VOL. 8 NO. 1
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IN THIS ISSUE
They who traveled far …
Resolutions?!
Sherri Gardner Howell says: I have nothing against self-improvement. I am not lazy or undisciplined or unmotivated. I thoroughly enjoy and embrace the closing of a chapter and the beginning of a new one. Matter of fact, you could dress me in a diaper and throw a sash around me with 2014 emblazoned on it and not get any less enthusiasm for the beginning of a new year than that New Year Baby exhibits.
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January 6, 2014
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Read Sherri’s Wrap on A-3
The Doc is in Carol Zinavage scored an interview with band leader and trumpeter Doc Severinsen at his home in Blount County. She writes: The paint crew that’s working upstairs doesn’t know who he is. “He’s the nice guy who hired us to paint,” they say with grins and shrugs. They agree to Google him when they get home. Anyone who grew up watching The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson instantly recognizes the iconic bandleader.
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Find Carol’s Corner on B-2
On tearing down Gibbs Hall Marvin West goes way back with UT’s Gibbs Hall. He writes: Down goes Gibbs Hall, well, soon. The old athletic dorm and Stokely Center will be mere memories as Tennessee clears the way for progress – parking garage, new dorm and three practice fields for football.
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Read Marvin’s tale on A-5
First Tennessee to mark 150 years First Tennessee Bank’s promise is to be the best at serving our customers, one opportunity at a time. The bank was founded in 1864 when Abraham Lincoln was president, and employees have been practicing that promise ever since – even if it wasn’t written down. No financial institution could endure for a century and a half without dedicated employees earning the trust of generations of customers.
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Read Pam Fansler on A-10
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By Sherri Gardner Howell The Magi in Matthew, chapter 2, are thought to have traveled more than 800 miles before the star of Bethlehem stopped at the place where Jesus was. The beautifully carved wise men and their camel at Farragut Presbyterian Church haven’t come that far, but they have made quite a trek through the church in search of the Christ
Child and the manger. Their journey ends today, Jan. 6, on Epiphany, the day Christians celebrate the coming of the wise men who acknowledged a baby as king. The traveling Magi at Farragut Presbyterian, 209 Jamestowne Boulevard, is just a way to add some more excitement at Christmas, says the church’s office administrator, Dawn Zilles.
Bearing his gift and leading his camel, this wise man has traveled throughout the church as he makes his way to the crèche, arriving on Epiphany, Jan. 6. To page A-2
Home for the New Year Vietnamese Catholics celebrate in church of their own By Betsy Pickle Everything feels new to the Church of Divine Mercy – new year, new building. Getting there, however, has taken a lot of old-style hard work. The church, which serves the area’s Vietnamese Catholic community, moved into it’s own building at 10919 Carmichael Road on Sunday, Sept. 1. “We had mass in the morning, and in the eveOlivia Dang, age 3, brought a party horn to church to help ning we started fi xing the church,” says Father with the celebration.
Hoan Dinh. Former home of Northstar Church, the building had been sitting empty for some time and had deteriorated. The pastor says church members pitched in and cleaned the whole building. “We remodeled the sanctuary to make it look like a Catholic church,” he says, adding that renovating the social hall was one of the biggest projects. Even now, the renovaTo page A-3
The star at the front of the Church of Divine Mercy shows the way to the new church building for the Vietnamese Catholic community. Photos by Sherri Gardner Howell
Legalizing Jim McClain By Sandra Clark James L. McClain was one of Knoxville’s hardestworking business owners with retail nurseries in various parts of town including a big one on Clinton Highway. In the 1980s, he started raising plants on 19.44 acres in the middle of nowhere. How was he to know that Lovell Road would surge to a 5-lane thoroughfare with an interstate interchange and subdivisions springing up like a field of daisies?
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In a case that’s been pending at the Metropolitan Planning Commission since 2009, McClain seeks to rezone his land to commercial. That’s what the county’s department of codes administration implied when it cited the John Deere Nursury (McClain’s tenant since 1996) for operating improperly for the land’s agricultural zoning. Yikes! Nearby homeowners are at peace with the ongoing nursery operation, but commercial zoning could open up the land to who knows what.
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Not so fast, says the MPC staff. “The site is completely surrounded by homes, and placing a commercial designation on 19.44 acres would be incompatible with surrounding land uses. ... Deny.” McClain is seeking both rezoning and an amendment to the county’s sector plan. Seymour points to West Knox Utility’s headquarters just north of McClain’s property. That Lovell Road site is zoned commercial and used for the utility’s office, shops and truck storage.
It’s back to business for the town of Farragut. ■ The Education Relations Committee will meet at 4 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 7, at Town Hall. ■ The Economic Development Committee will meet at 8 a.m. Wednesday, Jan. 8, at Town Hall. ■ The Board of Mayor and Aldermen will meet at 7 p.m. Thursdays, Jan. 9 and 23, also at Town Hall. ■ The Municipal Planning Commission will meet at 7 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 16, at Town Hall, 11408 Municipal Center Drive in Farragut.
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In November, MPC commissioners told McClain’s lawyer, Arthur Seymour Jr., that the day’s postponement would be his last. We’ll see, because McClain’ petition is back on the MPC agenda for this Thursday, Jan. 9, at 1:30 p.m. Seymour argues that Knox County can’t regulate the John Deere operations because the land use is consistent with state law. The storage and sale of nursery plants and related equipment is an accepted agricultural use, he says.
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A-2 • JANUARY 6, 2014 • Shopper news
Sad times on Sinking Creek By W Wendy end en dy Smith dy Smiith h June Loy Whitaker hi k moved d to a 130-acre farm on Sinking Creek in 1935, when she was just 19 months old. She was the youngest of “Doc” Garfield Loy’s and Zola Loy’s 11 children, and the family moved to West Knox County after their Union County farm was condemned by TVA for Norris Lake. June and her husband, Bob, still live in a waterfront home that Bob built on the property. Five other family members, including their son, Michael, have homes on the former farm. It appears that June’s property will once again be condemned by forces beyond her control. Unless the Whitakers and their neighbors are successful at the Jan. 22 meeting of the Board of Zoning Appeals, John Huber will build nine three and four-story apartment buildings a stone’s throw from the couple’s home. This is the third time that water, or a waterfront development, has threatened the Loy family property. After leaving one farm to escape a TVA lake, the family learned that another lake would soon encroach upon their land, and they began to anticipate the rising waters of Fort Loudoun Lake as construction of the Fort Loudoun Dam began in 1940. When they received word that the flood gates had closed in August of 1943, June and her sister ran down the hill to watch for the water. As it turned out, it took two weeks for the lake to reach their property. The farm was so remote that the Loys didn’t have electricity until June was a
Farragut High Farrag Farr agut ut H igh School igh Scho Sch hooll stustu tudent. d Most M off their h i needs d were met by the farm, where they grew vegetables and raised cattle, hogs and chickens. To avoid driving to Bearden for items like sugar and coffee, June sometimes walked east on the railroad tracks to a small market at Ebenezer Crossing, where Pip’s Iron Works is now located. It still seemed remote when Michael was growing up. “Dad always called it ‘40 and plumb.’ It was 40 miles out, and plumb in the middle of nowhere,” he says. After graduating from UT with a degree in mechanical engineering, Michael moved to Kingsport. But he came home when he had a job opportunity in Oak Ridge. “He said, ‘There are things more precious than money. Everything I love is here,’” June recalls. He still loves the natural beauty of the property. Deer graze regularly in the fields, and Great Blue Herons lurk in the shallow waters of the cove. June points out the island where the majestic birds nest together. But the family is realistic. They knew the property across the water would eventually be developed. They’re not opposed to development, Michael says, and not necessarily opposed to apartments. But they are opposed to the number of units that has been approved by MPC and Knox County Commission. June doesn’t want to see tall buildings when she looks out her window and is concerned about light pollution. Michael thinks that too many acres were included in the calculation that de-
Bob and June Whitaker stand at the edge of the property that has been in June’s family since 1935. John Huber has received county approval to build nine apartment buildings with 348 units immediately across the water from the Whitaker’s West Knox home. Photo by Wendy Smith
termined how many units could be built on the site. If property protected by the Hilltop and Ridge Protection Plan was excluded, far fewer units could be built, he says. He is also concerned that a conservation easement that Huber says will protect nearby homeowners isn’t yet on paper. “How will they protect it during construction if no one knows where it is?” While several commissioners visited the Westland Cove development site from Emory Church Road, Amy Broyles was the only one who visited the Whitaker property, which is accessible from George Williams Road. June invited them all. No matter what happens across the water, the family plans to stick around. “We’re not leaving,” says June.
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They who traveled far The wise men are moved each week, says Zilles, traveling around the church’s narthex in search of the baby Jesus. On the Sunday closest to Jan. 6, they are finally placed at the manger scene and can present the baby with their gifts. Zilles says the purchase of the nativity scene owned by the church predates her tenure at the church, but she loves to share the history of the hand-carved pieces at Christmas. “Angela Batey, our director of music, and Tami Newsom were the ones who had the vision for these pieces back in 2001,” she says. The pieces are the work of Otto Preske, a master wood carver in Gatlinburg,
From page A-1
who was commissioned by the church to make them. Preske’s love of carving dates back to when he was a 14-year-old camper at Boy Scout summer camp, says Zilles. “Later, as a U.S. Navy guy, he received his first ‘commission’ when he carved squadron plaques!” Preske worked under a master wood carver in Portugal after he got out of the Navy, honing his skills. The nativity set at Farragut Presbyterian is carved from linden wood, or basswood, a soft wood with a straight, fine grain. The Music and Worship committee purchased the first figures of Mary, baby Jesus in his crib and Joseph in December of
As the holy family waits with shepherds and angels, the three Magi make their way to the manger. Watching intently and hidden in the greenery above the stable is the little carved church mouse. Photos by Sherri Gardner Howell
2002, said Zilles. “Over the next 10 years, figures have been added, including a tiny church mouse that the kids love to hunt for in the greenery. The latest pieces added were a pair of doves.”
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Resolutions? Let’s not I have nothing against self-improvement. I am not lazy or undisciplined or unmotivated. I thoroughly enjoy and embrace the closing of a chapter and the beginning of a new one.
Sherri Gardner Howell
Matter of fact, you could dress me in a diaper and throw a sash around me with 2014 emblazoned on it and not get any less enthusiasm for the beginning of a new year than that New Year Baby exhibits. All that being said, I absolutely hate the major tradition that accompanies the dawn of a new year: Resolutions. Friends and loved ones all around me are making their lists, with visions of a new and better person gleaming in their eyes. Nine out of 10 of them involve weight loss, even though I have some friends I consider pretty dang skinny. No matter what your weight, there always seems to be a need to lose some multiple of 10 pounds. Other resolutions involve stopping bad habits like smoking, negativity, spending too much money, etc. So why do I hate all this goodwill and enthusiasm for a better world, one skinny, happy, rich person at a time? Because it is a recipe for failure. An over-abundance of excitement for the beginning of a new year leads us to think climbing Mount Everest is just a few months away when getting off the couch is still a challenge. I used to make resolutions, only to be depressed in February. Then I decided I would
only make one resolution each year, so that I could dedicate myself to making that one thing happen. Still depressed by February, but less so. So now I don’t make any. I know what I need to do to be better, but I’m not going to resolve to begin any journey on Jan. 1. I think that is my main problem with resolutions: Although it is the start of a new year and the most logical time for a new beginning, it’s at the end of the hectic, schedule-wrecking, over-stuffed month of December. I need January just to get my legs back under me. Getting to the gym three days a week just isn’t going to happen when the tree is still up, and thank you notes A self-proclaimed ice diva and figure skater, Meredith Van Leuven aren’t written. Statistics both back me strikes a pose after completing a spin. Photos by Sherri Gardner Howell up and shoot me down, which is usually the case with stats. Chew on these from the University of Scranton, Journal of Clinical Psychology, with your carrot sticks: (You did throw away the last of the fudge, didn’t you?) ■45 percent of Americans usually make New Year’s Resolutions ■17 percent of Americans infrequently make New Year’s Resolution ■38 percent of Americans absolutely never make New Year’s Resolutions ■8 percent are successful in achieving their resolution ■39 percent of people in their 20s achieve their resolution each year ■14 percent of people over 50 achieve their resolution each year ■75 percent of resolutions remain unbroken through the first week of January ■46 percent of resolutions remain unbroken past six months Happy New Year – be it one filled with resolutions or Just off the ice after Stick and Puck is Liam McCusker. Liam – he’s one that is resolution free! in there somewhere – is a goalie for the Squirts, one of the Knoxville Junior Ice Bears traveling teams.
Home for the New Year tion isn’t finished. “Thank God they are willing to do it,� says Hoan. “They know that we’re small, and we don’t have money to pay workers. They come here to help the church.� Having a building of their own means a lot to the church members. The Divine Mercy Catholic Mission has had a couple of homes throughout its nearly 20-year history, first at Immaculate Conception Catholic Church downtown, and then at Catholic High School at Cedar Bluff. “Immaculate Conception was far away from most of the people, and also the mass time was not good for them – it was 6 p.m. on Sunday,� says Hoan. Once the community moved to the high school and moved mass to Sunday morning, attendance started growing. “We knew we couldn’t stay there forever, so we started to think about a place. We didn’t think about buying a church like this one. ... We looked around a lot and found this place. We were very lucky.� The church was able to purchase the building with the help of the Catholic Foundation of East Tennessee. A dedication was held
Noah Mallery, left, and his buddy Sammy Barnard were getting in a full afternoon of skating. They had just finished Stick and Puck and were “just hanging around� on the ice for the public skate, waiting for a second session of Stick and Puck to happen.
Fun on the ice By Sherri Gardner Howell There is always plenty happening at Cool Sports: Home of the Icearium, 110 Watt Road. With ice hockey for all ages, figure skating for all ages, indoor soccer for adults and youth, flag football, fitness classes and lacrosse, it’s hard to keep up with what footwear should be worn! There was no doubting what was needed on Dec. 31 when a session of “Stick and Puck,� which is kind of an
open gym for hockey enthusiasts, was followed by a public skate session. The ice skates were king. The icearium was quite a melting pot – or freezing pot – on this day, as the holidays brought guests from all across the country and from nearby communities. Several were in town visiting relatives for the holidays and were joined by ice skating regulars who were proud to show off their community’s hot spot for all things frozen!
From page A-1
Father Hoan Dinh leads an evening mass on New Year’s Day at the Church of Divine Mercy’s new home at 10919 Carmichael Road.
Nov. 17. Hoan says an average of 200 attend Sunday’s 9 a.m. mass. Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and every other Saturday, mass is held at 8:30 a.m. Since coming here in June 2012 from Maryland, Hoan has helped strengthen participation among the younger crowd by starting the Eucharistic Youth Society, which meets after Sunday mass. Daily masses are in Vietnamese, but Hoan, who came to the United States five and a half years ago, does parts of the Sunday service in English “for the kids who were born here.� The next big event will be the Lunar New Year celebration. The new year begins Jan. 31, but the celebration will be held Sunday, Feb. 16, at Sacred Heart Cathedral School gym. Even the church’s new digs won’t accommodate the event – 1,000 to 1,500 people usually attend.
Alexis Page and family came from Crossville to enjoy the skating at Cool Sports.
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government Several honor Daniel Brown State Finance Commissioner Larry Martin attended the Dec. 21 reception for council member and former Mayor Daniel Brown at Broker Hall on Martin Luther King Blvd.
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Martin was Brown’s deputy when he was mayor. Also attending were Vice Mayor Nick Pavlis, council members George Wallace, Duane Grieve, Nick Della Volpe, Finbarr Saunders and Marshall Stair, along with the city’s community relations director Tank Strickland. Also attending were former state Rep. and council member Bob Booker (now director of Beck Cultural Center), state Rep. Joe Armstrong and retired pastor Harold Middlebrook. ■ Randy Boyd, Knoxville entrepreneur and unpaid higher education adviser to Gov. Bill Haslam for the past year, wraps up his time in Nashville in early February. ■ Mayor Tim Burchett is getting his fund raising for re-election started on Tuesday, Feb. 18, with a $100 a couple event at the Lighthouse on Baum Drive from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. Invitations will go out two weeks before the event. Burchett does not have an opponent at this time and appears to be a sure bet for a second and final term as county mayor. ■ Neil McBride lost his seat on the TVA board today when President Obama not only failed to reappoint him but also did not name anyone else. The 9-member board goes to eight members which will save the pay for one – $50,000 plus travel. If the President continues to ignore expiring TVA board appointments, then two more vacancies will occur in 2014 including the chair, Bill Sansom, president of H. T. Hackney Co. and former state transportation commissioner. Barbara Haskew of Chattanooga also departs. They will go off the board the end of this year although their terms actually end in May unless renominated and confirmed.
The board will then go to six members if Sansom and Haskew depart but still have a quorum to transact business. A new chair would be elected, too. The departure of McBride cannot be blamed on Republicans in the U.S. Senate but totally on the White House. The seat is vacant due to White House inaction. The seat became open in May 2013. McBride was chair of the TVA audit committee and a member of the external affairs committee. He wanted very much to be reappointed. McBride disappointed several supporters for his low key and quiet approach to several high profi le issues such as CEO Johnson’s $5.9 million salary for nine months, closed TVA committee meetings and silence on the 2-year dress code for board meetings which triggered a federal First Amendment lawsuit. The charge was he had been co-opted by Johnson and top staff. The President has mentioned the possibility of selling TVA, and the agency has declined to comment on whether it can be sold without congressional action which seems strange given TVA has a huge legal staff available to comment on hundreds of other issues. Their spokespersons said the senators would have to answer that question. ■ Longtime UT Law professor Carl Pierce is retiring this summer. He started in 1972 at the UT College of Law. He was director of the Howard Baker Public Policy Center for several years following Alan Lowe’s departure to head up the George W. Bush Presidential Library in Dallas. He has done many interviews with former Sen. and Ambassador Howard Baker. ■ There was a large crowd Dec. 29 at the service at Canaan Baptist Church at which longtime pastor Harold Middlebrook gave his final sermon as the pastor. In addition to former Mayor Brown and this writer attending, council member George Wallace and his wife, Stephanie, attended. To their credit, both were very engaged in the service and took copious notes.
A-4 • JANUARY 6, 2014 • Shopper news
2014: Referendum on McIntyre? Good-bye apathy. Hello involvement. There was very little interest in local politics last year and most city council incumbents ran unopposed. Election Day was greeted with a collective yawn. But if the growing list of potential candidates for county offices who had picked up nominating petitions by Dec. 31 is any indication, 2014 will be very different. There are county commission seats, fee offices and judgeships up for grabs, as well as races for sheriff and attorney general. The deadline to return completed petitions is Feb. 20. School board races appear to be generating the most interest, and the question there is whether teachers can sustain the passion they demonstrated in November and December and translate it into political clout in the May primary. If they do, the election will become a referendum on James McIntyre and his educational philosophy. By New Year’s Eve, 16 potential candidates had picked up petitions for five school board races. Incum-
Betty Bean bents Lynne Fugate, Pam Trainor and Gloria Deathridge, all of whom voted to extend McIntyre’s contract to late 2017, are drawing opposition. Watch for new opponents to sign up to run against first-term 9th District board member Trainor, who was elected with strong support from teachers. This year will be a different story. In addition to the district’s menu of perpetual candidates, her potential opponents include at least two former educators – Jim McClain (a former principal, school board member and a former Trainor supporter) and Larry Clark (a retired teacher and county commissioner who now works for the sheriff as a bailiff). Trainor’s most interesting opponent could be first-time candidate Amber Rountree, a school librarian and outspoken critic of McIntyre’s heavy reliance
Amber Rountree on data-gathering and high stakes testing. Rountree said she will find new employment if she is elected. “My understanding is that as an employee of the board, I would probably not be able to hold my teaching position,” she said. “But my degree is in library science, which is more versatile and not as tied to working in a public school environment. My gut instinct is to go ahead and do it. I think we need to see some change – pro-active, not reactive change. I’m going to run a very grassroots campaign.” She has set up a Twitter account (@vote4rountree) and chosen a slogan –“Growing Great Schools”– and a logo – a tree.
Patti Bounds, a veteran teacher at Brickey-McCloud Elementary School and longtime Powell resident, may run in school board District 7 where term-limited county commissioner R. Larry Smith is a candidate. Incumbent Kim Severance, who also voted to extend McIntyre’s contract, is not seeking re-election. Bounds plans to retire from Knox County Schools at year’s end. She teaches kindergarten. Another teacher, Cheri Siler, will be picking up a petition next week to run in the Democratic primary for state senate for the 7th District, the seat now held by Republican Stacey Campfield. She will be the guest of honor at a fundraiser at Central Flats and Taps 5-10 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 30. Her mother, Donna Edwards, will serve as her campaign treasurer, and contributions can be mailed to Cheri Siler for State Senate, 5507 Shannondale Road, Knoxville, TN 37918; or through her Facebook page (Cheri Kay Siler) or her campaign website, Cherisiler.com.
Mediating the tire store wars Moyers had granted summary judgment to Corbitt, who was managing broker for Heath Shuler Real Estate LLC in October 2004 when Plaintiff Crumpton entered into a contract to purchase real estate that included a house and business from Kelly and Patsy Beeler. Patricia Grissom was the affiliate broker for the transSandra action. Clark Crumpton was damaged, he said, when a 5-year noncompete agreement was not included with all copies of In a decision filed Dec. the contract. He sued every23, the court overturned a one in sight. decision by Knox County Corbitt asked to be disChancellor Mike Moyers to missed, saying she was not dismiss Mary Bea Corbitt personally involved in the from a lawsuit involving plaintiff’s purchase and had Reid R. Crumpton and Kelly no knowledge of the transBeeler Tire Service. action, therefore could not When is a managing real estate broker responsible for the action of an affiliate broker? Pretty much always, according to the state Court of Appeals.
GOSSIP AND LIES ■ Big stories for 2014: ■ 384 files are misplaced in the Criminal Court Clerk’s office and three dozen citizens are herded off to jail. Clerk Joy McCroskey goes on cruise. ■ Ruthie Kuhlman, Herb Moncier and Brian Hornback get stranded on a desert island. Together. Republicans everywhere rejoice ... and lay odds on which will survive. ■ Sheriff Jimmy “J.J.” Jones gets the endorsement of former Sheriff Tim Hutchison. Hundreds of heretofore-undecided GOP primary voters start wearing those Bobby Waggoner armbands that read: “Wagg 4 (star).”
■ Competition for who can draw the most public pensions accelerates when ace reporter Snidely Whiplash discovers a former city teacher working as a bailiff for the Sheriff ’s Office after a retirement job in city government. ■ Ahh, public employment. Where some make little and many make much. ■ Doug Harris, in voting to extend Superintendent Jim McIntyre’s contract until Dec. 31, 2017, mentioned that he serves some 50,000 meals a day. Wow! And there’s a CEO job open just up the road at Ruby Tuesday. ■ Stacey Campfield is working on gun bills, mentioning on his blog that he’s remorseful about allowing cities and counties to opt out of state
be held liable for the actions of the affiliate broker. In an opinion written by Judge G. Michael Swiney, the court said Tennessee law created a duty on the part of the managing broker, and Corbitt failed to show that she met the standard of care sufficient to satisfy her duty. The court reversed the summary judgment and remanded the case for further proceedings. Corbitt argued: “My duties as managing broker at Heath Shuler Real Estate did not include involvement in the day-to-day activities or review of the routine contracts of independent contractor realtors affiliated with the brokerage.” Judge Moyers said to hold a managing broker respon-
law. “A citizen should know what is and what isn’t a state crime statewide,” he said. ■ Stacey also noted his resemblance to Jason Garrett and said he’s not a candidate for coach of the Dallas Cowboys. ■
With Cheri Siler joining Dr. Richard Jason Garrett Briggs in AP photo/Tim Sharp trying to oust Campfield, one could call it the race of the red-haireds versus the no-haired. ■ Human capital just ain’t what it used to be. When Superintendent Jim McIntyre hired
sible for “possible misrepresentation or negligence of her affiliate brokers” would create a strict liability for managing brokers for the negligent or intentional torts of their affiliates. The appellate court held “by simply and purposefully remaining ignorant of the substance and details of an affiliate’s transactions,” a managing broker could “completely escape her statutory duty and any liability.” In the Crumpton case, the court held, the managing broker’s liability, if any, arises from a breach of her own statutory duty – not from the actions of the affiliate broker. It’s an interesting case with several well-known participants.
former KPD guy Gus Paidousis to head up school security and boosted its ranks to 100 or so, who vetted those hired? We had a guard arrested recently for indecent exposure at Tyson Park. Somebody get that guy a petition to run for county commission! ■ Lt. Gov. Ron Ramsey turned heads with his Christmas greeting in which he celebrated that dates are being set for executions. Finally, it’s about time and joy to the world, you-all. ■ Mike McMillan has as much chance of being school superintendent on Dec. 31, 2017, as does Jim McIntyre. So what was that extension really about? It boosted the buy-out by $225,000.
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Shopper news • JANUARY 6, 2014 • A-5
Down goes Gibbs Hall Down goes Gibbs Hall, well, soon. The old athletic dorm and Stokely Center will be mere memories as Tennessee clears the way for progress – parking garage, new dorm and three practice fields for football. This dorm was built in ’64 and named in a kneejerk reaction to the death of assistant basketball coach Bill Gibbs, 35. He was lost on the morning of Feb. 3 that year, when a commuter plane crashed on takeoff in Gainesville, Fla. An entire generation may not have known or cared about Bill Gibbs. I did. That was one of the worst days in 60 years of newspaper life. The basketball Vols were in Florida for a Monday night game. Gibbs was the advance scout who
Marvin West
had charted the Gators on Saturday. He gave his report to Ray Mears and the team at the Sunday walkthrough. The next day he would be moving on to see a future foe. When I heard about the crash, I read tea leaves. Bill wasn’t at the hotel so he almost certainly was on the flight. I hurried to the airport. There were no survivors. I got around enough police tape to see the wreckage from a distance but couldn’t confirm anything with authorities,
Winter birding January and February can be gloomy, cold and damp. Up in Vermont they call this time of year “stick season.” Aptly named – just look at the hillsides of bare limbs and twigs – all you see are sticks.
Dr. Bob Collier
This is prime season for watching familiar yard-bird friends at our bird feeders. So why would someone even consider going out on a cold damp morning into a world of sticks and stems to look at birds, especially since there’s nothing out there but a few cardinals and chickadees, and a bunch of little brown sparrows that all look alike, and are nearly impossible to see anyway? Well, now, that’s a good question, but it has some good answers (or I wouldn’t have asked it in the first place). For one thing, just getting outside in the winter, birds or no birds, is something everyone should try. Once you’ve been out and about in the winter and found that you can survive, and even be comfortable, it tends to grow on you. You will discover that all those trees and bushes and grassy fields that were there in the summer are still out there – they just look different. Even though they’re bare and brown, they are full of bird food. All those weeds and flowers have produced zillions of seeds, and the sumacs and grapes and poison ivy vines still have dried fruits and berries. And on most days throughout the winter, lots of tiny, tasty insects are out and about on all that vegetation. This adds up to a lot of food for the scores of species of birds that choose to winter here with us. They’re all busy making a living, foraging through the short winter days, often too busy to pay much attention to a nearby, nosy birdwatcher. They’re generally easier to see and observe without all those pesky leaves on the trees and bushes, and you often have time to really watch some of the harder to spot ones, like the sparrows, and really get to know them. We know there are a lot of them out there – Christmas counts have shown 80 or more species on a single day. In a good place, you’ll be amazed at the numbers of species and individual birds that you can see. We have no end of good winter birding opportunities in these parts. Think of Tommy Schumpert Park
and Halls Community Park. Without baseball or soccer, these parks are usually peaceful, quiet, birdy places. Having nearby streams, good open field, brushy, and forest-edge bird habitats, plus nice walking terrain and even paved walking paths, they make winter birding easy and fun. We spent a couple of hours at Schumpert Park on the morning of Dec. 19 and came up with 25
no matter how I asked the same questions. This was another time in the news business. It was important to be first but more important to be accurate. Of course I wrote the story but the combination of personal hurt and professional frustration made for a bad-hair day. Gibbs Hall became a focal point in my many years of covering the Volunteers. Access to athletes was far more open then and I conducted almost daily interviews in the dorm lobby, after practice and after dinner, without Haywood Harris or Bud Ford arranging or monitoring conversations. Steve Kiner and I once talked for two hours in his room – about life, obligations, responsibilities, ex-
pectations. The linebacker was struggling. I was a young husband and father and Sunday school teacher. I thought I had all the answers. It was an unforgettable experience. We remain friends. Kiner and Gibbs Hall – he was guardian of an adopted stray dog named Rabies. I believe it slept under his bed. He and other Vols smuggled in meat scraps. Maids and janitors didn’t notice. Kiner and Gibbs Hall – he once walloped basketball giant Rupert Breedlove over a table dispute in the dining room and had to skip a few meals as punishment. Tim Townes, very small freshman safety, was misidentified in the dining room by assistant coach Bob Davis: “Son, this is the football section. Wrestlers sit over there.” Gus Manning persuaded Tom T. Hall and part of his band to stop one evening as
cultural enrichment for the Volunteers. That was the first time I heard “Watermelon Wine.” Joe Louis came to see and be seen. I tried but the former heavyweight boxing champion didn’t say much. Bernard King lives on in Gibbs memories. Greg Phillips was second-team football but first in electrical engineering. He was studying late when loud music interrupted concentration. He took a walk, found the sound and asked the basketball star to turn it down. King said OK. Greg went back to books, heard more music and made another trip. Sorry about that. And there was peace and relative quiet. Phillips seemed more determined on the third trip. When Bernard opened the door, Greg picked him up and dumped him onto the stereo. It broke. It is good
for all of us that King didn’t. Police, now and then, visited Gibbs Hall. Eventually doors were locked. That didn’t prevent the occasional girl incident. The dorm was a focal point as recently as January 2010, after the sudden departure of a famous football coach. From a second floor window, somebody screamed, “Go to hell, Lane Kiffin.” John Ward delivered the most famous dorm mention, Vol Network, 1967, from the campus of Mississippi State. One fine guard hit free throws with seven seconds left in the third overtime to clinch the SEC championship. The big trophy belonged to the Volunteers. Ward said: “Wrap it up, tie it in orange and white, and send it to Bill Justus, care of Gibbs Hall, Knoxville, Tennessee!”
species of birds, including four species of sparrows and a surprise flyover by three sandhill cranes. Nice, easy, pleasant birding. In the winter, any place with water seems to offer a higher concentration of bird life. Even as small an area as the duck pond in Fountain City often comes up with a surprise wild duck or gull. Places a little farther out such as Eagle Bend Fish Hatchery on the Clinch River in Clinton, the Songbird Trail along the river below Norris Dam and the
Norris State Park above the dam, Cove Lake State Park at Caryville, and Fort Loudoun Dam and the lake above it up through Knoxville, all offer the usual as well as unexpected water- and shoretype birds all winter. With a little more time, birders try a bit farther afield, looking for birds that wouldn’t ordinarily be expected to be here. Word recently got around that a couple of short-eared owls had been seen hunting over the tall-grass meadows of Cade’s Cove. Short-eared
owls nest in northern Canada and the Northwest, and in winter down through the middle of the U.S. They are rare for us East Tennesseans to get to see. And so on Friday afternoon, Dec. 20, three of us set out for the Cove. The hills and fields were lovely, and traffic nearly nonexistent. We set up our birding scopes on a grassy elevation along Hyatt Lane. Sure enough, as dusk approached, there they were, flying like big feathered moths back and forth over the fields. One was even
kind enough to perch in a leafless tree and pose for us for over 30 minutes. The owls were accompanied by three owl-like hawks called northern harriers. We also saw wild turkeys and deer. And then, across the road came a fat, shiny mama bear with three cubs! It was a scene that will stay with us for a while. Winter birding is a great alternative to the couch or the mall with the woods mosquito- and tick-free, and alive with birds to learn from and enjoy. Good birding!
(Marvin West invites reader reaction. His address is westwest6@netzero.com)
A-6 • JANUARY 6, 2014 • Shopper news
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Shopper news • JANUARY 6, 2014 • A-7
The Written Word Although I have much to write to you, I would rather not use paper and ink; instead I hope to come to you and talk with you face to face, so that our joy may be complete. (2 John 12 NRSV)
Kien Nguyen is ready for the New Year’s Day service at Church of Divine Mercy. The brightly lit nativity scene waits for Epiphany. From left are Bui Ann, Trish and Bao Nguyen. The writing translates roughly to “Emmanuel God is with us.”
Celebrating with worship By Sherri Gardner Howell The faithful at Church of Divine Mercy did not lounge around in front of the television on New Year’s Day – at least not between 8:30 and 10 p.m. Eager to celebrate
Father Hoan Dinh swings the thurible over the communion sacraments at the Church of Divine Mercy. Photos by Sherri Gardner Howell
Kayla Vinh, a student at Catholic High School, talks with Father Hoan Dinh about her altar responsibilities before the New Year’s Day service begins at the Vietnamese church.
the new year in their new church building, approximately 75 people joined in fellowship at the church off Carmichael Road in West Knoxville. The Catholic church for those who want to hear mass in Vietnamese has been around for more than 15 years but now has its own church building. Father Hoan Dinh presided over the mass at the church. In addition to celebrating the new year, Father Dinh said January 1 is the Solemnity of Mary, the Mother of God and is a holy day for Catholics. He said the Vietnamese congregation is happy to have a permanent home with room to grow. (For more on Church of Divine Mercy, see the story on page A-1.)
FaithWalk steps up for AIDS awareness
Central Baptist members Laura Smith, Eli Stryk, Ted Stryk, Larkin Bristow, Kent Bristow, Stacey Bristow and Maria Bristow walk on Gay Street during FaithWalk. Photos submitted
By Wendy Smith The Second Annual FaithWalk, “Knoxville Steps Up for HIV,” was held downtown recently. Approximately 85 people participated in the walk, which b e ne f it te d S a m a r it a n M i n i s t r y, Moreland the National Week of Prayer for the Healing of AIDS and Smoky Mountains Lions Charities. The event was hosted by Immaculate Conception Catholic Church. FaithWalk is an attempt to engage the faith and HIV/ AIDS communities, says Wayne Smith of Samaritan Ministry of Central Baptist Church of Bearden. In many ways, life has improved for HIV patients. Patients are less likely to struggle finding jobs and housing, he says. “People have a better understanding of how you get HIV.”
Greer Roberts participates in the recent FaithWalk, which was held in conjunction with World AIDS Day.
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See? This is a problem. What the author of 2 John may have said to the community of faith we will never know, because it was said and not written. If it had been written, we would likely have it recorded in Scripture. In much the same way, I have an issue with emails. Don’t get me wrong. I appreciate email as much as the next person. It is quick and efficient and quite handy. However, there are advantages to getting a letter in the mail. Let me explain. We have, in the family archives, several letters my grandfather wrote to the young lady he would eventually marry – my grandmother Belle. She was well and truly named; Papa claimed forever that she was the prettiest girl who ever came out of Union County. His letters to her were elegant, humble, and very proper: in them, he called her “Miss Petree.” (It was a different time: as long as she lived, when she spoke of him to friends and neighbors, she referred to him as “Mr. Dunn.”) I also have one letter written to Belle by one of her 10 brothers. It was a letter of admiration and appreciation. I have considered giving it to one of his direct descendants, but so far, have (selfishly) kept it. Mother still has all of the correspondence she exchanged with Daddy before they were married. She was working at Miller’s Department Store and he was in school at Lincoln Memorial University. Those letters are filed, in order, in a cedar keepsake box. I have not read them, considering them private and personal. When my brother was born (not long before the end of World War II), Daddy sent telegrams to relatives announcing the birth. At least one of those documents was sent back to Daddy and Mother as a keepsake. It gave Warren’s name, date of birth, birth
Cross Currents
Lynn Pitts
weight, then remarked, “Mother and son are fine; father’s condition questionable.” That telegram is still in the family archives. When I was born three years later, Daddy made long distance phone calls. It was the new technology, very up-to-date. However, I have always felt a little cheated, because I didn’t have a telegram I could hold in my hand. I don’t know what Daddy said in those phone calls, and I would love to know! We also have all of the war correspondence from Daddy’s younger brother, who fought in the South Pacific, and who was in a foxhole on Okinawa when he learned of Warren’s birth. All of these are documents of a different time, of a different world. They are, however, historical documents, even if they are a family history and not of great importance to anyone else. They are a little chunk of our story, and that is, after all, what history is all about: story – yours, mine, ours, our country’s, our world’s, our universe’s story. I encourage you to find out your story, your history. Ask your parents and your grandparents to tell you their stories. Check out old family Bibles; look at the pages between the Old and New Testaments; frequently there are pages there on which to record births, marriages, and deaths. Go to the McClung Historical Collection, 601 Gay Street. It is part of the Knox County library system, and an unimaginable wealth of genealogical information. Go to Ancestry.com. Learn your stor y!
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A-8 • JANUARY 6, 2014 • Shopper news
UUNIK Academy teaches respect, discipline By Betty Bean The last day of school before the Christmas break, the big crowd in the Vine M i d d l e School auditorium was getting rowdy while waiting for the Jenkins Kwanzaa celebration to begin. Costumed dancers, poets and players scrambled up to the stage as the decibel level rose. The master of ceremonies took the microphone and asked for attention. He wasn’t playing. Remarkably, the crowd hushed. Afterward, Reggie Jenkins explained how he knew what to do: “A few people asked me to try to help calm the crowd down, and for me, it’s just the way I was raised – kind of like when I was growing up in church. Even if nobody’d been in my ear, I was going to say something because a lot of people put their heart and soul into that program and sometimes you just have to remind folks of where they are, who they are and what they represent.” A graduate of the University of Tennessee with degrees in math and statistics, Jenkins learned the value of hard work and respecting his elders from his father, who owned a barbershop. “I watched how he ran the shop – ‘Come in, take your hat off, pull your pants up.’ He was like the community father,” said Jenkins, whose volunteer work has made him well known at Vine and other schools in the heart of the city. His day job is in sales, but his heart is in the work he does with young people –
primarily with boys – as executive director of UUNIK Academy, a mentoring program for young AfricanAmerican males. The name is an acronym for the seven principles of Kwanzaa, which promote unity and responsibility among family, friends and community. “I have always had a passion for young people,” Jenkins said. “I worked in the school system for three years after I graduated, and after that at the YMCA. I always dreamed of having my own after-school program – so many youth programs are just babysitting and don’t get a lot of these young people ready for the world. I just really wanted something where children were really getting something.” He started UUNIK Academy in September 2003. It operates 5:307:30 p.m. Thursdays and 9 a.m.-1 p.m. Saturdays. UUNIK Academy sponsors College Careers Week for Vine students in February, a “Calling all Males” citywide conference in the fall and a “Calling all Females” conference in the spring. “My 5-year goal is to run Monday through Saturday. We work on academics, enrichment and counseling. We teach them how to correctly act out and come up with solutions. We go on field trips and try to find out what their talents and interests are, outside of athletics. We deal with cultural enrichment, history, and build on that for self esteem and self respect. We emphasize personal etiquette.” Parenthetically, Jenkins helps kids whose career dreams involve professional athletics work on backup plans. “I break that reality down,” he said. “I’m not going to deter them, but
Students from West Valley who participated in this year’s junior clinic band are (front) Nikhil Patel, Ben Collins, Morgan Post, Colin Patton, Gage Pagodin; (second row) Emily Chung, Hibah Javed, Josh Duzan, Megan Malone, Caris Morgenegg; (third row) Justin Edaugal, Audrey Plescia, Kelsey Shockley, Samantha Raymond, Sheyenne Johnson; (fourth row) Ethan Gossage, Aaron Lively, Tyler Chan, Travis Roberts, Garrett Coppock, Brandon Jacoby. Not Pictured is Ryan Petersen. Photo submitted
Band students raise the bar A select group of middle school band students from all over East Tennessee were chosen as members of this year’s regional junior clinic. The clinic is considered tryouts for two regional bands, Gold and Silver. West Valley Middle School had 21 students who tried out, some of whom were hand-picked by their instructors. Half made the Gold band and half made Silver.
Musical selections for both Gold and Silver included a range of classical music, and the bands had only Sara a day and a half to rehearse Barrett together before the official performance. Jennifer Jacoby, mother of WVMS student and Gold band member BranParticipants who made don Jacoby, said in general the cut performed at Oak band helps build character, Ridge High School on Dec. but being in the regional 7, the bands’ only perfor- bands kicks things up a mance. notch.
“(Regional band) gives them a whole new taste of music and a whole new appreciation of the arts,” said Jacoby. “They’re more challenged than in the regular band program. Music in general is a totally unique experience, and it exposes them to an experience away from testing. It is very rewarding for the kids to work so hard and perform the pieces regionally.”
I inform them that in the past 40 years, only one person from Knoxville (Elston Turner) has made it to the NBA and only 15 to the NFL.” Jenkins and his wife of 17 years, Kamesha, have a 7-month-old son, Jabari. To contact Reggie Jenkins, go to http:// uunikacademy.org or email uunik.academy@ gmail.com or call 865-3844475.
Karns Fire Department engineer Nathan Patterson, students Nathan Welden, Arabella Black and Abigail Weldon, firefighter James Tolliver, (back) fire department representative Kelley Grabill and student Caleb Cleghorn. Photo by S. Barrett
Kids helping kids By Sara Barrett Students at Karns Elementary School collected new toys since the first part of November for children in their area who may otherwise go without any at Christmas. Karns Volunteer Fire Department distributed the toys to families within its service area. It has done so since shortly after the department was started in 1978. This is the first year the school has participated; students at Amherst and Hardin Valley elementary schools have participated in previous years. There were also bins for donations at
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both the Food City on Middlebrook Pike and Hardin Valley Road. Toys, books and games were all accepted. “We receive a lot of phone calls from this area,” said Karns Volunteer Fire Department representative Kelley Grabill of the request for assistance at Christmastime. The toy drive at Karns Elementary was very successful, according to faculty member Dona Bean, who said she had to empty the tops of the bins in order to make room for more toys the students brought in.
Free tutoring is available Free tutoring is available online for any student in Knox County from kindergarten through college. Visit www.tutor. com/tutortn and enter your Knox County Public Library card numbers to connect with experts for oneto-one homework help or tutoring sessions in online classrooms. You do not have to create an account to use the service.
Shopper news • JANUARY 6, 2014 • A-9
The Rotary Club of Knoxville packed the back room at Naples for a special New Year’s Eve celebration honoring the club’s international ties.
Happy New Year … at 6 p.m. By Sherri Gardner Howell There was no waiting for the stroke of midnight for members of the Rotary Club of Knoxville on New Year’s Eve. Approximately 50 members gathered in the back room at Naples restaurant at 5 p.m. so they could be ready to count down to the New Year – at 6 p.m. “We welcomed in the new year with a toast to our Rotary partners in Hungary,” explains Townes Osborn. “This is our 11th annual New Year’s Eve party at Naples. Every year we toast our international partner clubs in Hungary and South Africa. The toast to Hungary is at 6 p.m., when it is a new year there.” The party has given birth to the Unicum Society,
named for the traditional drink that is found in most Hungarian homes. “Unicum is an elixir that every home in Hungary keeps on hand because it helps one digest the rich Hungarian food,” says Osborn, adding, “but the taste of Unicum is an acquired taste.” The toast isn’t easy for newcomers as the Rotarians take a drink of Unicum and yell, “Egeszegedre,” which roughly means “Cheers! Here’s to your health” in Hungarian. The Hungarian connection has a serious side. The club has partnered with the Hungarian Rotary Club in Mateszalak for 18 years on humanitarian projects. In
October, for example, Rotary Club of Knoxville collected $5,000 to send to the Mateszalak club for them to buy Christmas gifts for the children in a nearby orphanage. Knoxville Rotary also partners with two clubs in South Africa, and they toasted the New Year in their honor as well. The toast was with Amarula, which goes down much smoother, says Osborn. A new toast was added this year to the Hungarian portion of the celebration. It is a mixture of the Unicum, which is made by the Zwack company, and Jack Daniel’s whiskey. “We call it Zwack Jack,” says Osborn, “and when we drink it, we raise
Back to work after holidays The old post office and bait shop on Knox Lane behind the Fountain City McDonald’s are gone. Coming soon is Speedy Cash, a title and installment loan company, being built by HL Construction.
Nancy Whittaker
Last week I met the folks at Bluewater Laundromat, 3721 N. Broadway. This “futuristic” laundromat claims the largest Speed Queen washers in Tennessee. The washing machines range from the “double,” which holds 20 pounds of laundry, to a 100-pounder which holds the equivalent of 10 loads of laundry. These are the biggest washers I’ve seen. Info: www.bluewaterlaundromat.com or 2476230.
■
Rossini at Fountain City BPA
Larry Rossini, director of the Tennessee Small Business Development Center, will speak at the Fountain City Business and Professional Association at noon Wednesday, Jan. 8, in the fellowship hall of Central Baptist Church. He will discuss business checkup, new license requirements and new micro loan opportunities. Lunch is $10, first come first served. ■
Williams gets regional honor
Rebecca Williams, director of sales and marketing at the Knoxville Convention Center, was named Supplier of the Year by the East Williams Tennessee Meeting Professionals.
A Knoxville native, Williams is a UT graduate with a bachelor’s degree in journalism. ■
■
Mitchell promoted
Messer Construction Co. has promoted Brian Mitchell to project manager in the Knoxville office. He was previously Brian Mitchell a project engineer.
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Ken Tuggle has been promoted to Rural/ Metro battalion chief in Knox County. Tuggle began working for Rural/ Ken Tuggle Metro Fire Department in 1998 as a reserve and was hired as a full-time firefighter in 2000.
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Getting ready to toast a new year in honor of their sister club in Hungary are Rotary Club of Knoxville members Doug McKamey, Mack and Cheryl Gentry and Bob Parrott. Photos submitted
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A-10 • JANUARY 6, 2014 • Shopper news
News from First Tennessee
NEWS FROM BRIGHTSTAR
Practical tips for senior flu prevention
Flu season can get downright nasty, and an infected senior loved one can not only mean discomfort for them but also potentially more serious complications like pneumonia. The Centers for Disease Control offers these three tips to keep your seniors safe from the u: 1. Take time to get a u vaccine. The CDC recommends a yearly u vaccine as the rst step in protecting against u viruses. People at high risk of serious u complications include young children, pregnant women, people with chronic health conditions like asthma, diabetes or heart and lung disease and people 65 years or older. 2. Take everyday actions to stop the spread of germs. Avoid close quarters with sick people. If you have the u, stay home for at least 24 hours after your fever is gone except to get medical care. While sick, limit contact with others as much as possible to avoid infecting them. Cover your nose and mouth with a tissue when you cough or sneeze. Throw the tissue away after use. Wash hands often with soap and water, and avoid touching your eyes, nose and mouth.
3. Take u antiviral drugs if your doctor prescribes them. If you get the u, antiviral drugs can treat your illness. Antiviral drugs aren’t antibiotics. They’re prescription medicines and aren’t available overthe-counter. Studies show that u antiviral drugs work best for treatment when started within two days of getting sick, but starting them later can still help, especially if the sick person is high-risk or very sick from the u.
Do you or a loved one need help with personal care? We are here for you! For more information call (865) 281-5740 or visit us at www.brightstarcare.com We are always hiring exceptional caregivers. Apply on-line at: Brightstarcare.com/career-center
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First Tennessee Bank: 150 years of service By Pam Fansler First Tennessee Bank’s promise is to be the best at serving our customers, one opportunity at a time. The bank was founded in 1864 Fansler when Abraham Lincoln was president, and employees have been practicing that promise ever since – even if it wasn’t written down. No financial institution could endure for a century and a half without dedicated employees earning the trust of generations of customers. Next March, First Tennessee will celebrate its 150th anniversary. We’re planning an array of events to honor our customers, employees and communities. It’s not every day that an institution reaches that milestone, and we want to show our pride in our history. Galas, historical displays,
signs and banners, an advertising campaign, a book and more will proclaim that First Tennessee is Tennessee’s bank, as it has been for 150 years. First Tennessee is the largest bank headquartered in the state, and thanks to our customers, we’re staying number one. First Tennessee has the leading market share for all of Tennessee, according to the latest Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. figures. Our deposits grew faster than the market statewide and in each of our three regions in Tennessee. Such success might not have been foreseen when we were founded. But through the years we expanded into most markets in the state. In East Tennessee, milestones included the acquisition of United American Bank in 1983 and Valley Fidelity Bank in 1991. Most recently we completed the conversion of Mountain National Bank to First Tennessee, giving us an expanded presence and new options
for our customers. Our legacy of trust and service gives us perspective. First Tennessee was founded when the American Civil War was raging, and we’ve served customers through World Wars and social upheaval, through the Great Depression and the Great Recession. First Tennessee has been a part of the state’s history. We’ve provided financial services, jobs and community investment. We’re First Tennessee and we put Tennessee first. We are very proud of our strong presence in East Tennessee. We will continue to invest in the communities we serve, supporting education, economic development, health and the arts. When our communities prosper we do too. That’s been our guiding principle for 150 years and will be into the future. At First Tennessee, we’re ready for our next 150 years of serving customers, one opportunity at a time. Pam Fansler is president, East Tennessee Region, First Tennessee Bank.
News from Moxley Carmichael
The Moxley Carmichael Method By Cynthia Moxley Many East Tennesseans are planning for the New Year, setting resolutions to save money, lose weight, kick a bad habit or cross a few items off bucket lists. Jan. 1 marks a time for planning in the public relations industry as well. At Moxley Carmichael, we’ve been working with clients for weeks to prepare for 2014. Our clients have big goals and need plans to achieve them. C. Moxley We recommend preparing a strategic communications plan for the year that outlines not only your company’s objectives but also the strategies and tactics you’ll use to get your messages out and enhance your reputation. Whether we’re working with businesses in health care, professional services, education, consumer goods or nonprofit, we start with a few key areas. Any local business can benefit from focusing on these recommendations as we kick off 2014. Branding: What is your brand? Is it consistent? Recognizable? Effective? Consider gathering your executive team for a branding session focused on defining – or redefining – your brand. Make sure your strategy is effective in representing your organization to customers, potential customers and other stakeholders. Digital presence: How are you using technology and digital media to promote your business? Examine your website, blog, email marketing and social media pages. Do they reflect your brand and use consistent messaging? Companies are expanding their digital presence in 2014 with strategic
moves like adding a mobile-friendly website or using Facebook advertising. Media and presentation training: When you talk to local news outlets or civic groups about your business, how effective will you be? Take time to train key staff to serve as successful spokespersons whose messages resonate – while also providing value so they’re invited back. Crisis communication: Update your crisis plan so your team is ready to handle emerging situations. Fast, accurate and effective communication is critical in overcoming a crisis if your organization faces one in 2014. In 2013 Applebee’s fired an employee for posting a photo to Reddit showing the sales receipt of a pastor who refused to pay the automatic 18 percent gratuity the restaurant had added, and thousands flooded Applebee’s Facebook page in her support. Applebee’s posted impersonal responses and was accused of deleting negative comments and blocking users. This defensive approach angered customers and tarnished Applebee’s reputation. In contrast, when an insensitive tweet about President Obama’s grandmother was accidentally posted to the KitchenAid account instead of the employee’s personal Twitter page, the head of the KitchenAid brand started tweeting 15 minutes later to apologize and assure followers that the staffer would no longer tweet for KitchenAid. The immediate, honest approach was well received, and damage was minimized. With our top PR tips, you can enter 2014 with a purpose and a plan. We love doing business in East Tennessee, and we know those who work and own companies here share that love. We wish you a happy and prosperous New Year.
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Shopper news • JANUARY 6, 2014 • A-11
NEWS FROM GRACE CHRISTIAN ACADEMY OF KNOXVILLE
Grace students help Mission of Hope By Shannon Morris In the spirit of Christmas cheer, a handful of our middle school students had the opportunity to spread some peace, love and joy to a group of students from Huntsville, TN., on Dec. 5. For the last four years, students at Grace Christian Academy have been involved in a cooperative effort with Mission of Hope to assist children from impoverished backgrounds during the Christmas season. This year, a group of eight students from the Middle School Worship Arts
class, along with four staff members, went to Huntsville School to help in this annual project. Once the students arrived on-site, they helped unload the delivery truck and unpacked dozens of boxes of toys, which were designated by age group. The gymnasium at Huntsville was filled with more than toys, as the GCA students performed two short programs for the kids during the day. In addition, the students played games with the children, led the boys and girls in the singing of Christmas carols, and spent time encouraging each child as they met with them and
spoke to them. GCA staff and students, along with other volunteers, walked with the Huntsville students through the Christmas “store,” giving these children the opportunity to choose two toys. It was a tremendous opportunity to interact with students, some of whom have come from a very difficult background. It was an inspiring way to kick off the Christmas season and to show the love of Jesus to our neighbors north of us through a spirit of giving. We look forward to tak- Grace middle schooler Dexter Reasons (right) helps a stuing part in Mission of Hope again dent at Huntsville School choose items from Mission of Hope. next year! Photo by Teri Rash
Soccer balls for Haiti By Julie Pointer Why would a group of 72 third graders willingly choose to eat black beans and rice instead of pizza? If it means being able to provide soccer balls for kids in Haiti who have nothing to play with, it’s an easy choice for the 3rd graders at Grace Christian Academy. The Thursday before Thanksgiving, GCA 3rd graders brought in their $4 like they always do to pay for their pizza lunch, but this day they gave their money to provide for kids in Haiti. They were able to talk to a college student from Haiti to learn more about his country. They experienced a typical Haitian meal to replace the normal pizza lunch. The 3rd grade classes are excited about the partnership they have developed with Blackmon Pediatrics and Harvest Field Ministries this year to provide supplies for a joint
mission effort in Haiti. In September, they collected boxes of medical and dental supplies for the clinics in Haiti. After the Friends and Family Campaign at GCA, in which students began asking for donations to help fund the new playground at Grace, their thoughts turned to their partners in Haiti. Students realized that children there did not have anything to play with, so they stepped up to meet the need. Sixty-one MacGregor soccer balls were purchased with donations from “Have a Ball for Haiti.” Many students brought in above and beyond the $4 they were asked to donate. They were so excited when the balls arrived and they got to see all that their sacrifice had provided for others. When asked if their sacrifice that day was worth it, the response from most was, “When can we do it again?”
Grace 3rd graders Jake Blankenship, Gracie Coffey, Hayden Whitehead, Marlee Giles, Pierce Browning, Maggie Blackmon, Sydney Thompson and Ian Setzer hold soccer balls that will be sent to children in Haiti.
Grace 3rd graders Lillie Peterson and Ian Setzer enjoy a lunch of rice and beans instead of pizza to help buy soccer balls for children in Haiti. Photos by Kim Giles
New Year’s reflections By Rachel M. Hannon, Grace Christian Academy teacher The coming of a new year traditionally brings a time for reflection and resolution. It is a stepping stone in one’s life: an opportunity to appreciate the blessings and accomplishments of the past and determine to make the future better. The lists of New Year’s resolutions are often long, but contain a common theme of personal improvement. Most of us resolve to lose weight, exercise or learn something new. As a classroom teacher of high school freshmen and seniors, I wonder how teenagers view the new year. First, one has to understand the significance of a new year for a high school student. To them, it is more of a transition than an end. The school year is half over. The pressures
of midterm exams are past and Form), commit to a college and important chapter in their lives students have had several weeks make concrete plans for the is about to close. It is also a time to relax. With the start of a new future. This time of year brings of anticipation of having to face semester everyone has a perfect a sense of excitement as an the unknown. Ultimately, the start of the year allows grade in every subject. an opportunity to finish Students are focused on strong. One senior stated the distant approach of that now is the “time to summer, knowing that go as hard as you can. It’s May represents the end a chance to start proving of the year for them. who you really are.” Perhaps the best analogy shared by one student is When asked about that New Year’s is like their resolutions, halftime. You know the responses of my where you stand based students were varied. on the first half, but you However, there was one now have an opportunity underlying theme. While to pull ahead or stage a adult resolutions focus comeback. on self-improvement, For seniors, the new the vast majority of my year is the beginning of Grace teacher Rachel Hannon (standing) chats students’ resolutions the end. It is now time with students Madison McMullen, Shelby Green, concerned others. To to complete the FAFSA Lori Lower, Morgan Jackson and Miranda Pratt. the students, New Year’s (Federal Student Aid Photo by S. Morris is an opportunity to
decide to do something different, make improvements and correct mistakes. For them, this is a time to improve relationships with parents, siblings, classmates and the Lord. Many teenagers resolved to do something good— give of their time, encourage a friend or help someone in need. It seems adults can learn a lot about what really matters from a teenager. Looking at our list of resolutions and plans, maybe it is time for us to look out and up instead of in. As one student put it, “A new year means a new start, a fresh beginning. The old year is gone, and no matter what you do, you can’t get it back. The good times, the bad days, the experiences, are in the past. New Year’s is a time to reflect, to laugh, to cry, but also to move on.”
Accredited by: The Association of Christian Schools International & Southern Association of College and Schools
A-12 • JANUARY 6, 2014 • Shopper news foodcity.com
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January 6, 2014
HEALTH & LIFESTYLES
N EWS FROM PARKWEST, WEST KNOXVILLE ’ S H EALTHCARE LEADER • T REATED WELL .COM • 374-PARK
Diagnosed with breast cancer
Area woman finds a ‘mountaintop experience while in the valley’ Amy Carr did eeverything verything right right. She took good care of herself; and she’d had annual mammograms for eight years. Yet there she was, sitting in a medical office after having an ultrasound, facing the realization that she may have breast cancer. She says the doctor had been very comforting and explained that what the results showed could be an infection mimicking cancer. “But my mind was racing, and I immediately began thinking about my husband and kids,” Carr says. It was just too much to take in. She fainted. “The nurses were right there with a Sprite, fans and cold towels,” she laughs. Carr, now 49, is a living and breathing example of why every woman should take ownership of her health and listen to her own body. If she hadn’t, she might not be alive today. Carr says she noticed a bumpy patch of skin on her breast in March 2011, just a couple of months after having a clear mammogram. When it was still there after her family’s spring break vacation, she reluctantly scheduled an appointment with her physician. “He’s going to think I’m a worrywart,” Carr says of her thoughts at that time. However, when her physician saw that bumpy patch of skin, he was immediately concerned. “He knew what he was looking at,” Carr says. “His response was, ‘I’m very concerned. I’m going to send you to where I send all my tough breast patients.’ ” An ultrasound followed at Parkwest Comprehensive Breast Center, then an MRI at Parkwest Medical Center. At first, all indications were that Carr had cancer in her left breast, but further testing revealed cancer in both breasts. Biopsies showed that Carr had Infiltrating Ductal Carcinoma, one of the most commonly diagnosed breast cancers. She had stage III on the left side, stage II on the right. A PET scan at Thompson Cancer Survival Center later revealed that the cancer had also reached her lymph nodes on the left side. Breast cancer had already struck Carr’s family twice in her lifetime, so she had always taken the threat seriously and was judicious about annual mammograms. She’d even taken the initiative to undergo genetic testing, which showed she did not have the gene that would make her most vulnerable. Still, long months followed as Carr went through the process that has become so familiar to so many, undergoing treatment and surgery for breast cancer. Carr held on tightly to her faith in God and to her family. She continued to work,
ment. ment It was an incredible inccred iin credible time of reflection, gratitude and celebration.” “Now, I just take my little white pill every day and return to Thompson Oncology Group every three months for blood work,” Carr explains. “If it resurfaces somewhere, I know they will do everything in their power to stop it again.” Oncologist Daniel Ibach, MD, says having Carr as a patient inMembers of the choir at Carr’s church donned scarves and the color pink in a show of support as she sang “Trust,” spired everyone who came into a song written by the church minister of music. Carr now contact with her at Thompson tells her story to various groups, telling women “it’s in the West, where she received her valley that the most beautiful lilies grow.” chemotherapy. “Cancer is a fierce battle, with scary, life threatening situations, but it is in the trenches of the war against cancer that heroes shine, Diagnosed with bilateral breast cancer and Amy Carr is truly one of those (both breasts at the same time), Amy heroes.” Carr refused to let cancer define her life. She continued to sing even while going Carr had endured multiple surthrough chemotherapy. geries, chemotherapy, antibiotics and radiation. It was a hard fought battle, but she won. “I truly felt like To celebrate her recovery, Carr (short God was showing me how to truly hair, pink headband, behind the poster) and a dozen of her friends and live, not how to die.” family members participated in the Dr. Ibach says his staff was inKomen Race for the Cure in 2012. spired by Carr not only through her cancer treatment, but by how she through her port were not helping. openly leaned on her faith in God Carr ended up having three more to get her through it. “I would leave surgeries within 30 days. Lab re- the room inspired,” he says, “and sults finally revealed she had a very she was the one going through cherare type of infection that would re- motherapy.” Carr says she learned so much on quire six months of a different type her journey that now she’s writing of antibiotic. From January to June 2012, a book about it. When she talks to Carr took chemo and antibiotics other cancer patients, she encourevery day, more than 2,500 pills ages them to be authentic, the best in all. She then began 35 radiation version of themselves they can be. stayed involved in the day-to-day while recovering from surgery in “Yes, I had a wig that I wore, but lives of her husband and children, October 2011. It was Breast Cancer treatments at Thompson Cancer Survival Center downtown over the there were also times that I wore and continued to sing in her church Awareness Month. choir. “Everything on TV was pink,” summer. Carr had her final treat- bandanas and ball caps,” Carr says. Carr was determined to walk in says Carr. She hadn’t asked to be faith, not fear. part of this pink world of breast In the middle of the time period cancer and wasn’t ready to be a part during which she underwent che- of this sisterhood. Messages were motherapy, Carr performed a song everywhere about the importance written by her music minister titled of early detection and having mam“Trust.” To show their support, the mograms, something that she’d ment Sept. 11, 2012. “That’s when I learned some wonladies of the choir wore scarves on done without fail. Through it all, Carr had con- derful things,” she explains. Other their heads, just like Carr, and the “I was confused and a little anmen donned pink ties and shirts. gry when I thought about how I tinued her full-time job as a social survivors would notice her, introduce “It was an emotional day, an ex- had just had a clear mammogram, worker, and she had stayed actively themselves and share their own surperience that my family and I will yet the cancer was there, and had involved in the lives of her fam- vival stories and encouragement. never forget,” Carr says. been there for probably nine to 12 ily and friends. She only stopped “I want others to realize that Carr endured two separate, six- months,” Carr says. “I encourage singing in the choir for a short time there are many things cancer canmonth rounds of chemotherapy women now to ask for an ultra- while recovering from surgery. not take from you and to embrace Cancer had been unable to define during her 18 months of treatment; sound.” the support from others,” Carr says. however, she says she never looked Then, at a post surgery appoint- her life. With the long journey be“No one should ever face a trial like hind her, she was ready to celebrate. at chemo as poison. She never ment with her oncologist, Carr this alone. I’m so thankful for my hesitated about having the double received news that seven of the 11 When October 2012 came, Carr felt mastectomy either. “The fear of lymph nodes removed from her left very differently about Breast Can- family and friends who walked this road with me.” living with cancer in my body was side still tested positive for cancer. cer Awareness Month. “I can honestly now say that I “I not only accepted being part much greater than the fear of living Six more months of a different cheof the pink sisterhood, I now em- am thankful for the journey,” Carr without ‘my girls,’ ” Carr says of her mo would be in her future. breasts. As if that were not enough, Carr braced it,” Carr says. “Twelve of says with a smile. “When I speak to But the process of fighting can- had also developed a serious infec- my friends and family even joined ladies groups or churches, I remind cer can exhaust even the heartiest tion in her chest wall, and the anti- me in doing the Komen Race for a them that it’s in the valley that the of souls. She remembers a low point biotics she was self-administering Cure, just weeks after my last treat- most beautiful lilies grow!”
“Cancer is a fierce battle, with scary, life threatening situations, but it is in the trenches of the war against cancer that heroes shine, and Amy Carr is one of those heroes.” – Daniel Ibach M.D.
“I felt like God was showing me how to truly live, not how to die.” – Amy Carr, cancer survivor
Schedule your screening at Parkwest The Parkwest ComprehenThe center supports individsive Breast Center is recognized ual health needs in all ages and as a Breast Center of Excel- walks of life, including: lence by the American College ■ Digital mammography of Radiology. It offers a com■ Breast ultrasound prehensive, multi-disciplinary ■ Steriotactic biopsy program, including screenings, ■ Bone density screenings breast cancer diagnosis, treatIn addition, the center has a ment and counseling. designated Breast Health Co-
ordinator, and more than 50 skilled physicians are affiliated with Covenant Health Breast Centers. “A woman shouldn’t wait until she’s in the middle of a crisis,” says center supervisor Aundrea Gregory. “She deserves to be equipped with the
tools for optimum health, and we’re here to stand at her side through every age and stage.” To schedule your mammogram, or to learn more about the Parkwest Comprehensive Breast Center, call 865-3737010 or visit www.treatedwell. com/breastcenter.
KȐȠɤȵǸɑ LȃɑȐȐȽȨȽȠɕ ɑȐ LɜȨȵȵ dɄɤɑ ȣɄȨȃȐ another reason people prefer parkwest w est Early detection is essential for breast cancer survival. Call the Parkwest Comprehensive Breast Center at (865) 373-7010 to schedule your mammogram today.
B-2 • JANUARY 6, 2014 • Shopper news
Doc (center) jokes with the paint crew, Herman DuBose and Rob Rathbun, as Cathy looks on.
and Muñeca. On a recent weekday, they were headed Cathy Leach and Doc Severinsen discuss renovations for their farmhouse in Blount County. for UT – Cathy to teach and Doc to practice. He enjoys practicing in the stairwell near Cathy’s office because of the resonance. Those lucky enough to be in the The paint crew that’s building enjoy hearing working upstairs doesn’t that big bright sound, know who he is. undiminished in over 70 “He’s the nice guy who years of playing. Carol hired us to paint,” they say “The trumpet is wonwith grins and shrugs. They Zinavage derful,” says Doc. “It’s agree to Google him when the king of musical inthey get home. struments – that’s why In this age of 15-minthey put trumpets on the ute, viral video fame, Doc highest level when you Severinsen isn’t known to everyone. His friendly de- don’t really dress ‘like that,’” see an orchestra, because meanor and down-to-earth he says, referring to his they’re the majesty! nature make him seem like well-known habit of wear“But you can be hua regular guy. But anyone ing flamboyant clothes. He miliated beyond dewho grew up watching The still glitzes it up for concert scription. Playing the Tonight Show with Johnny tours, but “I don’t own any trumpet will keep you Carson instantly recognizes suits. All I own is jeans, work Doc likes the resonance of the stairwells in humble. About the time shirts and cowboy boots, so the iconic bandleader. you think you’ve got it the UT music building. When a 30-plus-year if I play in church, I’m going Doc Severinsen in front of his Bount County farmmade, it’ll reach right up house, built in 1840. Photos by Carol Zinavage friendship with fellow to be wearing that.” and bite you in the rear! Both stay busy with intrumpeter Cathy Leach “If you’re not having such One current joint project room will be my ‘cave’ where a good day and you don’t feel blossomed into romance a dividual projects. Cathy, Doc Severinsen Big Band, few years ago, Doc moved to who was the KSO’s princi- which he says is “the finest isn’t at all musical. The cou- I can practice and work on like you’re playing your best, pal trumpeter for 31 years, big band I’ve ever worked ple are restoring a rambling sewing projects. And that’s you’ve just got to keep at it. I Maryville to be near her. The two work together plays with “Stiletto,” an all- with.” And, of course, he’s of- Blount County farmhouse Doc’s room at the end of the get kicked off the horse every on many musical projects. female brass ensemble. The ten featured on his own. This built in 1840. “I am still try- hall,” she says, gesturing to- darn day in my own practice. They’ve appeared in Knox- group does master classes past weekend he appeared ing to find my way around ward a room literally stacked “But you’ve got to get with trumpets. ville churches in programs and concerts all over the with the Milwaukee Sympho- this place!” laughs Doc. right back on. And I do!” Cathy’s looking forward In fact, there’s at least of “jazzed-up” gospel mu- country. Their CD, featur- ny in a series of four concerts Stay tuned. Next week to getting all the rooms one trumpet somewhere in we’ll hear about Doc’s sic. There’s always a rustle ing Doc as special guest, is over three days. At 86, he’s fit, healthy and squared away. The busy pro- every room of the house. of excitement when Doc’s available on Amazon.com. musical upbringing and his Doc’s quintet, the San up to such a punishing sched- fessor of trumpet and direcBoth enjoy cooking in the memories of Johnny Carson lanky, jean-clad figure Miguel 5, features music with ule. “I’ve still got the mojo,” tor of undergraduate studies spacious farm kitchen, lookstrides to the front. and The Tonight Show. “People might be sur- a Latin flair, including Span- he says of his desire to per- at the UT School of Music ing at the mountain views Send story suggestions to news@ sees great potential. “One and caring for dogs Gracie ShopperNewsNow.com. prised to find out that I ish guitar. He also leads The form and delight audiences.
The doctor is in
Carol’s Corner
Adopt a new friend! About Ringo
Ringo is a strikingly handsome silver tabby male cat about 8 months old. He’s gets along great with other cats and would be great with kids. He is very affectionate and likes to be petted and rubbed. He loves to be the center of attention and sometimes I think he thinks he’s a dog. He can entertain himself but also likes to play with other cats and toys. He’s negative for feline leukemia and aids, has been spayed, wormed, vaccinated, and vet checked.
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About Squash
Squash is a darling short haired classic gray tabby female kitten about 4 months old. Her coat is quite strikingly beautiful and unique. She's very outgoing and social and gets along well with cats. She loves to play and wrestle with other cats or toys and is never bored. She's negative for feline leukemia and aids, had her first distemper vaccine, been wormed, vet checked and had Advantage for fleas. She’s healthy, happy, loves to snuggle and is as cute as a button, and ready for a permanent home.
About Xena
Xena, the warrior princess, is a cute short haired dilute tortie (gray with gold mix through) female kitten, about 8 months old. Born in foster care, she is very social, playful and outgoing. She continues to nurse on her own belly, which is very endearing. She loves to play with toys or other cats and likes to be held and snuggled. Gets along well with cats, and should be great with dogs and kids. She's negative for feline leukemia and been wormed, had Advantage for fleas, aids, had two distemper vaccines, has and been vet checked and spayed.
Please contact:
Holly at 671-4564
or Katpirate@ comcast.net
Peaceful Kingdom 57 579-5164 79-5 -5164 Space donated by Shopper-News.
Call today! Spaces are selling fast!
Senior living special section
Reaching over 90,618 homes Call 922-4136 (North office) or 218-WEST (West office) for advertising info
Coming January 27
Shopper news • JANUARY 6, 2014 • B-3
Shopper Ve n t s enews
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MONDAY, JAN. 6 Job Resources Group meeting, 8:30-10:30 a.m., Concord UMC, 11020 Roane Drive. Newly Bereaved casual workshop by Amedisys Hospice of Knoxville, 5:30 p.m., Cozy Joe’s Café, 2559 Willow Point Way. Free. To preregister: Sarah Wimmer, 689-7123 or 1-866-462-7182. Beginning Tai Chi class, open house, 7-8:30 p.m., Peace Lutheran Church, 621 N. Cedar Bluff Road. Classes taught by the Taoist Tai Chi Society of the USA. Info: 482-7761 or www.taoist.org. Ossoli Circle meeting, Ossoli Clubhouse, 2511 Kingston Pike. 9:45 a.m., coffee; 10:30, program: “History of Jews in America” by Mimi Pais and husband Art; 11:30, business meeting followed by lunch. Visitors welcome. Info: 577-4106.
TUESDAY, JAN. 7 Caregiver Support Group meeting, 10 a.m.noon, Room E-224, Concord UMC, 11020 Roane Drive. Guest speaker: Yvonne Marsh, CPA. Refreshments provided. Info: 675-2835. Newly Bereaved casual workshop by Amedisys Hospice of Knoxville, 5 p.m., Panera Bread, 4855 Kingston Pike. Free. To preregister: Sarah Wimmer, 689-7123 or 1-866-462-7182. “Computer Workshop – Introducing the Computer,” 5:30 p.m., East Tennessee History Center. Info/register: 215-8700.
WEDNESDAY, JAN. 8 Regal Classic Film Series featuring “Big,” 2 and 7 p.m., Downtown West Cinema 8, 1640 Downtown West Blvd. “Video Pioneers: A History of Early Television,” A Brown Bag Lecture by Julian Burke, noon, East Tennessee History Center, 601 South Gay St. Free. Info: 215-8824 or www.EastTNHistory.org. Bonny Kate Chapter Daughters of the American Revolution meeting, noon, Second Methodist Church, 1524 Western Ave. Speaker: Lisa Duncan, director of Dogwood Arts Festival.
THURSDAY, JAN. 9 Knoxville Children’s Theatre auditions for “Charlotte’s Web,” KCT, 109 E. Churchwell Ave. Auditions by appointment: email Dennis Perkins, dennis@ childrenstheatreknoxville.com, with name, age, gender and preferred audition time Artist in Residence Biennial opening reception 7-9 p.m., Ewing Gallery, UT Art & Architecture Building. Works by Patricia Treib, Michael Berryhill, EJ Hauser and Jaya Howey will be on display through Feb. 6. New session DivorceCare For Kids (DC4K) for ages 5-12, 6:30-8 p.m. Fellowship Church, 8000 Middlebrook Pike. Meets each Thursday for 13 weeks. DivorceCare, 6:30-8:30 p.m. each Thursday, Fellowship Church, 8000 Middlebrook Pike.
15 Condo Rentals
Cemetery Lots
49
2 Mausoleum Crypts at Lynnhurst Cemetery. Side-by-side, eye level. Prime loc. 865-414-1448
Real Estate Wanted 50 WE BUY HOUSES Any Reason, Any Condition 865-548-8267 www.ttrei.com
Apts - Unfurnished 71 KARNS AREA, 1 or 2BR, stove, refrig., DW, garb. disp., 2 1/2 BA, no pets. $600-$925. 865-6918822; 660-3584.
HAVANESE CKC Pups, 4 M, vet ck'd., S&W, raised in home, $850. www.peacespups.com Call 865-201-6652. ***Web ID# 352136***
Trucking Opportunities 106 PUPPY NURSERY DRIVERS: CDL-A. Dedicated Routes Solo & Team. Great Pay/Benefits & Bonuses! Home Weekly, No Slip Seat, No Touch, Newer Equipment. (855) 219-4838 DRIVERS: Make $63,000.00/year or more, $2,500 driver referral bonus & $1,200 orientation completion bonus! CDL-A OTR Exp. Req. Call Now: 1-877-725-8241
141
Auditions for “The Secret Garden” by The WordPlayers. For appointment: 539-2490. Info: www.wordplayers.org. Saturday Stories and Songs: Georgi Schmitt, 11 a.m., Cedar Bluff Branch Library, 9045 Cross Park Drive. Info: 470-7033. Saturday Stories and Songs: Miss Lynn, 11 a.m., Lawson McGhee Library, 500 W. Church Ave. Info: 215-8750.
SUNDAY, JAN. 12 Epworth Monthly Singing, 6:30 p.m., Laurel Theater, 1538 Laurel Ave. Info: Claudia Dean, 673-5822. Regal Classic Film Series featuring “The Princess Bride,” 2 p.m., Downtown West Cinema 8, 1640 Downtown West Blvd.
Many different breeds Maltese, Yorkies, Malti-Poos, Poodles, Yorki-Poos, Shih-Poos, Shih Tzu, $175/up. shots & wormed. We do layaways. Health guar. Div. of Animal Welfare State of TN Dept. of Health. Lic # COB0000000015. 423-566-3647 judyspuppynursery.com Schnauzers Miniature, AKC, 3rd shots, tails & dew claws, ch bldln, $400. 423-452-0646 WESTIES, AKC, Ch. Ped. Hlth guar. Beautiful, quality pups. $800. 865-654-4977 ***Web ID# 352196***
Bride,” 2 and 7 p.m., Downtown West Cinema 8, 1640 Downtown West Blvd.
THURSDAY, JAN. 16 Free budget classes, The Good Samaritan Center of Loudon County, 119 “A” St., Lenoir City. Classes provided by CredAbility. Info/to register: Karen Bowdle, 986-1777, ext. 12. Sneak preview of “Las Marthas” documentary, 7 p.m., East Tennessee PBS studio, 1611 E. Magnolia. The film will make its television debut 10 p.m. Monday, Feb. 17. “Research and Practice in Mass Grave Exhumations: Current International Projects at the Anthropology Research Facility,” a lecture by Dawnie Steadman of the UT Anthropology Department, 7:30 p.m. McClung Museum. Free.
FRIDAY, JAN. 17 “Kidz Night Out” for ages 5-13, 6-9 p.m., Farragut Town Hall, 11408 Municipal Center Drive. Cost: $30, first child; $25 each additional child. Registration deadline: Wednesday, Jan. 15. Info/ to register: 966-7057 or Farragut Town Hall. Martin Luther King Jr. Week: Gallery of Art Tribute, 5-7 p.m., Community Forum, 6:30 p.m., Beck Cultural Exchange Center, 1927 Dandridge Ave. In conjunction with the Oak Ridge Environmental Peace Alliance. Info: www.mlkknoxville.com.
SATURDAY, JAN. 18
Harvey Broome Group of the Sierra Club, 7 p.m., Tennessee Valley Unitarian Universalist Church, 2931 Kingston Pike. Paul and Barbara Akers will cover Appalachian Trail Through Hiking and a Top 5 Gear “Show and Tell.” Computer Workshops - Word 2007 II, 2 p.m., East Tennessee History Center, 601 S. Gay St. Requires “Introducing the Computer” or equivalent skills. Info/to register: 215-8700.
P.R.A.Y. Conference for women, 8:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m., West Park Baptist Church, 8833 Middlebrook Pike. Led by national speaker and author Debbie Taylor Williams. Cost: $10. Registration deadline: Jan. 12. Info/to register: www.westparkbaptist.org. Farragut Skate Date, 4-6 p.m., Cool sports: Home of the Icearium, 110 S. Watt Road. Info: 218-4500. YWCA Race Against Racism, 11:30 a.m., YWCA Phyllis Wheatley Center, 124 S. Cruze St. Info: www. ywcaknox.com. Wallace Coleman concert, blues harmonica, 8 p.m., Laurel Theater, 1538 Laurel Ave. Tickets: $14 (discount for JCA members, students and seniors); at www. knoxtix.com, 523-7521 and the door. Saturday Stories and Songs: Charlene Ellis, 11 a.m., Cedar Bluff Branch Library, 9045 Cross Park Drive. Info: 470-7033. Saturday Stories and Songs: Laurie Fisher, 11 a.m., Lawson McGhee Library, 500 W. Church Ave. Info: 215-8750. Introductory Internet Genealogy, 1 p.m., East Tennessee History Center, 601 S. Gay St. Preregistration, a valid email address and good Internet searching capabilities required. Info/to register: 215-8809. Certifiably Organic, 10:30 a.m., Farragut Branch Library, 417 N. Campbell Station Road. Presented by Knox County Master Gardener Stephanie Sayres and her husband, Tom. Free and open to the public.
TUESDAYS, JAN. 14-28
SUNDAY, JAN. 19
Pilates class, 6:30-7:30 p.m., Farragut Town Hall, 11408 Municipal Center Drive. Instructor: Simon Bradbury. Cost: $30. Deadline to register: Monday, Jan. 13. Info/to register: 966-7057 or Farragut Town Hall.
Piano-trumpet concert featuring pianist Ryan Fogg and trumpeter Glenda Cloutier, 5 p.m., American Piano Gallery Recital Hall, 11651 Parkside Drive. Free. MLK Week: A Night With the Arts featuring the Knoxville Symphony Chamber Orchestra, 6 p.m., Bijou Theatre, 803 S. Gay St. Info: www.mlkknoxville. com. Regal Classic Film Series featuring “Fast Times at Ridgemont High,” 2 p.m., Downtown West Cinema 8, 1640 Downtown West Blvd. Shakespeare Out Loud: Richard II, 2 p.m., Lawson McGhee Library, 500 W. Church Ave. Info: 2158750.
MONDAY, JAN. 13 Job Resources Group meeting, 8:30-10:30 a.m., Concord UMC, 11020 Roane Drive. Muslim Journeys: Points of View – “In the Country of Men” first of five scholar-facilitated reading and discussion program debut, 6-8 p.m., Cedar Bluff Branch Library, 9045 Cross Park Drive. Ossoli Circle meeting, Ossoli Clubhouse, 2511 Kingston Pike. 9:45 a.m., coffee; 10:30, program by Dr. Fred Bedelle Jr., author and former Superintendent of Knoxville City Schools; 11:30, book study by Wayne Zurl followed by lunch. Visitors welcome. Info: 577-4106.
TUESDAY, JAN. 14
TUESDAYS, JAN. 14-FEB. 18 Yoga class, 9-10 a.m., Farragut Town Hall, 11408 Municipal Center Drive. Instructor: Betty Kalister. Registration deadline: Friday, Jan. 10. Info/to register: 966-7057 or Farragut Town Hall.
141 Dogs
Cane Corso / Great Dane pups. Blues & brindles. Protection dog. $400-$500. 865-457-5907 Effic. Apt. $100/wk, Boyds Creek, Seymour, util. & ***Web ID# 352276*** cable incl. Priv. ent. 865GOLDEN RETRIEVER 286-9819; 727-453-0036 PUPS. AKC, Vet ckd, Shots, Wormed, $350. Call Manf’d Homes - Sale 85 Weaned. 423-215-0133 I BUY OLDER MOBILE HOMES. 1990 up, any size OK. 865-384-5643
SATURDAY, JAN. 11
141 Household Appliances 204a Motor Homes
Bordoodle Pups, DOB YORKIES AKC, quality 12/18. Non shed, large, ch. ln. Puppies & young smart & healthy, M&F, adults. Males. Great $600. Avail 1/22. Dep pricing. 865-591-7220 $300. 865-771-9276 ***Web ID# 352390*** ***Web ID# 350744***
Rooms-Roommates 77
Apts - Furnished 72 WALBROOK STUDIOS Dogs 25 1-3 60 7 $140 weekly. Discount avail. Util, TV, Ph, Stv, Refrig, Basic Cable. No Lse.
76 Dogs
2BR, 2.5BA Ftn. City, appls. included, priv. patio, 1 car gar., $850/ mo. $50/mo. HOA. Call 865-679-8105.
Dare To Be Square Tennessee, old-time squaredance calling, dance and music, 7 p.m., Laurel Theater, 1538 Laurel Ave. Weekend pass: $50. Evening dances open to the public: $5-$10 at the door. Calling and dancing workshops Friday and Saturday. Info/registration: www.jubileecommunityarts.org/dtbstn, 522-5851, dtbstn@gmail.com.
Martin Luther King Jr. Week Interfaith Prayer Service, noon, Peace and Goodwill Missionary Baptist Church, 1723 Washington Ave. Time Well Spent: Inspiration at Lunch featuring photographer and mixed-media artist Kelly Hider, noon, The Emporium, 100 S. Gay St. The Arts & Culture Alliance event is free; brown-bagging is welcome. Regal Classic Film Series featuring “The Princess
Call for artists for “Open Art Show 2014: Alchemy – the Magic of Art and Flowers,” a juried art and standard flower show. Applications and fees accepted: 8 a.m.-7p.m. Thursday; 8 a.m.-noon Friday. Application/info: www.townoffarragut.org/artsandculture or Farragut Town Hall, 11408 Municipal Center Drive. The Streamliners Swing Orchestra in concert,
PELVIC/TRANSVAGINAL MESH? Did you undergo transvaginal placement of mesh for pelvic organ prolapse or stress urinary incontinence between 2005 and the present? If the mesh caused complications, you may be entitled to compensation. Call Charles H.Johnson Law and speak with female staff members 1-800-535-5727
THURSDAY-SUNDAY, JAN. 9-12
WEDNESDAY, JAN. 15
THURSDAY-FRIDAY, JAN. 9-10
Special Notices
7 p.m., Relix Variety Theate, 1208 North Central St. Presented by The Tennessee Valley Jazz & Blues Foundation. Admission: $15.
Free Pets
145
GOOD AS NEW APPLIANCES
90 Day Warranty 865-851-9053 2001 E. Magnolia Ave.
ADOPT!
Looking for an addition to the family? Visit Young-Williams Animal Center, the official shelter for Knoxville & Knox County.
Call 215-6599 or visit knoxpets.org
Exercise Equipment 208 AERIAL PILATES Gym, total pkg. w/3 DVD's w/instructions. $150. 865-577-3993.
Boats Motors
232
MONDAY, JAN. 20 MLK Week: annual parade, lineup 8:30 a.m., step-off 10 a.m. from YWCA Phyllis Wheatley Center, 124 S. Cruze St. Info: www.mlkknoxville.com. MLK Week: Memorial Tribute Service, 11:45 a.m., Greater Warner Tabernacle AME Zion Church, 3800 Martin Luther King Jr. Ave. Info/parade registration: www.mlkknoxville.com.
237 4 Wheel Drive 258 Sports
264 Flooring
330 Remodeling
1976 FMC #1040, twin DODGE RAM 1500 Ford Mustang 1998 beds, dinette, new SLT quad 1998, 4x4, GT, blue, 4.6 V8, refrig, TV & satell. 129K mi., V8, 5.9L 31,641 1 ownr mi, antenna, microwave, mtr. Runs Great! extras, Accufab upper coffee maker, new $5000. 865-673-4897. intake, JLT cold air radio, 4 new Michelin intake, Steeda under tires, 6 1/2 kw Onan drive pulley set, 3.73 gen., Chrys #440 ind. Antiques Classics 260 rear gear, H pipe S/S rear eng. pusher, exhaust w/FloMasters, $10,000. 865-577-1427 Corvette $8500. Denny 865Convertible 947-0559; 865-607-9689 1966, 327 / 350, 4 sp, 36' Phaetan mfg by Tiffin, blk / yellow, great driver. 4 slides, 3 TVS, 9K mi, $49k firm. 865-254-1992 360 Cummings diesel w/lrg diesel gen. Reduced FORD $128,500. 865-577-1427 THUNDERBIRD 1966 complete rebuild, new paint, 428 eng. $7500 obo. 865-719-1333 PREVOST VW KARMANN GHIA (2 dr. coupe) 1971 1997 Vogue 45' XL Owner - Estate. Call: All elec., 60 series 522-4964 or Email Detroit, 6 spd Allison, dnoel@esper.com. in motion satellite, 20 kw Kohler, 2 owner ^ coach, $135,000. Sport Utility 261 865-803-7977
Roofing / Siding
BOSTON WHALER 2005 #150 Sport-Fish, Merc. 60 HP 4 stroke, built in 15 gal. gas tank, 12V troll motor, Farmer’s Market 150 only 94 hrs w/ built in hour meter, built in FORD EXPLORER battery charger, fish HAY FOR SALE, 150 238 2002 Eddie Bauer, finder, perfect cond. Motorcycles roles in the dry. $20 4WD, 128K mi., 3rd With galv. trailer & CERAMIC TILE inper roll. Phone 865seat, dual air, $5500. canvas cover, HARLEY DAVIDSON Floors/ 368-8968 Domestic 265 stallation. Call 865-591-0249. $11,500. 865-577-1427 walls/ repairs. 33 1952, all matching yrs exp, exc work! HAY FOR SALE. numbers, $10,000. Lincoln TOWN CAR John 938-3328 4x5' rolls, Call 423-215-9592 Imports 262 Signature 2003, $20 per bale, white, excellent cond., 922-4136 or 218-WEST(9378) Call 865-933-1238 housed in garage, Guttering Camry 2012, 333 Campgrounds 243 TOYOTA TAHOE 2004 Q4 S/F, 47,500 mi, $9500. 42K mi., $2,000 down, HP Mercruiser, Call 865-379-7126 take over pymnt. 865Music Instruments 198 20' 190 HAROLD'S GUTTER I/O, exc. cond. 376-0537; 306-4099. AMERICAN BISON: SERVICE. Will clean $11,900 neg. Call for Pont. Grand Am 2003, front & back $20 & up. Baldwin elec. organ, more info. 423-562-1338. 3--two yr. old heifers, PDL, PW, AC, sunrf, 1--two yr old unrelated Quality work, guaranexc cond, for church CD, runs great, bull. $4,800. 865-607-7820 teed. Call 288-0556. or home, $3500 cash. $2,900. 865-458-3269 865-524-6928 Campers 235
ACTION ADS
Misc. Items
203
BLOODHOUND YORKIES, ADULTS DOWNSIZING Moving PUPPIES, AKC reg. and PUPPIES, AKC sale, several items red, vet checked 3 lb. $200 to $600. for sale. Too much $500. 865-680-2155. 865-376-0537; 306-4099. to list. Info 865-247-6265
NEW & PRE-OWNED INVENTORY SALE
2013 MODEL SALE CHECK US OUT AT Northgaterv.com or call 865-681-3030
Trucks
257
CHEV SILVERADO 1987, SWB, all orig., $4,000 obo or trade. Call 865-922-6408 ***Web ID# 348995***
Fencing
351
ROCKY TOP Building & Remodeling. Lic'd, ins'd, bonded. Small jobs, repairs, honeydo's, painting, drywall, siding, trim, carpentry, windows, drs. Free est, 35 yrs exp! 254-3455, 776-6527
327 Painting / Wallpaper 344
Painting & FENCE WORK Instal- Powell's Remodeling - Resilation & repair. Free dential & Commercial. ^ est. 43 yrs exp! Call Free Estimates. 865689-9572. 771-0609
352
B-4 • JANUARY 6, 2014 • Shopper news
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