VOL. 10 NO. 48
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New UT Martin chancellor relies on wisdom of By Wendy Smith
Holiday notes
■ West Hills Beautification Council will judge holiday mailboxes on Thursday, Dec.15. All residents of the West Hills neighborhood are welcomed to participate. ■ Food City Holiday Open House will be 10 a.m. -7 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 3, at all stores – featuring special events and tasty treats. All are invited. ■ Stanley’s Greenhouse will host a Holiday Open House 1-5 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 4, at 3029 Davenport Road. Info: 865-573-9591. ■ Volunteer Ministry Center’s annual holiday store will open at 1 p.m. today (Nov. 30) and remain open through Dec. 21. New items and cash donations are requested for the store where clients of the ministry can “shop” with points earned through community service. Most needed are toys, craft sets, baby clothes, sports balls, cosmetic/perfume sets and small tool kits. Info: Gabe Cline at 865-524-3926, ext. 224 or vmcinc.org ■ The 2016 Mission of Hope Christmas Campaign Big Blue Barrel Collection runs through Monday, Dec. 5. Info: 584-7571; info@missionofhope.org; missionofhope.org; mail to: Mission of Hope, P. O Box 51824, Knoxville, TN 37950. ■ Knoxville’s Holidays on Ice, Fridays-Sundays, through Jan. 8, Market Square. Admission: $10 adults, $7 children 12 and younger; includes skate rental and tax. Info: knoxvillesholidaysonice.com or 215-4423. ■ WIVK Christmas Parade, 7 p.m. Friday, Dec. 2, Gay Street. Info knoxvilletn. gov/christmas. ■ Joy of Music festive fundraiser, 6:30 p.m. Tuesday, Dec. 6, Cherokee Country Club. Tickets $125. Info: 5256806 or info@joyofmusic school.org. ■ Mabry-Hazen House annual Christmas tours, 5-8 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 10 and 2-5 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 11, 1711 Dandridge Ave. Free, but donations appreciated. Info: 522-8661 or mabryhazen.com. ■ Christmas in the City: Tour de Lights, Friday, Dec. 16, starts at Market Square. Judging, 6 p.m.; the bike ride, 7 p.m. Info: ibikeknx.com. ■ New Year’s Eve on the Square, 10:30 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 31, Market Square.
(865) 218-WEST (9378) NEWS (865) 661-8777 news@ShopperNewsNow.com Sandra Clark | Wendy Smith ADVERTISING SALES (865) 342-6084 ads@ShopperNewsNow.com Amy Lutheran | Patty Fecco Beverly Hollandl CIRCULATION (865) 342-6200 shoppercirc@ShopperNewsNow.com
November 30, 2016
When Keith Carver, who was recently selected as the next UT Martin chancellor, arrived in Knoxville in 1993, he took the advice of a college mentor and made an appointment with then-UT president Dr. Joe Johnson. Carver didn’t know it then, but Johnson would become an invaluable adviser throughout his career. “I don’t think there’s a job that I applied for that I haven’t sought his advice,” he says. Carver came to UT Knoxville for a master’s degree in college student personnel and educational leadership. His relationship with Johnson developed after he was asked to join Student Counselors to the President, a systemwide group of students who met a few times each year to address assigned topics. Carver and Johnson also attended church together at Laurel Church of Christ. After graduation, Carver had opportunities at UT, but Johnson suggested that he “might want to see something different.” So he took his first job at Marietta College in Ohio. He returned to UT Knoxville in 1997 as an adviser in the Office of Student Activities, and began fundraising for the UT College of Law a year later.
Joe Johnson
Keith Carver, the new chancellor of UT Martin, with his longtime friend and mentor Joe Johnson Photo submitted
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Sequoyah Hills residents purchase former Christenberry property By Wendy Smith A group of Sequoyah Hills residents has purchased a 4.8-acre parcel at 3222 Kingston Pike to keep it residential and minimize the number of homes that can be built on the property. Last year, the property was the focus of
community attention when the former owners, John and Paula Chesworth, demolished their historic home, known as the Christenberry House, a few hours before city council approved a 60-day waiting period for a demolition permit for historic structures. Rich Tierney, owner of Sequoyah Hills Re-
Eight is NOT enough
the number defied the law of averBy Marvin West Be nice. Butch needs your help. ages. Was strength-and-conditionPlease be patient and supportive. ing flawed? Was August too soft? We know this team set a reSend cheerful get-well cards. cord for yards yielded, the most in school history. Defensive backs never mastered the art of looking back for the ball. Outside containEncourage him to seek advice. ment did not exist. There were If he is going to continue as Ten- wide lanes to big gains. Injuries were relevant. Tennesnessee football coach, at four-plus million and several perks, he must see ran short on tackles. The best give the Volunteers of 2017 a dif- linebacker missed 9½ games. The best corner missed half the seaferent look. If these Vols had an actual blue- son and wasn’t the same when he print, it didn’t work. From start hustled back. “Next man up” was for public to finish, this was never a good team. It wasn’t ready to play at the consumption. It sounded good. beginning of several games. Cap- Replacements were supposedly tains attended coin tosses. The instructed in the ways of the SEC, band played Rocky Top. Oppo- but several looked lost. I used to nents scored touchdowns, some- know but no longer can tell how times in clusters before Tennessee long it takes to teach fundamentals. Different instructors. Differjoined the fray. The 8-4 record was misleading. ent students. I do know for sure that eight Three victories were against offwins are not enough. I explained brands and two were pure luck. It is possible the Volunteers set that when Bill Battle was here. Like a world record for injuries. Misfor- Bill, Butch is a decent guy, a life tune must have been a factor but coach, an advocate of academics.
Analysis
alty, put together the Kingston Pike Zoning Preservation LLC to purchase the property. The advertised price was $1,325,000. It was listed on Sept. 30, and the sale closed last week.
That is of considerable importance. Alas, Bill didn’t make it. Butch might earn a bronze statue if he is tough enough and links decency with more victories. I want to say this gently so Butch does not get his feelings hurt. Losing the fourth quarter to Vanderbilt is not acceptable. No excuses. No spin. No diversionary tactics. This just won’t do. Losing to South Carolina was devastating. It mortally wounded the season of high expectations. This was worse. It was dead on delivery and humbling. Did you see the coach of the Commodores jumping around as if he had received a pony for Christmas? He was in shock. His team outplayed and outhit the vaunted Vols. Derek Mason was speechless – for a while. It might be impolite to mention that he outcoached Butch. Did you notice what shifting two tight ends from right to left did for three Vandy touchdown runs? The opening was four lanes wide. Did you identify Tennessee adjustments from the first to the second
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to the third? I didn’t either. How about pressure on Vanderbilt’s quarterback? Blitz packages were ineffective. Did you analyze the UT secondary? Don’t get beat deep is the first maxim of pass defense. Vandy noticed the deficiency. I can help with that. Deep in the archives, filed under 1970, is grainy film that illustrates pass defense. The late Buddy Bennett was architect. The coaching point was run with receivers, look for the ball, catch the ball. Volunteers intercepted 36. Bobby Majors got 10. Captain Tim Priest picked off nine. Jackie Walker had five. David Allen and Conrad Graham intercepted three each. Tennessee won 11 games. What we now celebrate was not very good but it is not the end. Tennessee football goes on and on. This is a crossroad. You can have the bowl game. I don’t want it. I want the Vols to start preparations now for next season. So much needs to be done. Big bowl bonuses should be applied to the future. We have overpaid for the past. Marvin West invites reader reaction. His address is westwest6@netzero.com