, she was an oncology nurse for 30 years. In those years, she became very familiar with death. “The dying process frightens most people because they do not have experience with death and perhaps because their ideas are shaped by what they’ve seen on
won’t apply. Of course, we’re going to revive you.� There are many misperceptions about who palliative care programs treat. People often think palliative care is only for those diagnosed with cancer. That is far from the case. Palliative care now “cloaks� people with dementia, heart failure, end stage COPD, kidney disease and a multitude of other complex medical problems. Since launching its Palliative Care Program in 2010, Parkwest has served 433 patients. Plans are underway to expand the service to assist more patients and their television or in the movies, which families. For more information on Palliaisn’t necessarily the way things happen,� Sowell said. “Patients tive Care or any other services ofalways know when they are dying. fered at Parkwest, call 374-PARK It is often much harder for fam- or visit TreatedWell.com. ily members to accept and sometimes, patients prolong their dying to spare loved ones. They may resist death and make it harder than it has to be.� Sowell is passionate about advance directives – documentation Peggy, a Parkwest patient, had of healthcare desires when persons are no longer able to speak battled various medical problems for several years. In fact, the for themselves. “We all need advance directives. 80-year-old relocated from Florida It doesn’t matter what the situation to Knoxville to be with her daughis,� Sowell said. “When things are ter following a fall which broke her catastrophic, having a living will in leg in seven places. Then, Peggy received news she place makes the situation so much easier. Did you know some pa- was entering a stage of kidney failtients are reluctant to sign advance ure in which dialysis would become directives because they believe necessary. Even with dialysis, her they will not be revived no matter life expectancy would likely be just what? For example, if you are hav- a few months. Peggy was referred to ing surgery for a broken bone, and Mary Sowell, Coordinator of the Palthe night before, you choke on din- liative Care Program at Parkwest. ner, the do not resuscitate orders During the consultation, Peggy
“The word palliate, which originated in the 1500s, means to cloak. That’s what we do here – we wrap our arms around the patient and the family and we cover their needs.�
One family’s story:
‘We should give them a choice’
What is palliative care?
Peggy’s daughter, Jacki. “When people are ready to go, we should give them the choice.� “I would like to share with all adult children with ailing parents to look at the quality of life – if you wouldn’t want it for yourself, don’t want it for them; don’t encourage them to hang on because you’re not ready to let them go,� Jacki said. “Mary Sowell and the staff at Parkwest are wonderful. They allowed Mom to be comfortable and to make the decision not to pursue any further medical treatment with no regrets or feelings of guilt.�
What are advance directives?
Parkwest Palliative Care takes a physician-driven, multi-disciplinary team approach to improving the quality of life for patients and families facing problems associated with a life-threatening illness through the prevention and relief of suffering.
The program offers: Last year, during its first year of operation, Parkwest Palliative Care served 433 patients and their families.
voiced a clear desire not to endure dialysis to hopefully gain only a few months of life. Given her other medical issues, she believed her quality of life wouldn’t be what she wanted. That Friday, supported by her family, Peggy made the decision that she was tired of ďŹ ghting and living in pain. She elected not to receive any further life-prolonging treatment and asked only to be kept comfortable. On Sunday, Peggy passed away peacefully with her family members present. “Mom made the decision to save herself months of misery,â€? said
N Improved communication between healthcare providers and patients. N Education for patients and families about the disease process, progression and outcomes. N Formulation of patient generated goals. N Completion of advance directives. N Management of pain and other distressing symptoms such as nausea, vomiting, constipation, anxiety, depression, difďŹ culty breathing, delirium, decreased appetite, fatigue and agitation. N Psychosocial support. N Bereavement care. N Education and support of staff.
Who qualifies? N Patients diagnosed with acute, serious, life-threatening illnesses such as trauma, leukemia and stroke. N Patients experiencing progression in a chronic condition such as renal failure, cancer, advanced congestive heart failure, neuro-degenerative diseases, emphysema or dementia. N Patients who are seriously or terminally ill. For more information, call 373-1460. For a palliative care consultation, ask your physician for a referral.
Advance directives are legal documents that describe your treatment preferences in endof-life situations. These legal documents give voice to persons who are unable to speak for themselves. Unexpected end-of-life situations can happen at any age, so all adults should have advance directives in place. Having written instructions can help reduce confusion or disagreement. Anyone age 18 or older may prepare advance directives.
Advance directives include: N Living will. This written, legal document spells out the types of medical treatments and life-sustaining measures you do and don’t want, such as mechanical breathing (respiration and ventilation), tube feeding or resuscitation. In some states, living wills may
be called healthcare declarations or directives. N Medical Power of Attorney (POA). The medical POA is a legal document that designates an individual – referred to as your healthcare agent or proxy – to make medical decisions for you in the event that you’re unable to do so. A medical POA is sometimes called a durable power of attorney for healthcare. However, it is different from a power of attorney authorizing someone to make ďŹ nancial transactions for you. N Do Not Resuscitate (DNR) Order. This is a request to not have cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) if your heart stops or if you stop breathing. Advance directives do not have to include a DNR order, and you don’t have to have an advance directive to have a DNR order. Your doctor can put a DNR order in your medical chart.
Resources for patients and families “Five Wishes� is an advance directives document available at a nominal cost from an organization called Aging with Dignity. It is the first living will that talks about personal, emotional and spiritual needs as well as medical wishes. The book has been featured on NBC’s “Today� show, CNN, and in Time and Money magazines. It is written in very easy-to-understand terms and allows the signer to specifically make wishes known in these areas: 1. The person I want to make decisions for me when I can’t. 2. The kind of medical treatment that I want or don’t want. 3. How comfortable I want to be.
4. How I want people to treat me. 5. What I want my loved ones to know. To get “Five Wishes,� call 888-5-WISHES (888-5947437) or visit www.agingwithdignity.org. “Gone From My Sight� by Barbara Karnes, R.N., a hospice nurse, details the universal commonality of the dying experience beginning with a patient’s withdrawing from everything outside oneself, which the author says comes up to three months prior to death. “The Eleventh Hour,� also by Barbara Karnes, RN, is a caring guideline that lets the reader know what physiological signals to expect in the hours to minutes before death.
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B-2 • JANUARY 10, 2011 • WEST SIDE SHOPPER-NEWS
Worry is my middle name
Quick bits ■Horse Haven of Tennessee (HHT) is asking the community to rally around a long-time HHT supporter whose entire barn burned to the ground Jan. 3. Luckily, all nine of her horses were in the pasture and were unharmed, but they have now lost all their winter hay and everything else that was in the barn. Monetary donations of even a few dollars could buy a bail of hay. Every penny counts in this situation. Checks can be mailed to HHT, P.O. Box 22841, Knoxville, TN 37933. Write “Carla� in the memo space. Info: www.horsehaven.net. ■Four Paws Food Pantry of Lenoir City needs volunteers and supplies. The nonprofit organization helps families feed their pets during tough economic times. Four Paws purchases dog and cat food which is then distrib-
ANIMAL EVENTS â– Command Performance Canine Training Center, 11904 Kingston Pike, will begin a seven-week beginner obedience class for puppies at 6:30 p.m. and older puppies and adult dogs at 7:45 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 13. Info: Melanie Harriman, 966-4148. â– East Tennessee Border Collie rescue group will hold an adoption event 10:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 15, at AgriFeed Pet Supply, 5716 Middlebrook Pike. Info: 5843959. â– Young-Williams Animal Center, 3201 Division St., will hold a volunteer orientation 5 p.m. Monday, Jan. 24, for PAC (Pals of the Animal Center). Volunteers are needed to help train dogs, socialize cats, assist in adoptions and more. Anyone 16 or older who is interested in helping out at the center is encouraged to attend. Spots fill up quickly. Info: Deonna Light, 215-6662.
Sara Barrett
Critter Tales
uted by the Good Samaritan Center of Loudon County. A $25 donation buys three bags of dog food or four bags of cat food. All donations are tax deductible. Info: www. fourpawsfoodpantry.com or call Walter at 408-0327. â– Feral Feline Friends will receive a monetary donation each time you conduct a search or make a purchase at www.igive.com. Select Feral Friends as your favorite charity during registration on the website and shop with a clear conscience. Info: www.igive.com.
Donate blood, save lives Medic Regional Blood Center will raffle off a free trip to Graceland for one lucky donor during January. This is made possible by donations of AAA of East Tennessee and Pilot Corporation. Donors can donate at a daily mobile site or one of two fixed sites: 1601 Ailor Avenue and 11000 Kingston Pike in Farragut. Blood drives in your area: â– 2-8 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 13, Marbledale Baptist Church, 5935 Thorngrove Pike, inside fellowship hall. â– 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 13, West Town Mall, inside amphitheater near J.C. Penney.
Meet Salt, a 1-year-old male Netherland Dwarf rabbit. Salt is a delightful fellow that is learning the joys of being a house bunny. He has his own litter box and gets tasty carrots and lettuce to eat. He enjoys people and is learning that being in the arms of a human friend is a nice play to be. He must live indoors with his adoptive family but should live well with bunny-friendly dogs and cats. He and many other bunnies are available for adoption at Young-Williams Animal Center at 3201 Division St. The main center is open to visitors 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Saturday and 1-6 p.m. Sunday. Young-Williams Animal Village at 6400 Kingston Pike is open to visitors noon to 6 p.m. daily. See all of Young-Williams Animal Center’s adoptable animals at www.knoxpets.org.
â– 6 a.m. to 2 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 13, Chickfil-A at Kingston Overlook, Bloodmobile. â– 6 a.m. to 2 p.m. Friday, Jan. 14, Chick-fil-A on Clinton Highway, Bloodmobile. â– Noon to 5 p.m. Sunday, Jan. 16, Ismaili Muslim Center, 10700 Virginia Pine Way, Bloodmobile. â– 6 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 18, Parkwest Medical Center, Boulevard Bistro, lower level. â– 2-8 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 19, Grace Lutheran Church, 9076 Middlebrook Pike, inside fellowship hall. â– 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 20, CVS Pharmacy on Middlebrook Pike, Bloodmobile.
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â&#x2013; 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 20, Kroger Marketplace, Bloodmobile. â&#x2013; 8-10 a.m. Thursday, Jan. 20, Modern Supply Company, 525 Lovell Road, Bloodmobile. â&#x2013; Noon to 5 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 20, Pattison Sign Group, 410 N. Cedar Bluff Road, Bloodmobile. â&#x2013; 8:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. Friday, Jan. 21, and 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 22, Healthy Living Expo, inside Knoxville Convention Center.
Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s true, you know. If you looked up â&#x20AC;&#x153;worryâ&#x20AC;? in the dictionary, youâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;d probably find my picture. I hear it runs in my family, but I know that worry is part of the mommy job description. Since the day Daniel was born, Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ve worried about everything from diaper rash to future ACT scores. And, while Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;m not a bathe-them-in-hand-sanitizer or clothe-them-inbubble-wrap mom, I have more than my fair share of concerns that make my husband raise his eyebrows and shake his head. I worry that Daniel is color blind because he sometimes mixes up red and green. The fact that heâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s just started learning colors in the last few months doesnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t stop me from fretting. I worry that his refusal to use a pillow in bed will result in neck problems. Because he canâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t tolerate milk, I worry about what weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ll do at other kidsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; birthday parties for the next decade. Will having to skip the ice cream take some kind of toll on his psyche? Will he feel left out? Whose genetics are to blame: mine or his dadâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s? I worry that heâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ll take the paci with him to college and that Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ll have to pack his ki-
Shannon Carey
moms101 ki blanket for his honeymoon. I worry that buying him a Star Wars lightsaber is fostering some kind of violent tendencies. Maybe it will lead to him holding up a liquor store while dressed as Darth Vader. But, my worst worry by far is about choking hazards. Even when I see other kids his age happily eating whole grapes, my fingers itch to cut Danielâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s into halves. Whatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s a worrier to do? Meditation and breathing exercises may help you, but I have to keep reminding myself that bad things will happen no matter how I try to prevent them. If it wasnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t a life devoid of ice cream, there would be another childhood trauma for Daniel to write soulful poetry about when heâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s 20. And I confess, I toted a ki-ki blanket to college, and I think I turned out OK. Contact Shannon Carey at shannon@ ShopperNewsNow.com.
Animals make a HABIT of volunteering By Wendy Smith Daisy, a tiny Shih Tzu and Chihuahua mix, practically drags her owner, Mali Glazer, into Shannondale Healthcare Center each Wednesday, says Shannondale receptionist Patsy Karalis. â&#x20AC;&#x153;She wants to go to work,â&#x20AC;? says Karalis. Daisy may be small in size, but sheâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s big in love, which makes her an excellent therapy dog. Glazer and her friendly pooch are volunteers with HABIT (Human Animal Bond in Tennessee), a University of Tennessee College of Veterinary Medicine program. HABIT volunteers work in a wide variety of facilities in a nine-county area in East Tennessee, says program administrator Karen Armsey. Therapy animals are used in schools, hospitals and assisted living facilities and nursing homes. When the program began 25 years ago, volunteers had to beg their way into nursing homes, says Armsey. Now thereâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s a waiting list. Well-behaved, gentle animals provide both an emotional and physical boost to all ages. Elementary school students benefit from reading to animals. Armsey even learned of one child who recruited a younger sibling to listen to him read so he could be a better reader for his therapy dog. Regular visits from dogs, cats and even rabbits can lower blood pressure and ease depression in hospitals and nursing homes. Daisy clearly benefits her friends at Shannondale. Opal Bradshaw is reminded of the Chihuahua she had for 14 years when Daisy is placed in her lap. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;d like to take her home with me,â&#x20AC;? she says fondly. The warm feelings go both ways. When Daisy sees Lucinda Bowman down the hall, Glazer drops the leash and lets the dog run. Daisy knows that Bowman, also known as â&#x20AC;&#x153;Granny,â&#x20AC;? has
Daisy, a HABIT therapy dog, sits with Mona Wilson during a recent visit to Shannondale Healthcare Center. Daisyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s proud owner is Mali Glazer. Photo by Wendy Smith treats tucked away in her drawer. Glazer, a first-time dog owner, is completely enamored of her dog. But sheâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s happy to share. Since sheâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s a former nursing home employee, she knows how meaningful Daisyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s visits are. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Everything my dog does is a miracle to me.â&#x20AC;? A friend of Glazerâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s recommended that she enlist the outgoing Daisy as a therapy dog. But just before Daisy was assessed, Glazer learned that therapy animals shouldnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t jump or lick. She was sure the dog would fail. But Daisy was so popular with her assessors that one of them wanted to take her home. Glazer admits that Daisy would not sit still long enough for children to read to her. But sheâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s happy with her present employment. â&#x20AC;&#x153;It would be unkind to not give her this job. This is
what she loves.â&#x20AC;? Armsey says that therapy animals generally know which day of the week they work. Her golden retriever, Maggie, wears a special scarf on therapy days, and when she missed work one day recently, the dog sat next to the scarf and sniffed it. HABIT is holding an informational meeting for human volunteers on Wednesday, Jan. 19, in room A118 at the UT College of Veterinary Medicine. Doors open at 6 p.m. Therapy animals must undergo both medical and behavioral evaluation. HABIT volunteers are assigned to a specific facility, and would ideally be available for weekly visits. â&#x20AC;&#x153;People start to depend on you,â&#x20AC;? Armsey says. For more information: www.vet.utk.edu/habit or 974-5633.
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WEST SIDE SHOPPER-NEWS • JANUARY 10, 2011 • B-3
Helping seniors cut prescription costs AMOS offers free info, individual advising By Jake Mabe Senior citizens looking for help with the high cost of prescription drugs can get some help through AMOS – Affordable Medicine Options for Seniors. AMOS is a free service at the Knoxville-Knox County CAC Office on Aging that helps the city and county’s seniors find lower cost options for medicines. AMOS provides an information telephone hotline, individual advising by appointment, presentations to groups, information mailed to the home and training for professionals and community volunteers. AMOS manager David Holden gave an hourlong presentation at the Halls Senior Center last week highlighting the two Medicare choices, changes to Medi-
HEALTH NOTES ■ “Concerns With Cholesterol,” sponsored by The Foundation for Wellness Professionals, will be held 6 to 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 11, at the West Knoxville Library located at 100 Golf Club Road. To register: 659-2733. ■ “Look Good, Feel Better,” 1:30 p.m. Monday, Jan. 17, at Clinton Physical Therapy Center, 1921 N. Charles Seviers Blvd. Free workshop for women undergoing cancer treatments. Licensed cosmetologist Robin Martin will give suggestions to help enhance their appearance and self-image as well as explain skin care and beauty techniques. To register: 5841668 or Kelly Lenz, 457-1649.
Special Notices
David Holden, manager of Affordable Medical Options for Seniors (AMOS), speaks at the Halls Senior Center last week about 2011 changes to Medicare coverage. Photo by Jake Mabe care in 2011 and information about the Medicare Part D prescription drug coverage. Among the highlights: ■ Choosing whether to enroll in the original Medicare (the public option) or
■ Mobile Mammography Unit from Thompson Cancer Survival Center, beginning 9 a.m. Thursday, Jan. 27, at Clinton Physical Therapy Center. Most insurance is accepted. Anyone uninsured or meeting financial criteria will be eligible for a free mammogram. To schedule appointments: 1-800-4428372 or 541-1312. ■ Cancer survivor support groups, Monday evenings and Tuesday mornings and Tuesday evenings, at the Cancer Support Community of East Tennessee (formerly the Wellness Community), 2230 Sutherland Ave. Support groups for cancer caregivers, Monday evenings. Cancer family bereavement group, Thursday evenings.
with a private-option Medicare Advantage Plan is a big deal. Patients who confuse the two sometimes give doctor’s offices the wrong information, causing the bill to be sent to the wrong
Info: 546-4661 or www. cnacersupportet.org. ■ Chronic Pain and Depression support group meets noon to 1:30 p.m. the first and third Thursday of every month at Faith Promise Church off Pellissippi Parkway. Info: Paula, 945-3810, or 748-1407. ■ Fibromyalgia screenings are held from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Wednesdays at the Fibromyaligia Clinic located at Total Rehab Physical Therapy. Also support group meetings and several classes are held on the third Wednesday of each month. No charge. Info: 548-1086. ■ Grief support groups at Fort Sanders Sevier Hospital at 6 p.m. the first Thursday of each month, 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. the
place, which in turn causes payment to be denied. ■ For Knox County residents in 2011, 16 or more various Medicare Advantage plans are offered by a handful of private insurance companies. Each is a different plan with different benefits. “If you don’t read the fine print, you may discover what you need is not in the plan,” Holden says. Summit Medical Group in Knox County, for example, accepts Medicare Advantage plans from one insurance company – Humana. ■ Holden says that patients who buy Medicare Advantage plans that offer zero monthly premiums “can’t expect to get the best benefits in the world.” ■ Which way is better? Holden says without hesitation that the best option is to pick the original public option Medicare and add the Part D prescription drug coverage and a Type F
third Wednesday of each month at the Covenant Home Care Knoxville office and 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. the fourth Wednesday of each month at the Covenant Home Care Oak Ridge office. Registration is required. Info or to register: 541-4500. ■ Lung cancer support group meets 6 p.m. the third Monday every month at Baptist West Cancer Center, 10820 Parkside Drive. No charge, light refreshments served. Info: Trish or Amanda, 218-7081. ■ Stop Smoking: 215-QUIT (7848) is a program of the Knox County Health Department. The hotline is answered 8 a.m. until 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday. ■ Support group meeting for family members or caregiv-
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I BUY HOUSES!! CASH FAST! ANY SITUATION!! 865-363-8010
Investment Prop-Sale 61
SEYMOUR on pvt. farm carport, decks, H/A, no pets, safe, 2 HOUSES ON 1 LOT, W/D, $27,500 OBO. Fixer quiet, clean. 865-256-6111 Upper, Knox City appraised @ $58,300. Houses - Unfurnished 74 865-250-4306
Condos- Townhouses 42 Condos- Townhouses 42 Condos- Townhouses 42
TRIPLE E DEVELOPMENT 709721MASTER Ad Size to 3 Knoxville’s x 5 Welcome Best! 4c W You won’t be disappointed after viewing Urban <ec> Park’s brand new floor plan that lives as comfortably
1800 SF, hdwd flrs, Chapman Hwy, 3 BR, 2 BA, $850/mo. 865-288-0946 ***Web ID# 708354*** BSMT RANCHER, Cedar Bluff area, 3 BR, 2 BA, LR, DR, kit., sunrm, deck on main level. BR, family rm w/frpl, 1/2 BA & laundry rm, 2 car gar. + storage. $1,025 mo., $900 dep. Credit & ref check. 865-675-9850 ***Web ID# 710955***
as it looks. Every convenience has been considered and built-in at an unbelievably affordable price. Hurry in to our designs center and take advantage of the opportunity to “custom design” your home. You make the selections – we’ll do all the work! Call Gary or Vicki today to schedule a private tour at our incredible model home.
HALLS. 3 BR, 2 1/2 BA, carpet, cent h/a, appls furn., lrg rec rm w/frpl, 2 car gar., deck. $975 mo. + $500 dep. 423-504-2679 ***Web ID# 708566***
You’ll agree – it’s the best!
LENOIR CITY, 3 BR luxury duplex, 2 BA, 1 car gar, fenced, great loc. $875. 865-388-0610
One level, open floor plans ■ Energy efficient ■ Fully furnished model ■ Professionally landscaped entrance ■ Underground utilities • On-site design center ■
MAYNARDVILLE, 2 mi. Union Co. High School, 2200 SF, 3 BR, 3 BA, bsmt., garage, no inside pets. $900/mo. 865765-0749, 865-992-2465 ***Web ID# 710434***
1-car garage (1,028 SF) $124,900 2-car garage (1,204 SF) $137,900
NEAR UT/N-SHORE, 3/4 br, 2 1/2 ba, 2232 sf, attchd gar. $1875/ mo. 865-406-1817 ***Web ID# 707203***
100% FINANCING AVAILABLE!
Gorgeous Details!
VICKI KOONTZ office: 588-3232 Crown molding ■ Extra storage over garage cell: 973-2644 ■ Covered entrance ■ Split Bedrooms vickikoontz@tds.net ■ Tray ceiling in master ■ Gas fireplace* ■ Vaulted ceiling in living area ■ Large master closet ■ Microwave & stove GARY KOONTZ ■ Hardwood floors* ■ Dishwasher ■ Disposal office: 588-3232 ■ Screened evening porches* cell: 548-1010 ■ 1 & 2 car garages with opener gary@garykoontz.com ■ Large laundry room ■
*Options
DIRECTIONS: West on Middlebrook Pk, right on Amhurst. At All Occasions Party Rentals, turn right on Jackson, then 300 ft, right into Urban Park on Metropolitan Way.
73
2 BR, 1 BA, quiet comm., 2915 & 2911 Beaverwood Dr Halls, $600 mo. 865-414-1848. ***Web ID# 692624***
Each Realty Executives Office is Independently Owned and Operated
NORRIS LAKE Waterfront with dock, 3100 SF, 3 BR, 3 BA, w/effic. dept. Lease w/dep. $2000/mo. Email dsmoak236@aol.com 865-216-3290 Daniel ***Web ID# 708121*** NORTH Whittle Sprgs area, 2 BR, new appls. + W/D, $725 mo. + dep. 335-5938 ***Web ID# 708408*** Rocky Hill. 3BR/2BA house for rent. $1,000 month + $1,000 dep. Pets O.K. with $250 . n o nr e fu n d ab l e p et deposit. Fenced yard, 2 bonus rooms, 2 car garage, W/D hookups. 1BA up, 1BA down. Call Jo Marie Dean-Smith REALTOR @ C.865-368-6456 O.865-588-5000
Medigap Supplement Insurance if you can afford it. ■ Holden encourages Medicare users with Part D coverage to plan ahead if you think you might reach the so-called Doughnut Hole. “Start using a strategy to use your insurance in the best, smartest way you can,” perhaps buying cheaper, generic medicines some other way and saving the insurance for more expensive medicines. Holden says price calculations are based on the total cost of coverage. ■ New this year: Brand name drugs bought during the Doughnut Hole receive a 50 percent rebate, as opposed to generic drugs, which receive only a 7 percent rebate. Holden says the federal government has promised that the Doughnut Hole will gradually diminish by 2020. But, he says, “How are they going to do that? I don’t know.” Call AMOS at 524-2786. For other Medicare info, visit www.medicare.gov.
ers of an adult with a mental illness is 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. the third Tuesday of each month at Cherokee Health Systems, 2018 Western Avenue. Info: Rebecca Gill, 602-7807 or www.namiknox.org. ■ UT Hospice conducts ongoing orientation sessions for adults (18 and older) interested in becoming volunteers with its program. No medical experience is required. Training is provided. Info: 544-6277 or 544-6279. ■ UT Hospice Adult Grief Support, for any adult who is suffering loss, meets 6 to 7:30 p.m. the third Tuesday of every month in the UT Hospice office, 2270 Sutherland Ave. A light supper is served. Info or to reserve a spot: 544-6277.
141 Dogs
141 Auctions
Kids’ fun run The Covenant Health Knoxville Marathon Kids Run will host a kick-off fun run at the Knoxville Zoo at noon Saturday, Jan. 22. Children ages 12 and under can skip, hop, walk or run a mile at the zoo and log their first mile in a challenge to complete a full 26.2 mile marathon over the weeks leading up to the Convenant Kids Run Saturday, April 2. Each child will receive a log book to track their progress. On race day, the children run their last mile together finishing on the 50-yard line at Neyland Stadium. Registration begins at 10:30 a.m. the day of the event or online at www. knoxvillemarathon.com. Cost is $15 and covers registration for the official Covenant Health Kids Run Saturday, April 2. Admission to the zoo is free for children registering and one accompanying guest. Additional guests get half-price admission to the zoo. Info: www. knoxvillemarathon.com or www.covenanthealth. com/kidsrun or call 541-4500.
Need
something? Try the Action Ads! 10512 Lexington Dr., Ste. 500 • 218-WEST
217 Imports
UNDER SECTION 8, LIQUOR STORE GERMAN SHEP- YORKIE POO Males NEXT AUCTION: 3 or 4 BR, 2 BA, w/d HERD PUPS, AKC, 8 wks., $200 cash. 6 FOR SALE Tues Feb 1, 6pm conn., cent. H&A, Registered. $350. mos $100 cash. S&W High volume, fast Cherokee Auction Co. stove & frig. furn., Phone 865-882-9269 992-5482, 385-2746 growing store on 10015 Rutledge Pike no pets. $700/mo. + Millertown Pike. Serious ***Web ID# 708362*** ***Web ID# 709572*** dep. 865-579-1061 inquiries only. NDA & Corryton, TN 37721 proof of financial ability GOLDEN Retriever Just 10 min from Pups, AKC, 8 wks. required for further zoo exit off I-40. 1st shots, $300. 423details. Call John @ 865-465-3164 or visit 869-2156; 606-499-0667 865-603-7235 a u c t i o nz i p. c o m WEST, 1011 Buena Rd TA L 2 38 6 FL 5 62 6 GOLDEN Retrievers, 3 br, 2 ba, garage, CKC, 14 wks. old, $950 + dep. Call 1st & 2nd shots & 615-243-3521 Sporting Goods 223 wormed, F $250, M $200, 931-704-6220. ***Web ID# 709535*** Condo Rentals 76 GOLF: Driver, 4 FWS, set of irons, PW 2, GREAT DANE PUPS, SW 2, PTRS, Ball 1300 SF condo, 2 BR, CKC, champ lines, par- YORKIES AKC males Retr., Umbrella, Bag, 1 1/2 BA, lg. dressents on site, vet ckd, & females, health 200+ used balls, ing rm, W/D conn., 865-242-1570; 242-1481. guar., S/W, Visa/MC $400. 865-577-7288. range, frig., DW, & ***Web ID# 708442*** welcome. 865-386-4111 heat pump. $595/mo. www.tnyorkie.com $500 dep. 423-244PUPS, ***Web ID# 708769*** Cats 140 HAVANESE Boats Motors 232 6600 or 423-618-8579 AKC, home raised, 262-993-0460; noahs Yorkie Terrier, 6 wks 1 BR, convenient to HIMALAYAN Kittens, BASS BOAT 18', 1985 littleark.com old, AKC reg, champ UT, Sequoyah area, baby doll face, Bumblebee w/trlr, ***Web ID# 709044*** bldlns, POP, 2 Males, avail now. $575/mo. 1988 Evinrude V6. CFA reg, $300. 1 Fem. $800 ea. 931Call 865-237-1089 runs good. $3,500 865-428-8501 LAB PUPPIES 879-8109; 931-260-2829 obo. 865-705-4291 ***Web ID# 710929*** AKC reg., Yellow, ***Web ID# 710566*** 2 BR, 1 1/2 BA TwnBlack & Choc. $250. hse, West Knox off PERSIAN & Selkirk Call 423-636-1307. Gleason Rd., quiet Rex kittens, pretty, nbrhd, 1200 SF, cent 142 Autos Wanted 253 long hair kitties & LAB PUPS, AKC, 7 Misc. Pets H&A, W/D, patio, adorable curly wks. Choc, 2 M, 1 F, A BETTER CASH pets ask, $575/mo. coated cats. Also ch. bldline, $400. PEACOCKS, Beautiful OFFER for junk cars, + dep. 865-531-3839 adult calico Persian Black shouldered, 1 trucks, vans, running 423-295-4473 Spay. $200 to $400. ***Web ID# 708232*** yr. old males. $50. or not. 865-456-3500 865-556-2904 865-523-1974; 414-7191 OLDE ENGLISH 2/2 w/park balcony, ***Web ID# 709551*** BULLDOGGE 10 mo 257 granite kit., W/D, Free Pets 145 Trucks female, triple reg. wood floors. $1375/mo. Dogs 141 $600 firm. 865-992-4335 305-793-6399. CHEV. Silverado 2006 ***Web ID# 708694*** ***Web ID# 705215*** 4x4 PU, 2500 HD LT Australian Shepherd pkg., 59K mi., & ** ADOPT! * * puppies, 10 weeks. PAPILLONS NEW CONDO chrome grill guard SHELTIES, AKC Looking for a lost pet or a new old. $200. 423-337WEST KNOXVILLE + stepsides, ext. $350 ea. w/papers. 7902 or 423-404-3547 one? Visit Young-Williams 5825 Metropolitan Way cab, LineX liner, 865-376-1000 ***Web ID# 707689*** 2 BR , 2 B A , 2 car Animal Center, the official $23,500. 423-593-1813 ***Web ID# 710653*** garage, $850/mo. 1 yr shelter for the City of AUSTRALIAN SHEPlease. NO PETS. MAZDA B2300, 2007, Knoxville & Knox County: POMERANIAN PUP, HERD PUPS 7 wks Call Gary 865-548-1010 wht, 5 spd, am/fm/ ASCA registered. adorable, tiny, male, 3201 Division St. Knoxville. cd, cruise, bedliner, POL, sable, shots, 865-250-0403 www.knoxpets.org Palisades 2 BR Units less than 28k mi, 25 $450. 865-548-9205. ***Web ID# 707891*** near Bearden Hi, pool, mpg hwy, like new, * * * * * * * * tennis. No Pets. $700-$750 Boxer Puppies, M&F, ***Web ID# 707680*** one owner, $11,900. + dep. 617-4171; 588-3493 865-771-7274 9 wks old, tails & dew POODLE NURSERY, ***Web ID# 708501*** claws, shots & worming We Have All Sizes, Farmer’s Market 150 WEST TOWN/CEDAR UTD, $225. 865-230-4665 all colors. Pups are reg., BLUFF AREA, 1 NISSAN FRONTIER have shots, health WANT TO BUY 1/2 story, 3BR, 3BA, LE 2005, king cab, guarantee & wormed. standing white oak & 2 car gar., just reV6, AT, cap, 62K mi, Our nursery is full. walnut timber. You decorated in well $200/ea. 931-879-7123 $13,500. 865-919-2333 $175 & up. 423-566-0467 may have trees worth ***Web ID# 709142*** kept subd. $1300 or 931-261-7067 $1000. 865-456-6489 mo. Lease, DD & $150/ea. CHIHUAHUA PUPS, PUGGLES, refs. 865-405-5908. M & F, black and 10 wks old, CKC reg ***Web ID# 705987*** fawns, 423-235-2106 Building Materials 188 4 Wheel Drive 258 very small, S&W, (Bulls Gap) Call 865-932-2333. Chev. Silverado crew ***Web ID# 707959*** Rooms-Roommates 77 cab 4 dr, 2006, 4x4, PUPPY NURSERY. USED BLDG materials: 2x10's, 2x12's, AT, cruise, exc. cond. Many different breeds CHIHUAHUAS $24.99 DAILY, 2x8's, plywood, 60 60k mi. Pewter. Maltese, Yorkies, 6 weeks, $250. Reg., blocks, & more. All $129 Wkly. $499, 4 wks. $18,500/bo. 423-312-8256. Malti-Poos, Yorkidewormed. 865for $125. 865-689-9742 Budget Inn 865-251-2525 Poos, Shih-Poos, shots 385-4936; 247-4964 or 865-300-2855. Alcoa Hwy. & wormed. Health ***Web ID# 630734*** Comm Trucks Buses 259 COCKAPOO Puppies, guar. 423-566-0467 Jewelry 202 6 wks. old, no shedding, less than 10 PUPPY SALE! Puppy CHEVY C65 2004, dieManf’d Homes - Sale 85 lbs $250. 423-312-1404 Zone at 8235 King- 18K YELLOW GOLD sel w/18' refrig bed, ***Web ID# 708041*** ston Pike next to Diamond Ring, 1.10 ct full opening bk drs, Chuck E Cheese. Call oval diamond with 8 16X80 MOBILE home, DACHSHUNDS, Mini, MD11SR Thermo 865-690-5252 or come princess & 8 baguette 2 BR, 2 BA, 1994, King unit. $12,000/ adorable tiny by for more info. $7,000 OBO. You diamonds, totaling an obo. 865-254-8006 babies, M & F, move. 865-256-0788 ***Web ID# 708869*** additional .8 ct. Two 865-805-7312 SHARPEI, AKC diamond bands also. cream puppies, $500 Entire set: $6,000 (1/2 BANK SALE DOBERMAN Puppies cash. 865-376-9803 Imports 262 of appraised value). AKC reg, champiKingston. Oval diamond only: onship pedigrees, ***Web ID# 710525*** All Sizes. 865-719-1338 $1500. Call 865-803-3738 some red/rust & blk/ ***Web ID# 708141*** BMW 323i Wagon 2000 tan. 865-789-5320 SHIH TZU Puppies, ***Web ID# 710521*** Needs some repair. ***Web ID# 709098*** beautiful, 12 wks, $3,900. 865-250-4306 CKC Reg. Wormed, Household Furn. 204 large beautiful mobile DOBERMANS 2F, 1M, 865-429-4953 home. 865-719-1338 AKC, black ***Web ID# 708281*** ***Web ID# 708202*** 83k mi, $2,000. Runs ROUND TABLE, 4 865-278-4491 well. 865-482-1212 ladderback chairs ***Web ID# 709242*** SHIH TZU puppies, solid cherry, $500. full blooded, 6 wks, LEXUS 430 ES 1997. Trucking Opportunities 106 ENGLISH BULLDOG blk/wht, 2 F, 2 M, 865-288-7021 Arizona car, gar'd, AKC, female, needs shots. $215/ea babied. Exc cond. USED OFFICE furn for Call 865-306-3974 $1000 - $1250 - $1500 champion bloodlines, 96k. Easily get ansale. Copier, fax, $1000. 865-475-3145. ***Web ID# 709353*** Sign on Bonuses! other 100k. $7,200. desks, chairs, filing ***Web ID# 707696*** Hiring Over the Road 423-667-2900 cabinets, 2 desktop SIBERIAN HUSKY English Bulldog pups, ***Web ID# 711049*** computers, printer. Puppies, AKC reg, Drivers: Van, Flatbed, AKC UGA ch. lns., Call 202-3239 for appt. LEXUS LS 400 1998, $500. Ready Now! UTD health, M&F, Refrigerated openings. 423-506-6415. loaded w/nav., gold $1000 & up. 423-881-3855 ***Web ID# 710998*** Call Roehl dk. blue/tan. ***Web ID# 711115*** Household Appliances 204a pkg., Exc. cond. $6200. 1-888-867-6345 ENGLISH MASTIFF Weimaraner Puppies, Call 865-966-4140. AKC reg. Health puppies, AKC reg, ***Web ID# 707995*** guar. Ready now. CDL TRAINING fawn & brindle. $550 $300. 865-684-3246 LEXUS RX300, 2002, for US Xpress, Werner & Call 423-479-2786 ***Web ID# 709538*** excellent condition, ***Web ID# 710456*** Others. $975 weekly + white with silver. benefits. Local training. GERMAN Shepherd YORKIE BABIES 865-483-8383 AKC, Champ bld., Home weekends. No Puppies, AKC, $250 health guar. 7wks. Layoffs. Start a great each. Clinton $450/$550. 865-304-1968 career with a future. 865-236-2335. ***Web ID# 711006*** 1-877-720-7321 1716 E. Magnolia Ave. ***Web ID# 710326***
Candy Factory Condo
262
NISSAN Z350 CONV., 2006, 12K mi., fully loaded, leather int. $19,500. 865-232-2162 ***Web ID# 709604***
Domestic
265
Cadillac Deville 2002 gold, 3.2 Northstar, 96k mi, $6950. Call 865-556-7225, Tom PONTIAC TRANS AM, WS6, 1997, V8, auto., good shape, many new parts, blk w/gray lthr. int., all opts incl. T-tops. $6,500. 423-286-9847
Cleaning
318
CLEAN FOR YOU, ETC. Housework, errands, cooking. 30 years exp, great references. Cheaper prices! 524-0475 or 237-4934
Guttering
333
HAROLD'S GUTTER SVC. Will clean front & back $20 & up. Quality work, guaranteed. 945-2565
Lawn Care
339
BOXER PUPS (2)
New Mobile Homes
^
Painting / Wallpaper 344 AA PAINTING Int/Ext painting, staining, log homes, pressure washing. 9 9 2 -4 0 0 2 or 6 1 7 -2 2 2 8
Tree Service
357
TAKE OVER PMTS
JAGUAR XJ6 1995
GOOD AS NEW APPLIANCES
90 Day Warranty Call 637-1060
^ COOPER'S TREE SVC Bucket truck, lot cleaning, brush pick-up, chipper. Ins'd, lg & sm jobs. 523-4206, 789-8761
B-4 • JANUARY 10, 2011 • WEST SIDE SHOPPER-NEWS
CONTINUING EDUCATION January 11-March 13
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Win FREE ADVERTISING for ONE YEAR! with Merle 96.7 Email your business name to win@merlefm.com. When submitted your business will be mentioned on
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• JANUARY 10, 2011
ROTARY
INFO CLUTTER
Meet the members
Control the flood
SEE PAGE 3
SEE PAGE 4
THE SPOT WHERE OUR STRATEGIC PARTNERS CAN SHINE
Five Jones associates are partners Wendy Schopp, John Gardner, Jim Dickerson, Barbara Slaven and Bettye Jo Purda of Edward Jones in Farragut have accepted invitations to become limited partners or increase their limited partner holdings in The Jones Financial Cos., the holding company for the St. Louisbased financial services firm. Edward Jones currently employs more than 30,000 associates in 50 states and through its affiliate in Canada. Under the current partnership offering, 16,000 associates received initial limited partnership offerings or were invited to increase their existing ownership in the firm.
Transfers show December surge Following a brief decline in sales during November, property transfers in Knox County experienced a moderate upswing in December. The month ended on Thursday, Dec. 30, saw 620 parcels of land sold in the county, representing a total land value of $144.2 million. This was a notable increase from the $107 million in sales recorded in November.
Sherry Witt Register of Deeds
realestatereport Interest rates continued to have an effect on the lending market as well. There was approximately $315 million loaned against property in Knox County during December. This figure topped the amount loaned in December of 2009 by some $50 million. Transfer numbers lagged slightly behind those noted from last December. December does typically see a few more property transfers than the other winter months, as individuals and companies seek to position their holdings for the upcoming tax year. The largest transfer of the month was a sale of an apartment complex in the Gallaher View area for $8 million. Another parcel in the Forks of the River Industrial Park sold for $3.85 million. The largest lending transaction recorded was one for $12 million by Court South Centres. An overall analysis of the fourth quarter recording data shows that the period of October through December lagged behind the same period of 2009 in terms of the overall value of property transferred. However, in terms of mortgage lending and refinancing, the fourth quarter of 2010 saw nearly $170 million more in loans than the last three months of 2009. Here’s wishing a healthy, happy and prosperous 2011 to all of you!
Nutrition to the rescue
Food City partners with Healthy Living Kitchen to increase healthy choices
Steve Smith, CEO of Food City, and Joseph Landsman, CEO of UT Medical Center, announce their new partnership.
By Natalie Lester Jim and Betty Fox are the first of hopefully many success stories to come out of the Healthy Living Kitchen program at UT Medical Center. The couple lost almost 100 pounds in five years after their involvement in the Healthy Living Kitchen cooking classes. “We brought back information from the class and started trying to add food items to our diets.” Now, the Healthy Living Kitchen will expand its programs through a new partnership with Food City. Chief executives of the two companies announced their joint efforts at a lunch conference. “Food City teaches you how to buy healthy food and the Healthy Living Kitchen shows you how to prepare it,” explained Dr. Jerry Punch. Food City president and CEO Steve Smith explained how his company and the Healthy Living Kitchen share the same priorities. “These people have a true passion for what they do and we think we have a true responsibility to our community. This program can work hand-inhand with our NuVal system to
Photos by Ruth White
Bill Gorman is sampling the turkey and low fat stuffing roulade. Gorman’s daughter Jane Kelly is a cardiac nurse specialist who works the Healthy Living Kitchen .
help our customers make the right decisions about what to eat. With combined resources, we hope to increase the reach of both the NuVal and Healthy Living Kitchen.” UT Medical Center president Joe Landsman acknowledged how easy the decision was because of the shared goals. “We knew we needed to serve our community and expand this educational program. We believe Food City is uniquely equipped to help us enhance it.” The next cooking class will be offered in March. Smith said the partners would begin with the immediate area, but hope to expand their efforts in the future. “This is important to Knoxville, but it’s also important for a lot of the outlying areas.”
Children’s book honors old friend
If Mitch Townley wore any more hats, he’d probably have to build a wing onto his house just to have a place to store them all.
Anne Hart We first talked with Mitch back in September when we wrote about a coyote he and his neighbors had spotted near their homes in Crestwood Hills – one of the most heavily populated parts of town. We even ran pictures Mitch had taken of the critter. The coyote didn’t stay around long. No one knows what happened to it, but we’re hoping it found its way back home. But back to Mitch. What we have learned since then is that he is the children’s pastor at West Hills Presbyterian Church, is a published songwriter of both country music and Christian contemporary
music, and has recently published a children’s book. The book is a delight. The name of it is “Franny the Fireplug,” it is for primary age children, and like its author, it is cheerful and full of fun. It also has important lessons for little children, and a “back story” like none other. The book was written as a tribute to Mitch’s close friend and fellow West Hills Presbyterian Church member Mitch Townley Fran Smith, a Knox County school teacher for 30 years. The book’s name resulted from the fact that the first time Mitch visited the Smith home, Fran’s direction included “turn right at the fireplug.” As Mitch recalls, “I had never heard the word ‘fireplug’ used to mean ‘fire hydrant’ before, so we both had a good laugh about it.” Mitch started calling Fran “Fireplug,” and the two even talked
about the name making a good character in a children’s book – not surprising when you consider that both had careers working with children. Two years ago, Fran Smith was diagnosed with cancer. In an effort to boost her morale, Mitch presented her a “Franny the Fireplug” award he made up commending her “for courage and bravery and to keep her looking ahead, because that is what fireplugs do. That’s all they can do – look ahead.” Sadly, Fran was not to win her battle with cancer. A year after her diagnosis, Mitch decided it was time to write the book they had discussed. He found an illustrator and a publisher, and wrote the story. The layout and illustrations were completed just three weeks before Fran passed away last April. Mitch said he read it to her
while sitting on the edge of her bed. “It was a tearful occasion I will always treasure. She responded by asking me to sign her copy.” Mitch recounts that scene on the inside back cover of the now-published book, telling his readers, “This book was for Fran, but now it is for all of you.” Don’t get the idea that the book is sad. It isn’t. It tells the story of a little fireplug that looks straight ahead and right into the life of the little girl who lives in the house across the street. It’s a great story. While the holiday gift season is over, this little book would make a cherished gift for a child on a birthday or at any other time. It isn’t available in book stores yet, but a call to Mitch at the church will produce as many copies as you want. Contact: annehartsn@aol.com.
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C-2 â&#x20AC;˘ JANUARY 10, 2011 â&#x20AC;˘ WEST SIDE SHOPPER-NEWS
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Meet us at Longâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Wednesday, Jan. 12, 10 a.m.
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Knoxville Police Chief Sterling Owen IV and Barbara Pelot both en Haslamâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s farewell addre d up at Longâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s after att ss to city employees. Th ending Bill eir discussion meander is less expensive but mo ed from golf (which Ow re addictive than drugs) en says to Eu rop ean river cruises. As the headquarters, Pelot ask chief dashed back to ed if he planned to hang around Knoxville. He pleaded the Fifth.
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advice from his ngâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s to solicit political Lo by ps dro en Ow l Bil Lobbyist terms in the state . Sure, heâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s served three lot Pe ra rba Ba nd frie old but now heâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s considerms in the state senate, legislature and two ter in a good direction in cil. â&#x20AC;&#x153;The city has moved ing a run for City Coun â&#x20AC;? he says. He also tin like to see that con ue, Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;d d an rs, yea few st the pa al center, and has becoming an education le has a vision of Knoxville for underserved midd a of a boarding school s. pu cam e been promoting the ide lleg Co ille ts based on the Knoxv and high school studen ge of a renaissance.â&#x20AC;? ver â&#x20AC;&#x153;Knoxville is on the Photos by Wendy Smith
West Knoxville Rotary presents
Rotary
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A concert to beneďŹ t the Rotary Foundationâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s â&#x20AC;&#x153;Polio Plusâ&#x20AC;? project to prevent and eradicate polio worldwide, plus local charities.
3 great bands
live!
Photo courtesy World Health Organization
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Since 1988, Rotary International and its partners in the Global Polio Eradication Initiative (GPEI) â&#x20AC;&#x201C; the World Health Organization, UNICEF, and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention â&#x20AC;&#x201C; have worked to wipe polio from the face of the earth. When Rotary began its eradication work, polio infected more than 350,000 children annually. In 2009, fewer than 1,700 cases were reported worldwide. But the polio cases represented by that ďŹ nal 1 percent are the most difďŹ cult and expensive to prevent. Thatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s why itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s so important to generate the funding needed to End Polio Now. To fail is to invite a polio resurgence that would condemn millions of children to lifelong paralysis in the years ahead.
The bottom line is this: As long as polio threatens even one child anywhere in the world, all children â&#x20AC;&#x201C; wherever they live â&#x20AC;&#x201C; remain at risk.
New2U
WEST SIDE SHOPPER-NEWS • JANUARY 10, 2011 • C-3
Chic
H
eather Woods describes her new Bearden store, Chic, as offering clothing and accessories that are “stylish, unique and affordable. “We carry brands that no one else in Knoxville has, and many of our items are so versatile that you can wear them to work and then out on the town in the evening.” Chic’s apparel is fun and flirty and fashionable all at once, and there are pants and tops and dresses suitable for all ages. Prices
Heather Woods in her new Kingston Pike women’s shop, Chic.
range from $20 to $80. There are also lots of specialty items, ranging from sparkly jewelry to decorative hair ornaments to such important must-haves as double sided tape for ripped hems or for blouses that may show too much decolletage for your personal taste.
eWomen The Knoxville Chapter of eWomenNetwork, a professional group of women helping women achieve their goals, will feature internationally known speaker Loral Langemeier from 11:30 a.m. until 3 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 20, at Rothchild Catering & Conference r ppe Center, 8807 Kingston Pike. Sho Pot S Langemeier is the CEO/founder of Live Out Loud and the author of “The Millionaire Maker” book series and “Put More Cash In Your Pocket.” Learn how to overcome obstacles and propel your business to consistently earn money. Seating is limited: $45 for eWomen members, $55 for nonmembers. Info: Linda Parrent, eWomenNetwork executive managing director for Knoxville, 247-0157, or visit www. eWomenNetwork.com/.
Franklin Square Winter clearance sales abound at Franklin Square: ■ Coachman Clothiers (entire month) – 25 to 70 percent off selected merchandise. ■ Sami’s Café (Wednesday, Jan. 12, 11 a.m. until noon) – On the Road with Shopper-News. ■ Smart Toys and Books (Friday, Jan. 14, 5-7 p.m.) – Family game night; free refreshments; learn new games for the family; ages 3+. Reservations required. ■ Smart Toys and Books (Saturday, Jan. 22, 1 to 2:30 p.m.) – Tie-Dye T-shirts; bring a T-shirt to tiedye; ages 8+. $5 fee in advance; reservations required.
r ppe Sho ot SP
■ Children’s storyteller Miss Helen will be at Smart Toys and Books each Thursday in January at 11 a.m. Themes are: Jan. 13, Cats; Jan. 20, Moos & Coos and Things that Go Bump in the Night!; and Jan. 27, Foxes. Info: 691-1154 or smarttoysandbooks.com/. ■ Arts and crafts teacher Miss Candice will be at Smart Toys each Friday with sessions at 10 a.m., 11 a.m. and noon. Classes include an art project and a story. Reservations and $5 materials fee requested in advance.
Academy Ballroom
E
ver wonder what they teach at Academy Ballroom? Owner Jeremy Norris has a quick answer: “Anything you see on ‘Dancing with the Stars.’ ” So if your dream is to dance like the folks you have watched compete for the mirrored ball trophy, this spacious business, nestled in a corner at Western Plaza Shopping Center, is the place to go. Salsa to Cha Cha, and Nightclub Two-step to West Coast Swing, they teach all of that and much, much more. Norris and his co-owner, Emily Loyless, are both highly-trained professional dancers who still compete in the big contests. They believe dancing should be fun and that it becomes even more fun as you get better at it. Along with a number of other professional instructors, they teach any kind of partner dancing, their prices are extremely reasonably – some classes cost as little as $10 – and instruction is offered for both individuals and groups. Prices are a la carte. There is no longterm contract, so clients pay only for exactly what they want. Norris says the cost is cheaper than eating out, adding, “and here you’re going to be losing calories instead of gaining them.” Dancing is a great way to work off those pounds you added over the holidays. This is also a great place to have a party, complete with dance instruction – great for team building for a business or office staff, for example. Another popular item are the classes for wedding parties. Schedule those well in advance of the big event so you will be sure to
West Knox Rotary resumes meetings By Sandra Clark Bet you missed them. The Rotary Club of West Knoxville took off a couple of weeks at year’s end, but they roared back last Friday, ready to host a major music event and restore those noon Friday meetings. At 2010’s final meeting, president Phil Parkey heard reports from committee chairs and introduced the upcoming leadership team. Parkey’s term continues through June, but the Rotarians believe in planning Leadership team: Oliver Smith IV, vice president; Richard Bettis, president-elect; and Lucy Gibson, president. The terms of office ahead. The 2011-12 officers are: will be July 1 through June 2012. Photos by Charles Garvey Lucy Gibson, president; Richard Bettis, the Barney Thompson Meet the Members won president-elect; Oliver Rotarian of the Year award in Smith IV, vice presiJim Burns joined 2009-10. dent; Alan Smeltzer, Rotary in 2001. He He attended the University secretary; Ted Hotz, grew up in Stone of Alabama and then joined treasurer; Wayne Mountain, Ga., with the Army. He Underwood, service; three brothers, and his met his wife, Deanna Coulter, addad was a helicopter Margaret, ministration; Karl pilot in Vietnam when in London. Kemmer, memberJim was born. He holds They’ve been ship; Nancy Christian, a bachelor’s degree in married 51 r public relations; Jim marketing from the ppe years. Their Sho Pot Bailey, Rotary FounUniversity of Georgia. S daughter, dation; Gary JohnHe worked in sales Lynne, lives son, new generations; and moved to Knoxville in San AntoAlan Wright, director at in 1995 to open a used office Bob Boothe nio, and their large; Sam Carey and Gary furniture store, now named son, Brian, lives in Winnipeg, West, sergeants at arms; and Office FurniCanada, with his wife and two Leo Knight, webmaster (or is ture Outfitdaughters. that ringmaster?). ters and soleBob’s career was in pharRichard Bettis, fundraisly owned by maceutical sales and maning chair, reminded memBurns. Hobbers of the club’s annual bies include agement. While in Texas, he fundraiser which is to be golf, running, earned his bachelor’s degree held Saturday, Feb. 19, at fly fishing, from Texas A&M. Just before the Bijou Theater. Entercamping and his retirement in 1995, his tainment will be by three birding. He company, Syntex Laboratobands: David Hales, the Jim Burns and his wife, ries, was acquired by Hoffman Early Morning String Dust- Terri, have two daughters: La Roche. Bob volunteers with Parkers (featuring the club’s Sam Melissa, 11, and Sarah, 9. west and Mercy hospitals Carey) and Second Opinion Bob Boothe joined Rota(featuring the club’s Larry ry in 1985 in San Antonio. He and enjoys fly fishing, oil Sheumaker). moved to Knoxville in 2002 painting, playing bag-pipes, The fundraising goal is and joined the local club. He is reading, crossword puzzles $50,000. active in several projects and and foreign travel.
West Knox Rotary
Chic also a large selection of leggings and tank tops in every imaginable hue in a one-size-fits-all line, and there is an area of the shop devoted solely to stylish orange and white clothing to brighten the wardrobe of any UT fan. New items arrive several times a week, so you will want to stop in often. Hours are 10 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. Monday through Friday and 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Saturday. Info: 5036 Kingston Pike, 249-6188.
New business? New location? New product? Tell the world! Call us today.
Jeremy Norris and Emily Loyless, owners of Academy Ballroom, dance with their rescue pup, Rexi. BEARDEN
wow the guests at your reception. Hours are 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday through Friday and weekends by appointment. Info: 4451 Kingston Pike in Western Plaza, www.dancingknox. com or 539-2255.
Paige Davis 640-6354
FARRAGUT
Debbie Moss 661-7071
Financial Focus How to choose a financial professional As you navigate the financial world, you’ll most likely deal with a wide array of investment choices, constantly changing tax laws, estateplanning issues and other areas. And then, to make things even more complex, you’ll have to consider your own risk tolerance, time horizon Wendy and individual goals. If Schopp you’re like most people, you don’t have the time and expertise to create, monitor and adjust your investment strategy by yourself, so you’ll need to get some help. But how can you choose a financial professional who is right for you? You’ll need to do some research, possibly by interviewing a few candidates. Here are a few questions you may want to ask: ■ Do you have experience working with people like me? Ideally, you’d like to work with someone who has experience in helping people like you – that is, people with similar income and asset levels, family situations, goals and so on. The more familiar a financial professional is with people like you, the better that person will be at helping you identify the appropriate investment moves. ■ Do you have a particular investment philosophy? Look for someone with a thoughtful, reasoned philosophy on investing. As a general rule, be suspicious of anyone promising you big, quick gains. The best financial professionals seek to help their clients achieve positive longterm results through disciplined, persistent and sensible investment moves. ■ How often will you communicate with me? If you’re going to entrust your hardearned financial resources with someone, you’ll want that person to communicate
with you regularly as to how you’re doing and what changes you may need to make. How often will you receive investment statements? How many times a year will you meet to review your progress? Can you have face-to-face consultations whenever you need them? These are the types of questions you’ll want to ask any prospective financial advisor. ■ Will you be my primary contact? If you seek a one-on-one relationship with a financial professional, you’ll want that person to be your main contact, if not your exclusive one. You deserve the attention and expertise of a financial professional, so if you’re interviewing someone who seems as if he or she might try to “pass you along” to subordinates in the office, keep looking. ■ What services do you offer? If you want your financial professional to help you create a unified investment strategy, you’ll also want that person to help you implement it – which means he or she needs access to a full range of investment and money management products and services. ■ How are you paid? Financial professionals are compensated in any of a number of ways. They may work on a fee-only basis, with the fee either agreed upon in advance or based on the level of assets under management. And some financial professionals work in a combined fee-and-commission arrangement. From an investor’s point of view, one method of compensation may not be “better” than the others; nonetheless, it’s important for you to fully understand how your financial advisor will be paid. By doing your homework in advance, you can develop a solid relationship with a qualified financial professional – someone who will be with you far into the future. For more information on investing, contact Wendy Schopp at Edward Jones Investments, 671-1318.
Catch up with all your favorite columnists every Monday at www.ShopperNewsNow.com
C-4 • JANUARY 10, 2011 • WEST SIDE SHOPPER-NEWS
One Pound Have you ever really thought about what it takes to lose one pound? One pound is equal to 3,500 calories. Therefore, in order to lose one pound, you need a deficit of 3,500 calories. The deficit can be created by reducing calories, beginning an
Cutting through the
information clutter By Anne Hart
It’s a truism that simply having knowledge doesn’t get you to your goal. It’s what you do with that
Casey Peer Registered Dietitian
exercise program, or increasing your current exercise frequency, duration and/or intensity. Does this mean you need to begin counting all calories eaten? Not necessarily. However, using the food label, Internet, or other resource for nutritional information is important for knowing of the number of calories you are eating at a meal or snack. How often do you … N Grab a handful of peanuts, chips or M&M’s? N Eat a 100 calorie pack or two? N Eat a candy bar? N Drink a latte or mocha? N Drink a sweet tea, soda or energy drink? Including the calories from a handful of peanuts here, and a 100 calorie pack (or two) there is easily overlooked. But those calories can really add up. Consider this: by eating approximately 100 calories less each day, you could lose one pound each month. One pound in a month may not seem significant but over several months, it can become significant. If you can find a few more “100 calories” each day, you could lose two, three, four … pounds each month. Finding those extra little calories can be as easy as changing from sweet tea to unsweet tea, making modifications to a recipe or going for a walk. These are simple, nearly unrecognizable changes. Each time you go to the refrigerator, pantry, coffee shop, lunch with a friend, etc., remember that 100 calories could be the difference in losing or gaining one pound. Be aware of what you are eating and what your food choices are costing you. If you are aware of what you are doing and you are consistent, you will find success.
knowledge that’s important. We are all inundated with a constant flood of information from numerous sources on a daily, or even a minute-to-minute basis. It’s mind boggling, and it begs for a method of sifting through the clutter to a state of better comprehension – a bottom line that will bring sense to it all. The Wellness Center at Dowell Springs is the place to come to gain that understanding of which pieces of information will guide you – your mind and body and spirit – to the best methods for reaching your goals. Here, the experts will help you sift through all that information and will work with you to determine which pieces of the puzzle best fit together to help you achieve a state of well being. It all starts with a baseline assessment of you and your specific needs. The professional staff will work with you to determine both your personal goals and your level of knowledge about how best to reach those goals. You will work together to set priorities,
and then to build an effective road map to help you get where you want to be. Nutrition is a good example of how easy it is to become so overwhelmed with information that we don’t know which way to turn, making it tough to reach our goals. Especially at this time of year, there is a deluge of information about diet plans promising magical results. You may choose one and lose that 25 pounds, but the likelihood is that you will soon return to the eating habits that put those pounds on you in the first place. You add them back on, and the cycle begins again. It’s called “yo-yo dieting.” Some things are basic. For example, we all know that a baked potato is better for us than french fries, but how do we really get to better overall nutritional habits? How do we know whether we are getting too much cholesterol to be healthy or too little? And what is all that talk about gluten? Should we be paying attention to it?
As the center’s registered dietitian, Casey Peer, puts it, “Everyone knows what we’re supposed to do – lose weight, tone up, deal with stress, quit smoking – but do we know how to do it? One day we hear in the media that pasta is good for us; the next day we hear it isn’t. Next it may be eggs. We’re supposed to eat them or we aren’t. What we have to do is sift through all of
that in ways that it will make sense for each of us as individuals.” It takes a road map to get to good health and well being, and that’s exactly what you receive at The Wellness Center. Instead of a “diet,” you will learn good nutritional habits that will last a lifetime, and you will also learn which sorts of exercise will best partner with your new way of eating to produce
results that will have you both looking better and feeling better. Exercise produces the endorphins that give you a sense of well being. Stress is lessened or eliminated altogether. Combined with a change in eating habits, your looks will change, and, of course, when we look better we feel better about ourselves. If you’re a smoker, there couldn’t be a better time to stop, and The Wellness Center has programs for that, too. If you can’t manage stress well, you aren’t going to be able to quit smoking. It’s tough, but The Wellness Center can help you manage the stress, stop smoking, and improve your overall health. There’s an old saying that “Knowledge is power” – but that’s only true if you have a clear understanding of that knowledge and how it works. The Wellness Center staff has the expertise and the desire to show you what to do with the knowledge you already have. They’ll cut through the clutter for you, with the end result being a healthier, happier you.
PROGRAMS AND OFFERINGS Arms and Abs – Designed for quick, convenient 30-minute group sessions, our Arms and Abs class helps you gain strength using your own body weight, dumbbells, resistance bands, BOSU balls and more. Pilates – Improve your balance and core strength with our Pilates class. Yoga – Learn essential yoga basics and experience the wellness benefits of poses, bends and relaxation in our one-hour group sessions. Pilates/Yoga Combo – Our one-hour Pilates/Yoga Combo group fitness class utilizes specially selected pilates and yoga exercises to increase your muscle strength, endurance and overall flexibility. Pump – Ideal for everyone from beginners to experienced exercisers, our Pump class targets every major muscle group. With minimal down time between exercises, you’ll get the most out of using the body bar, dumbbells, BOSU, step bench and more. Spin – Ready to challenge yourself by starting your own spinning regimen? Spin is an entry-level spinning class lasting 45-60 minutes, perfect for beginners. Cycle In, Yoga Out – An ideal fit for both beginners and veteran spinners, this is your chance to change up typical spin class routines by starting with 45 minutes on the bike and ending
with 15 minutes of standing yoga – all in our 60-minute group classes. Kid Fit – Don’t let busy schedules get in the way of your exercise regimen. Fit in your own workout while your kids enjoy a fitness class designed just for them. This one-hour group fitness class for ages 6-12 is focused on making physical activity fun for kids – and giving you a break from supervising. Power Hour – Push yourself in our one-hour Power Hour class with 30 minutes of hardcore cycling hills, sprints and races, immediately followed by 30 minutes of intense leg and ab work. Functional Fitness – Class involves a variety of exercise, including but not limited to: cardiovascular, balance and strength. Appropriate for seniors or individuals who desire fitness gains with little impact on the joints. Sunrise Yoga – Refresh yourself by starting the day with our one-hour Sunrise Yoga class. Mostly held indoors, Sunrise Yoga may be occasionally moved outdoors to take advantage of the fresh morning air when weather permits. SmartFit by Knoxville Orthopaedic Clinic – In collaboration with our expert partners at Knoxville Orthopaedic Clinic, SmartFit classes aim to minimize the risk of future injury for young athletes ages 8-18. These one-hour expert-
led sessions focus on proper technique and muscle imbalances. Each athlete will receive a Functional Movement Screening after joining to identify individual risks, then basic movement patterns are used to modify behavior. Challenge U – Challenge yourself to go beyond your comfort zone with Challenge U. The strength and conditioning staff at The Wellness Center have developed circuitbased classes as part of Challenge U using the technique of muscle confusion to achieve maximum results. Participants should attend three days per week for best results, complementing an existing workout or cardio-training. You can even join one or more classes for one low fee per month. Core and More – In Core and More, you’ll utilize resistance band training, dumbbells and body weight resistance in 60-minute circuit sessions for a total body workout with a special focus on the core. Xpress Fitness – Ideal for working individuals and travelers, our convenient morning Xpress class fits a total-body workout into only 45 minutes. Work It Circuit – Designed for females only, you can feel comfortable in this 60-minute total-body workout created just for you.
Healthy Eating Series – It’s all about food! Classes are designed to provide you a hands-on, foodbased learning experience to bring comfort to your kitchen. Each month will highlight a new topic to help YOU find success with nutrition. Eating with Diabetes Made Simple – This 90-minute group class is specially designed for those with diabetes, and focuses on reading food labels, meal planning and eating away from home or on the go. Grocery Store Tours – Get out of the classroom setting and take a closer look at how to properly read food labels and recognize healthier choices right on the grocery store shelf! You’ll discover there are a lot of choices available that pack as much flavor as nutritional value. Kids in the Kitchen (Healthy Cooking) – When the kids get involved in preparing nutritious meals, eating right becomes something the whole family looks forward to. Our Kids in the Kitchen classes help families make time for healthy cooking and eating, even in the midst of busy schedules. Weight Management: Getting to the Basics – In this six-week group program, you’ll meet 60 minutes per week to learn about identifying the barriers to successful long-term weight loss, plus effective strategies to overcome those barriers.