VOL. 8 NO. 4
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www.ShopperNewsNow.com |
Life
January 27, 2014
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Twelve steps bring healing to Uganda
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IN THIS ISSUE WHERE the
JOBS ARE DeRoyal jobs are hot ticket
DeRoyal manufactures surgical devices, unitized delivery systems, orthopedic supports and bracing, wound care dressings and orthopedic implants produced by processes including injection molding, device assembly, metal fabrication, converting, electronics assembly and sterilization services. Locally, this means jobs – stable jobs.
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Read Betty Bean on A-9
Science Saturday They weren’t able to make trains fly, but students who participated in the first of four Science Saturdays levitated small magnets with the help of a superconducting disk and liquid nitrogen.
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Read Wendy Smith on A-3
UT social work students Stephanie Ader and Anna-Claire Daniels, center, cel- gram for Awareness, Counseling and Treatment of Alcoholism, with prison ebrate the completion of an eight-week program offered by PACTA, the Pro- inmates in Gulu, Uganda. Photo submitted
By Wendy Smith University of Tennessee student Anna-Claire Daniels is open about her previous drug addiction. The goal of any 12-step program is to be of service to others, she says, and she knows that she can help people by sharing her story. But she couldn’t have imagined
that her own treatment would lead her to travel to Africa and undertake the translation of a 12-step program into Lwo (pronounced “luo”), the language of civil wartorn Gulu, Uganda. Daniels grew up in Oak Ridge. She was the only child of attentive parents, and she exceled in sports.
She was a competitive gymnast until 8th grade, when a knee injury forced her to find a new sport. She had a talent for golf, and, after graduation from Christian Academy of Knoxville, she attended Florida Atlantic University on a golf scholarship. Before she left for school, a boy-
friend introduced her to marijuana. When she injured her shoulder as a sophomore, she red-shirted, and the drug testing ended. That was when the drugs began to control her life. “Stuff happens, I think, for a To page A-3
No tax increase Victor Ashe got County Mayor Tim Burchett’s take on taxes, and he also forecasts upcoming political races. Ashe talks about former state Sen. Bill Owen and the challenge for leadership in the Democratic Party.
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Read Victor Ashe on A-4
Hider’s art: beautiful, but strange There’s something mesmerizing about artist Kelly Hider’s work. Her sumptuous mixedmedia pieces incorporate photographs, gilded paint, sequins, rhinestones and handmade jeweled toys. Cherub-cheeked children are often her subjects. And yet there’s something disturbing there, too. Something difficult to put one’s finger on. As the artist herself says, “You’re not sure.”
➤ Read Carol Zinavage on page A-6
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No vote on Westland Cove By Wendy Smith Neither party won at last week’s Board of Zoning Appeals meeting when a vote on John Huber’s plan for a 312-unit apartment complex on Emory Church Road was postponed following a four-hour meeting. But June Whitaker, who lives across the water from the proposed Westland Cove development, is glad that a few board members said they’d need more time to digest the 400 pages of information they received within days of the meeting. “I do feel that we may still have a chance to get it modified,” she said. Two parties are appealing the development plan adopted 6-5 by Knox County Commission. Attorney Wayne Kline represents a collection of West Knox homeowners, and Michael Whitaker, June’s son, represents five family mem-
bers who have property close to the proposed development. Kline asked to postpone the vote due to the absence of two BZA members. The BZA will vote on whether to approve Huber’s plan, modify it, or deny it at its Feb. 26 meeting. Huber and his attorney, John King, were visibly frustrated by the postponement. But Huber doesn’t think it will have an impact on the project. “I believe they just need time to review and absorb it. I have confidence the members of the BZA will vote to affirm MPC’s 13-2 vote in support of Westland Cove once they have had an opportunity to review the facts,” he said afterwards. During the meeting, Kline argued that high density housing was inappropriate for the area, and that MPC and County Commission did not consider the Knoxville-Knox County Hillside
Attorney Wayne Kline speaks with Barbara Strange of Lakewood subdivision after last week’s BZA meeting. Kline represents West Knox homeowners who are appealing John Huber’s proposed apartment complex on Emory Church Road. Photo by Wendy Smith and Ridgetop Protection Plan when it was decided that five units per acre were appropriate for the 70-acre property. He also questioned the development’s adherence to the General Plan 2033 and Southwest County Sector Plan. Michael Whitaker said he isn’t
Hodge wins Presidential Award Tennessee State University, By Betty Bean where she Rocky Hill Elementary got her unSchool 4th grade teacher dergraduAmber Hodge has won the ate degree, Presidential Award in Math and South and Science Teaching in College, Tennessee. She was one of where she two finalists in Knox Counreceived ty and one of six statewide. her masOne math teacher and one and science teacher from each Amber Hodge ter’s her teachstate was selected to win ing certification, was nomithe award. Hodge, a graduate of East nated for the award by her
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opposed to development of the property, but to the scale of the project. He also expressed concern about pollution of the water table and the lake. Huber’s plan calls for a marina with 75 boat
be improved in the future. Hodge’s sample lesson former principal at Annoor plan dealt with fractions, Academy, a private Islamic the most challenging math school in West Knoxville skill for 4th and 5th graders. The lesson plan utilized where she taught for six years before transferring to iPads, which she said are more engaging for stuRocky Hill in 2012. To be considered for the dents than pencil and paaward, Hodge was required per. She had previously to fill out a 15-page applica- written a grant to finance tion detailing a lesson plan the purchase of 10 iPads for a difficult subject, in- to be shared by the 25 stucluding information about dents in her class. She said that winning the research, how the plan was received and how it could award is a dream come true:
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“I was awed when I was nominated, elated when I became one of three state finalists, and over the moon when I received notification that I am the national math winner for Tennessee. “I hope that the knowledge I gain from being a finalist will allow me to become an even better educator so that I can reach as many students as possible and show them that math and science are fun!”
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