Karns/Hardin Valley Shopper-News 030216

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VOL. 10 NO. 9

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Bullies, beware

BUZZ Why Trump wins Count me among the skeptics who thought Donald Trump would blow over as a serious candidate. But after watching the debates and the early primaries, I finally get it. Donald J. Trump – casino-building, old-lady-evicting, multimarried, bankruptcy-filing wild man with three wives and five kids – is headed for the White House.

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Read Sandra Clark on page A-4

Brantley wants relief on towing Knox County at-large commissioner Ed Brantley apparently believes that when a citizen comes to public forum, asking for help on an issue, that someone ought to pay attention. This is an odd notion that surely will be squelched. For now Brantley’s trampled on a sacred sheriff’s office prerogative. Stand by to learn the outcome. It started when Paul Johnson appeared at an earlier commission meeting to complain that he got a towing/ storage bill for more than $500 after a Thanksgiving weekend wreck rendered his car undrivable.

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More on page A-4

Spring plants It’s March and I cannot keep from noticing the subtle signs of spring. My star magnolia has bloomed, but sadly after two days the freeze got it. The jonquils will be out in a couple of weeks and hopefully will not get frozen.

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Read Bonnie Peters on page A-6

Stories in full inside this paper Technical difficulties. That’s our story and we’re sticking to it. Somehow in the rush to make printing deadlines last week, we managed to print Farragut’s page A-3 inside the Karns/Hardin Valley edition. That left several readers wondering where their story went as they turned to page 3 for the continuation. And it actually generated a call from a reader who had enjoyed the back half of a story from the Farragut zone about Hughie Moulden. She wanted the first part. So we’ve made space on pages A-2 and A-3 for all those stories. In their entirety. Enjoy.

(865) 218-WEST (9378) NEWS (865) 661-8777 news@ShopperNewsNow.com Sandra Clark | Sara Barrett ADVERTISING SALES (865) 342-6084 ads@ShopperNewsNow.com Patty Fecco | Tony Cranmore Beverly Holland | Amy Lutheran CIRCULATION (865) 521-8181

Karns High School takes a stand By Sara Barrett Students at Karns High School have decided to “stand up, stand strong and stand togetherâ€? against bullying with a new campaign sponsored by Student Government and leadership class. Most students admit they don’t really see much physical bullying nowadays, but cyber bullying has become commonplace among their age group. “Bullying is still an issue, but it has a different dynamic now,â€? says KHS senior Savanah Pope. “For some reason, people become fearless with social media. You see it more on Twitter and Instagram ‌ it is so easy for them to hide behind a screen.â€? Pope and senior Kaci Bowerman have spearheaded the campaign to unite the student body against all forms of bullying including physical, verbal and cyber forms. “This has really turned into something a lot bigger than we initially planned,â€? adds Bowerman. The project started as an after-

Mason Sexton, Duff Gentry and Aaron Lusk act out an example of physical bullying while Kim Webster and Anthony Appleba capture it on video. Photos by S. Barrett

school activity, but that was two months ago. There are now about 60 people working behind the scenes. Students in filmmaking class were assigned the creation of short films explaining the types of

bullying, and they will be shown during a rally 11:30 a.m. Friday, March 4, in the gym. During the program, Bowerman and Pope will also share experiences from fellow students who have been bullied but wish to

remain anonymous. A documentary-style film will also be shown with testimonies of students who have been placed behind a screen to protect their privacy. To page A-3

ESK plans new arts/athletics complex The Episcopal School of Knoxville has launched construction of a $6.5 million facility to house middle school art and athletics. Officials gathered March 1 to symbolically break ground. The new building is 25,000 square feet and will feature a high school sized gym. The building will house an expanded middle school with a program for grades 5-6 and another for grades 7-8. Fifth graders will be able to take world language, performance music and critical thinking courses.

enrollment will be expanded. “Through this development, we are going to take ESK to the next level of what we’re able to offer,� said ESK Head of School Dr. Jack Talmadge. A capital campaign is underway to fund the new building, improve parking and add sports fields. The new building will have two complete with computers and a The new building is designed dedicated band and chorus rooms 3D printer. by BarberMcMurry Architects and with separate ensemble rehearsal As the fifth grade leaves the will be built by George W. Regan spaces and two art rooms. One art Brewington Family Lower School Company. It is expected to open in room will include a Makerspace facility, the junior kindergarten October 2016.

Guilty: Even if somehow exonerated By Marvin West The Title IX lawsuit against the University of Tennessee may bounce around in the courts for three or four years but the preliminary trial is already over.

Analysis The university, the athletic department in particular, has lost in the eyes and ears of the general public. The degree of presumed guilt varies. Those who know the least about the case think the transgressions are monumental. Officially, UT has a choice. It can surrender, pay big and make many changes, or counter-attack with hand grenades. Unofficially, macho types think they can prevail. Could be, but ‌ The barrage of media blows was staggering but not enough for an absolute knockout at home. The football Volunteers are almost sacred. They are also the financial engine of all UT sports, yea, even women’s sports. The Vols must win.

March 2, 2016

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I say scrub the deck as needed but don’t sink the ship. There is a mortgage. The university? Another big deal. Even though it seeks to be one of the best in the country, it is not so sacred. It consumes tax dollars, keeps raising tuition and spends big on diversity frivolity. This Title IX stuff is contagious. Better beware. The U.S. Department of Education’s Office of Civil Rights is currently investigating 204 cases of sexual violence at 164 colleges and universities. Even if this sizzling Tennessee lawsuit burns itself out, the heat was awesome. The orange image is scarred. There are alarming numbers of anonymous accusers. There are complications and conflicts. That some changed their story between then and now increases the smell of smoke. How bad were the hits? The Tennessean has been having a party. The New York Daily News went far beyond reporting the news. When a former Vol and a new Vol were arrested in the same

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week, the New York Post used the word “cesspool� to describe the football program. There will be a price to pay. Following the Missouri precedent, some “judges and juries� will call for the ouster of Chancellor Jimmy Cheek and athletic director Dave Hart. Their perceived guilt is lack of leadership. They were too quiet too long. A segment of the population long ago convicted Hart’s supposed view of women. Payoffs in gender discrimination suits were proof. Strife over the Lady Vols nickname and logo was the final straw. Dr. Cheek has been as still as the proverbial church house mouse. Some critics will call for cultural adjustments, no-fault insurance for victims, no more excuses that “boys will be boys.� Women in men’s bedrooms at 3 in the morning shall be no cause for suspicion. Nobody will retain the right to ask “What was she doing there? Was she drinking?�

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Butch Jones faces a serious dilemma. He is praised for promoting law and order and even team dignity but is accused, under oath, of calling a player a traitor because he helped an alleged victim. Coach has denied the charge. Butch and all other coaches rallied around the flag, cheerleader style. They said UT is safe and sound. Sam Winterbotham, tennis coach, said he hopes his four young daughters choose to attend UT. Football Vols were praised. “I’ve never been around a group of young men who were so respectful,’’ swim coach Matt Kredich said. He was an honorary football coach during the 2013 Orange and White Game. Beth Alford-Sullivan, director of track and field, said much the same. Her teams share indoor training facilities with football. “There is a huge amount of respect and a huge amount of care for each other.’’

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A-2 • MARCH 2, 2016 • KARNS/HARDIN VALLEY Shopper news

Setting sail

doing,� says Kiser of the random meeting with Jack all those years ago. To this day, they still enjoy spending time together including snorkeling on a recent trip to St. Thomas. “You have to keep in touch with each other and love each other, that is the most important part,� she adds of a lasting love. “Enjoy things together. We went hiking and skiing together – just enjoy being together.�

for a lifetime of love By Sara Barrett Gerda Kiser met her husband, Jack, Sept. 10, 1960, on a beach in Majorca, Spain. “We kept swimming to a small island out in the water ‌ I think he was impressed I could swim that far,â€? says Kiser. Originally from Germany, she was on holiday from her job as an au pair in France, and Jack was vacationing before completing his mandatory twoyear service with the United States military. They each had a few days left on their trips, during which Kiser says they were inseparable. After leaving Spain, the two 24-year-olds rendezvoused one last time in Paris before corresponding by mail until Christmastime, when Jack sent an engagement ring with a wedding proposal. “We just had a good feeling about it,â€? she says of the short, long-distance courtship. “We just had faith in it, and we trusted it.â€? March 8, 1961, Gerda boarded the S.S. America for a one-way voyage to New York City, where Jack met her at the harbor March 16. They were married two days later in Virginia. Jack’s job with TVA took them to Tennessee where they eventually settled in Hardin Valley. “That was really the end of our traveling,â€? she says of the journey to their new home. They had three sons over the next four years. The S.S. America is no longer in service, but Kiser

Photos courtesy of Gerda Kiser

kept many souvenirs from her time aboard the luxury liner. Menus and a passenger list still in perfect condition have been tucked safely away at the bottom of a drawer. Kiser still remembers boarding the ship with her family who stayed behind in Germany. “That feeling never left me. It is still exciting,â€? she says. “The largeness of the ship ‌ it was huge. It was March, so it was windy and cold.â€? Her most vivid memory upon coming into the harbor aboard the ship was seeing the Statue of Liberty for the first time. “As a little girl, seeing pictures of it and knowing it was so far away – I never thought I would see it in person,â€? she says.

The S.S. America’s sister ship, the S.S. United States, is being overhauled by a conservation group. It has been docked and neglected at the Philadelphia waterfront for the last 20 years or so. Seeing a recent article about the ship’s return to service brought a flood of good memories back for both Gerda and Jack, who prefers to let Gerda do the talking. For their 50th wedding anniversary, the Kisers’ sons paid for their parents to travel back to that same beach in Majorca where they first met. “It was exciting to see. There were high-rises everywhere where there was nothing before. But the beautiful scenery had not changed at all,� she says.

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Kiser kept several photos from that first meeting with her husband of 56 years. A favorite is the two of them on the scooter they rented to ride around the island. “This was somehow God’s

Kiser’s family sent her this photo album shortly after she arrived in the states. It includes photos of her with her parents as she boarded a ship before sailing to America.

Gerda Fest rode around the island of Majorca with Jack Kiser after meeting him on the beach in Palma in 1960.

Kiser looks through the many mementoes she kept from her journey to America. Photo by S. Barrett

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Gerda Kiser kept the original agenda from the S.S. America, circa 1961.

Hardin Valley

gets a middle school By Sara Barrett The official ground breaking for a new middle school in Hardin Valley was held Feb. 19 with a boatload of officials and politicians ‌ and some very happy parents. The new school will be located behind Hardin Valley Academy, but some road work needs to be handled before construction. Conner Creek runs next to the site, and two small bridges have to be constructed to allow for traffic flow. The main middle school entrance will be from Steele Road. After the ceremony, a few of the parents responsible for bringing the issue of a new school to light grabbed the shovels and enjoyed a few moments of celebration. Kim Frazier, mother to a Karns Middle School student and a Hardin Valley Elementary School student says she’s been quietly gathering information the last five years to build a case for the new school. “You can’t deny facts, and that’s what we’ve shown them every time,â€? says Frazier of the discussions the parents have had with local officials and the school board.

“When I first approached Commissioner Brad Anders and school board representative Terry Hill and asked them what the chances were of getting a new middle school, they both said ‘very slim’ but Brad added, ‘don’t let that stop you from trying.’ “I hope this speaks to the kids in our community,� she adds. “If they see a need,

A rendering of the middle school planned for Hardin Valley. they shouldn’t be complacent. They should be proactive and do something about it.�

Hardin Valley residents Kim Frazier, Kevin Crateau and Jennifer Rice celebrate at the groundbreaking ceremony held Feb. 19 for a new middle school in their community. Not pictured is Amanda Abshagen. Photos by S. Barrett

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KARNS/HARDIN VALLEY Shopper news • MARCH 2, 2016 • A-3

Hughie Moulden reflects on his roots By Carolyn Evans From his house on top of a knoll, Hughie Moulden can see the old garden spot. He can see across Bluegrass Road to Garland Road. And if he looks long enough, images of the dairy farm where he hauled hay into the barn when he was a youth float up from the past. After 72 years on Bluegrass Road, Moulden says he wouldn’t live anywhere else. “It’s comfortable,� he says. “It’s home.� It’s where he milked the cow and churned butter. As Moulden, an AfricanAmerican, considers Black History Month, he says he is proud of the journey. “As a race of people, the Lord has brought us definitely a long, long ways – from the cotton fields to the White House,� he says. Moulden grew up an only child with his grandparents, Nathaniel and Josie Moulden. Their home is still there, now occupied by Hughie’s 83-year-old aunt. Along the way, his grandparents gave him some land on their property. He built the home where he and his wife, Christine, raised four sons: Kenneth, Ronald, Kevin and Christopher. He and Christine just celebrated their 54th wedding anniversary. “We had a garden of our own here on the place,� he says. “We raised corn,

beans, tomatoes, okra, sweet potatoes, Irish potatoes. That was our livelihood. We raised hogs and had a milk cow.� That old garden spot is still in use. Moulden plants a garden there every spring, growing his vegetables. He laughs when asked if he remembers how to milk a cow. “Why, sure!� he says, adding that he used to make buttermilk and butter. “I helped my grandmother churn. You put the milk in the refrigerator, and it forms a clabHughie Moulden stands at the fence ber on top. in Pleasant Forest Cemetery that Then you pour separates white and black graves. it in the churn Photo by Carolyn Evans and work it up and down till school. it forms butterAlong with Concord Elemilk. From that you make mentary, he remembers the butter.� “old city.� How long did it take? “Right next to the rail“It depends on how fast your arm worked!� he says. road track, there was BenMoulden’s sons went son’s store,� he says. “There to Bluegrass Elementary was Hobbs’ store next to School; a privilege he didn’t the post office. They would have. He went to the all- take the mail and put it in a black Concord Elementary bag, then hang it on a pole, School that used to sit on waiting for the train to come Loop Road. He remembers through. “We had night services at the long bus rides to an allblack junior high and high church,� Moulden says.

“My aunt lived over in Concord. We’d sit over there and talk to her. About 10 at night the train would come through and get the mail.� Moulden retired from Exxon and has been the overseer of Pleasant Forest Cemetery, founded in 1796, for 20 years. The old cemetery that spreads across both sides of Concord Road is separated by race. A black wrought iron fence runs east to west in the large area. To the north is the white cemetery, with the exception of one black grave. To the south and east is the black cemetery. “Someone with the Boy Scouts approached me about doing some work,� he says. “He was working on his Eagle Scout.� Moulden agreed, and the scouts worked on the fence and erected a monument. About a month ago he and Christine went to Virtue Presbyterian Church to the young man’s Eagle Scout award ceremony. He says although many things have changed, he’s clung to some old-fashioned things. “Hard work will not kill you. My values – that I believe in the Almighty – have brought us through,� he says. “We don’t have much, but He’s allowed us to accumulate what we do have.�

Knox native Beauford Delaney is project for Knoxville Museum of Art By Wendy Smith Beauford Delaney is internationally recognized as one of the great abstract painters of the 20th century, but is little known in Knoxville, his home town. That will change if Knoxville Museum of Art curator Stephen Wicks gets his way. Wicks, along with KMA director David Butler and sev-

eral other local Delaney fans, recently visited Paris to see the opening of a new exhibition − Beauford Delaney: Resonance of Form and Vibration of Color − made up of 40 privately-owned works. Wicks hopes to bring the exhibition to Knoxville. That would help him achieve another goal − promoting Knoxville as a ris-

ing center of excellence for Beauford Delaney, along with New York City and Paris, two other cities the artist called home. Wicks spoke about Beauford Delaney during an East Tennessee Historical Society brown bag lecture. The artist, born in 1901, was raised at 815 E. Vine Street, along with his brother Joseph.

Bullies Beware

Both were art prodigies and early pupils of Nicholson Art League member Lloyd Branson. While both were important artists, the brothers were very different, Wicks said. Older brother Beauford was sensitive and a deep thinker while Joe was more “blue collar.�

community Guilty Holly Warlick, women’s basketball coach, defended the entire athletic department. Of course some of her players go to parties with football players. They are friends. “I just tell them, ‘You have to make the right choices.’� Holly has cautioned her players not to walk alone at night, as if cavemen were hiding in the bushes. The threat, if there is one, is social interaction with loose or no boundaries. Ah, but the culture is described as healthy. It will, nevertheless, undergo inspection. There will be other studies. One will conclude that criminal accusations should be investigated by real detectives, not committees. Even if a court finds the complaints are exaggerated, no way the university comes completely clean. Title IX is about women’s rights. There is no ceiling.

From page A-1 The military front row in ground warfare, the right to be blown to pieces or captured and tortured unmercifully, was the ultimate victory for women. They, too, are Marines. Equal pay and proper respect are kid stuff. In the lawsuit, the university is blamed for enabling an environment of bad behavior. The disciplinary system is said to favor athletes. Administrators are accused of deliberate indifference. The suit seeks to remedy all ills, starting with the Tennessee Uniform Administrative Procedure Act, applicable to many institutions. The 1982 legislative idea was to assure due process. In reality, it is slow. The suit says protection of football came at any cost, even when the charge was rape. Rape is bad. So is premeditated lynching. Let’s have a real trial.

COMMUNITY NOTES â– Council of West Knox County Homeowners meets 7:15 p.m. each first Tuesday, Peace Lutheran Church, 621 N. Cedar Bluff Road. Info: cwkch.com. â– District 6 Democrats meet 6:15 p.m. each fourth Tuesday at the Karns Library, 7516 Oak Ridge Highway. Info: Mike Knapp, 696-8038, or Janice Spoone, 771-5920. â– Karns Republican Club meets 7 p.m. each first Tuesday at Karns Middle School library. â– Karns Lions Club meets 6:30 p.m. each first and

third Monday, Karns Community Center, 7708 Oak Ridge Highway. Info: karnslionsclub.com. â– Northwest Knox Business and Professional Association meets each third Thursday, Karns Community Center, 7708 Oak Ridge Highway. Meetings are 6 p.m. March, June, September, December and noon the remaining months. â– Send your announcement to our editorial team at news@ShopperNewsNow. com

From page A-1

Savanah Pope, KHS teacher Cori Hackworth and Kaci Bowerman display antibullying T-shirts available for purchase at the school.

“We want to explain what it is, how it happens and how it is solved,� says Pope. A banner will be presented at the end of the program which students will be invited to sign as a way of taking a stand. “Don’t get us wrong,� adds Bowerman. “We’re not dumb enough to believe this will

spread like wildfire throughout the school. But if one seed is planted in the process, we will be successful.� “Our main focus isn’t just the victims of bullying or the bullies themselves,� says Pope. “We want to speak to the bystanders who could do something to help. That’s the majority of the population.�

The two seniors hope the campaign will continue annually in some form after they’ve graduated. “Instead of distancing themselves from it, we hope students will stand up to the problem,� says Pope. “These are people in your community. These are people in your school.�

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A-4 • MARCH 2, 2016 • Shopper news

Jani Trupovnieks: International salesman When you know a thousand former Volunteers, the stack of stories never ends – who they really are, where they have been, what they are doing. We remember Curt Watson as an elite Navy pilot with the Blue Angels. David Allen remains a famous urologist. Alan Duncan became a missionary. Tim Townes, who chairs the of University of Alabama-Birmingham Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Genetics, is still chasing a cure for sickle-cell disease. Vol for Life Jani Trupovnieks is an international salesman. That is the benign tip of an unbelievable trip. Jani sells high-pressure reverse osmosis equipment

Marvin West

that changes bad water into good. Since 2010, he has represented Aqua-Chem Global Water Solutions of Knoxville. His customers include major oil companies, cruise lines, municipalities (city of Vladivostok, Russia, for example), Caribbean islands and even the government of Kuwait. Jani works some of the circuit he traveled for 15 years when he sold boats for Sea Ray. Water is the connecting link.

Before that, Trupovnieks was an offensive tackle, 6-8 and 260, for the Vols, 198081. He finished his degree, had a very brief fling with the Oakland Raiders and faced the real world. “I sent out 400 resumes. Sea Ray was first to respond. I had a connection. My parents had moved to Knoxville and bought a house from a company executive. It just took six months of pestering Sea Ray for them to hire me.� He helped build boats until the company posted an opening in international sales. It just took six more months of “pestering� management for the chance to move up. That job took Jani so many places, he lost count. “Something more than

50 countries, seeing some of the most unbelievable places, meeting some fascinating people and experiencing some thrills of a lifetime.� He took a 22-foot speed boat from Marbella, Spain, over to Gibraltar. He walked the streets of Amsterdam. He skied in Norway in subzero weather. A stiff breeze somehow turned his lift chair upside down. Exciting, very exciting. Jani made it to Moscow and walked through the Kremlin. In Rome, he saw St. Peters Square and the Vatican. In Berlin he visited Checkpoint Charlie. He was treated like royalty when he introduced Sea Rays into Finland. The boats and the country were a perfect match. He went boating along

the coast of France, from Cannes to San Tropez. He saw Monaco. He drove on the Autobahn. He visited his father’s birthplace in Latvia, and his mother’s in East Germany. He met relatives for the first time. There were none in America. Jani accumulated many rewards for commercial air miles, enough to fly his mother’s family to the U.S. (first class) for her 70th birthday party. Trupovnieks had a private jet for a three-week sales trip to South America. He didn’t stay long in Venezuela. “We were awakened by our pilots and told we must depart immediately due to a coup. I remember slipping out the back door of the hotel, rushing to the airport and running to the plane. It was already on the runway at 3 a.m.� Jani was a big man long

before all that. He looks trim enough at 320 but economy airline seats are a tight fit. He once survived 17 hours in coach, from Chicago to Abu Dhabi. He says hotel beds in Japan are a little problem. So was a dental chair. “I lost a filling. My interpreter helped find a dentist. The office reminded me of a big doll house. I knew I was in trouble when I sat down and my hands felt the floor. “I was sedated. When I awoke, at least 10 people were looking in my mouth. Obviously I could not understand a word they were saying. My interpreter interpreted. “‘Look at the size of those molars.’� Next week: The rest of the story, background, time as Vol, bumping into Rhonda Brimer. Marvin West invites reader reaction. His address is westwest6@netzero.com

Brantley wants relief for towing customers By Sandra Clark Knox County at-large commissioner Ed Brantley apparently believes that when a citizen comes to public forum, asking for help on an issue, that someone ought to pay attention. This is an odd notion that surely will be squelched. For now Brantley’s trampled on a sacred sheriff’s office prerogative. Stand by to learn the outcome. It started when Paul Johnson appeared at an earlier commission meeting to complain that he got a towing/storage bill for more than $500 after a Thanksgiving weekend wreck rendered his car undrivable. “I tried to call my insurance agency, but they were closed for the holiday. So the county (deputy) called a wrecker. For a 15-mile

tow, the bill was over $500 when I went to get the car on Monday. I had to forfeit my title to the car, the bill was so high. I asked for an itemized bill and the person at t he window said no. I finally took a picture of the bill with my phone. “It was $350 for towing, a $50 gate fee and $50 for cleanup at the site.� Brantley said the deputies should hand the victims a list of wrecker services and their charges. “The consumer should know what they’re up against when this happens because they’re not in any position to make a good decision.� He called for discussion. Commissioner Mike Brown jumped in. “Is there such a list? Who sets the list? Who sets the cost?� He called for someone from the sheriff’s office to respond.

Ed Brantley

No one stepped forward. Brantley said he had spoken with Deputy Chief Lee Tramel who said there’s no proce-

dure in place. Commissioner Brad Anders, also a city police officer, said the city has a contract wrecker service for each zone with set rates. “We would have to create a committee to inspect wreckers and it would require cooperation from the sheriff’s office.� Commissioner Charles Busler said his insurance has a towing rider and he also has AAA. Anders said AAA doesn’t tow wrecks. “They’ll

call a towing service, but you’ll get the full bill.� “I’m not asking for more regulations,� said Brantley. “The simplest thing would be a written list. ...� Commissioner Bob Thomas thanked Johnson for coming back to the February meeting. “The No. 1 thing that everyone up here wants is for every citizen to be treated fairly. We should come up with what it would cost (to oversee wreckers and towing). “It should be fair for citizens and fair for wrecker companies. Citizens should be able to get an itemized bill. We need to step into the 20th Century.� Commission chair Dave Wright asked Brantley to contact the sheriff’s office and set up a discussion for the commission’s next workshop meeting, which should be Monday, March 14.

GOP women’s award Helen “Tootie� Haskins and JoAnne Skidmore of the Tennessee Federation of Republican Women acknowledge Haskins’ selection as one of five women honored by the new GOP committee on Women in Business, which Skidmore chairs. Recognized in the inaugural class were Chrissy Haslam, Speaker Beth Harwell, U.S. Reps. Diane Black and Marsha Blackburn, and Haskins. Haskins had a 33-year career as legislative assistant to Sens. Halbert Havill, Bill Baird, Reagor Motlow, Milton Hamilton and Ben Atchley.

Jones needs a home

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Shopper news • MARCH 2, 2016 • A-5

The human face of outsourcing Tom Anderson has worked for the University of Tennessee 15 years come August. He’s in Facilities Services (formerly Physical Plant) and is a buyer in the supply warehouse. A past president of United Campus W o r k ers (affiliated with the ComTom Anderson munication Workers of America), he and his wife have two children, ages 22 and 23, who want to continue their education. They live in the Whittle Springs area. Both he and his wife have preexisting health conditions, and it took him years to top $30,000 annually at UT. “There’s a public image of cushy state jobs with great benefits where you don’t really work that hard, but that’s far from reality,� Anderson said. “One of the tradeoffs for the ‘good benefits’ is a lower salary scale.

Betty Bean Folks who are custodians or in zone maintenance, they make $9.50 an hour – UT’s minimum wage. Almost everybody I know has a side job on weekends. They’re living hand to mouth, and I’m not far from that. We live paycheck to paycheck.� Nevertheless, he said that he and his colleagues take pride in their work and always find a way to do what needs to be done, regardless of Nashville-mandated funding cuts and belt tightening. He’s proud that Facilities Services logged a 94 percent approval rating for work orders completed in 2015. A memo prepared by the department says its employees have more than 5,000 years of accumulated service. “There’s an old saying that applies: ‘Never mind the mule, just load down the cart.’ � Anderson said.

“And with state employees, that’s what you get. We understand what it takes to maintain campus as a safe and effective learning environment and we do whatever it takes to support the university.� He said life has been hard for campus workers since they found out about Gov. Bill Haslam’s plan to outsource their jobs last August (nobody’s buying Haslam’s claims that he hasn’t yet made up his mind about going forward). Despite a series of embarrassments – the failure to attract a single private sector bidder to run the state’s parks, the scandalplagued handover of state buildings to a Chicago management firm (in which, it was later revealed, Haslam had invested) and the poor outcomes logged by the firm contracted to provide online elementary school education, Haslam appears set on outsourcing as many public jobs as he can hand over to private enterprise. Although he knows the

campus workers have strong support from their administration and the public, Anderson can’t help but worry. “If this happens, I’ll almost certainly lose my job, my income and my benefits. The ability to send my kids to college would become very difficult. My ability to get insurance will pretty much disappear, and so will my ability to spend money in the community. And we’re talking about 800 people. That’s a lot of money to take out of the local economy.� If past is prologue, even those who keep their jobs will make less money and see their benefits reduced. “It’s emotionally draining,� Anderson said. “My co-workers really are family – and not only will that go away, but its going to affect their ability to survive. There’s a very clear human cost that the governor and his Office of Customer Focused Government are not talking about – and they don’t want to talk about. They much rather keep it as numbers. “Never mind us mules.�

Timing of Armstrong trial is dilemma What happens to state Rep. Joe Armstrong as he seeks a 15th term in the Legislature this August and November? It is an awkward issue for many who like Armstrong. He is under federal indictment for income tax evasion and it goes to trial on Aug. 2, just two days before the state primary. Of course it could be postponed again or settled. But if not, to be in court on election day is not a good situation for a public official running for office. One wonders if the judge hearing the case will want it to be heard while voters are deciding Armstrong’s future. If he is acquitted, then his problems are resolved. He has well-known Knoxville criminal defense attorney Greg Isaacs working his case. However, if he were convicted, he can still legally continue running for office in November but it would be embarrassing for local and state Democrats. Of course, he could also resign the nomination and allow local Democrats to replace him. However, if elected, it is unlikely the House would seat him as a convicted felon. Under Tennessee’s Constitution the House or Senate determines the eligibility of its own members. If Armstrong were not seated then that would trigger a special election in his district in 2017 at considerable public expense. County Commission would also name an interim representative for 100 days until

Victor Ashe

the election was held. However, there is precedent for a lawmaker serving in the state House and drawing a paycheck while in federal prison. That was the late Tommy Burnett who represented Fentress County. He was re-elected while in prison. The Democratic Party faces the dilemma of sticking with Armstrong despite the indictment or securing an alternative candidate to oppose him. Right now the Democrats seem to be backing Armstrong or at least not opposing him. The district itself is less than 50 percent African American and includes Holston Hills, the UT campus and much of South Knoxville as well as all of East Knoxville. It is a Democratic district but an indictment and certainly a conviction could change voting patterns if the Republicans run a serious moderate candidate. New state GOP chair Ryan Haynes has a challenge as the deadline for filing is April 7 (a little over one month from now). It falls to him and the House GOP caucus to seek a candidate in case Armstrong falters. Armstrong is personally liked by members of both parties. The vast majority, including this writer, hope

he is innocent. That is one reason there has not been a rush by political leaders calling for his ouster. On the other hand, should he be found guilty then there are consequences for both parties and the people of his district whom he has ably served for 28 years. â– Retiring U.S. Rep. Steve Fincher from West Tennessee who has served only three terms in Congress is taking with him a huge campaign war chest of $2.7 million. This can be found at fec.gov for those who wish to check donations to campaign for Congress as well as president. This was as of Dec. 31, 2015. Fincher will be able to give this away to various causes and political activities as long as it lasts. He cannot use it for personal matters. To place this in comparison to other Tennessee House members, Rep. Phil Roe from the upper East Tennessee district has $535,000 in his campaign account. Rep. Jimmy Duncan has $1 million. Rep. Chuck Fleischmann has $931,000, Rep. Scott DesJarlais has $240,000, Rep. Jim Cooper from Nashville has $891,000, Rep. Diane Black has $1.7 million, Rep. Marsha Blackburn has $2.2 million and Rep. Steve Cohen has $745,000. â– County Commissioner Bob Thomas is contacting lots of folks about a possible 2018 run for county mayor when Tim Burchett is term limited in

2018. Thomas had coffee a few weeks ago with former Mayor Tommy Schumpert at Panera’s in Bearden. He is thinking about a May event at Powell Auction to raise some funds but he has not named a treasurer yet which is a legal requirement to raise money. ■John Hooker’s death removes a colorful and iconic personality from the Tennessee political scene. He came close to being elected governor in 1970 but came up against a Memphis dentist named Winfield Dunn who prevailed. Dunn and Hooker later became good friends and Dunn described him as a “giant. It is hard not to like and admire the tenacity with which Hooker approached the causes he favored. He had character and conviction. They are worthy attributes. ■Noted author Erik Larson will speak in Knoxville at 7 p.m. Tuesday, March 22, at the Bijou Theatre. He is the author of “Dead Wake� and previously wrote “In the Garden of Beasts,� and “The Devil in the White City.� Tickets are available from knoxbijou.com

government I’ve seen the light: Why Trump wins Count me among the skeptics who thought Donald Trump would blow over as a serious candidate. But after watching the debates and the early primaries, I finally get it. Donald J. Trump – casinobuilding, old-lady-evicting, multimarried, bankruptcy-filing wild man with three wives and five kids – is headed for the White House. Trump has caught the wave of outrage that folks across the country are feeling. “Let’s make America great again� resonates. For every Ron Ramsey who got outspent and outpolled by an establishment sort like Bill Haslam, this Trump’s for you. For every evangelical who dutifully voted for Republican nominees only to see nothing change, this Trump’s for you. For the middle class,

Sandra Clark

standing on an economic sand bar watching good jobs and their standard of living wash away, this Trump’s for you. Donald Trump in the White House is scary. Very scary. But even scarier is the massive federal debt we’ve piled up by spending money on social programs and wars we haven’t been willing to tax ourselves to fund. Voters in yesterday’s primary said “Enough. No more. Let’s go.� Donald Trump, allAmerican scoundrel, is headed for the White House.

Library honor State Sen. Randy McNally, who chairs the Senate finance committee and represents a portion of Knox County, has received the Medallion Award for leadership in financial management and support of the state’s libraries. Secretary of State Tre Hargett (left) presented the award to McNally, citing his work to secure state funding to construct the Briceville Public Library in 2011. McNally said libraries, especially in rural areas, give important Internet access for online education programs and job searches.

Tennessee Highway Patrol hiring cadets The Tennessee Highway Patrol will soon begin accepting applications for the next Trooper Cadet Academy. Men and women interested in a career as a state trooper can begin the

GOV NOTES ■Thursday 3/3, 7:30 p.m., GOP Concord Farragut, Fruitation CafÊ, speaker Lee Tramel ■Saturday 3/5, 9:30-noon, public officials assisting Second Harvest, RSVP 615-741-1648 ■Monday 3/7, 1 p.m., East Knox Community Meeting, Burlington Library, speaker Charme Allen ■Monday 3/7, 7 p.m., GOP West Knox, Red Lobster, Kingston Pike ■Tuesday 3/8, 7 p.m., GOP North Knox/Fountain City, Shoney’s, Broadway.

application process online only, beginning at 12:01 a.m. Wednesday, March 9, through 11:59 p.m. Tuesday, March 15. Applicants may apply at agency.governmentjobs. com/tennessee/default.cfm There are currently 884 authorized commissioned trooper positions within the THP. Trooper cadets will be assigned to vacant positions across the state upon graduation. The starting salary during the training academy is $2,733 per month. Info: tn.gov/safety or 615-741-4841

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A-6 • MARCH 2, 2016 • KARNS/HARDIN VALLEY Shopper news

SENIOR NOTES ■ Karns Senior Center 8042 Oak Ridge Highway 951-2653 knoxcounty.org/seniors Monday-Friday 7:30 a.m.-4 p.m. Offerings include: card games; dance classes; exercise programs; mahjong; art classes; farkle dice games; dominoes; a computer lab; billiards room; outdoor grill and kitchen area. Veterans Services, 9-10 a.m. Friday, March 18. ■ Frank R. Strang Senior Center 109 Lovell Heights Road 670-6693 knoxcounty.org/seniors Monday-Friday 8 a.m.-4 p.m. Offerings include: card games; exercise programs; dance classes; watercolor classes; Tai Chi; blood pressure checks; Mahjong; senior-friendly computer classes. The center’s lounge/ resource area contains a lending library, puzzle table, Green Mountain Coffee, television and newspapers, along with a “Senior Services” resource wall. Veterans Services, 11 a.m.-noon Thursday, March 10. ■ CAC Office on Aging 2247 Western Ave. 524-2786 knoxooa@knoxseniors. org ■ Knox County Senior Services City County Building 400 Main St., Suite 615 215-4044 Monday-Friday 8 a.m.-4:30 p.m. ■ Senior Citizens Information and Referral Service 2247 Western Ave. 524-2786 knoxseniors.org Provides information about services for persons age 60+ and those with disabilities who live in Knoxville or Knox County and referrals when needed.

The Tellico Tappers step-ball-changing their way through “Singing in the Rain.”

The Tellico Tappers with Strang Senior Center coordinator Lauren Monahan at the center’s 18-year anniversary celebration Feb. 10. Pictured from left are Amy Covell, Michel Hamilton, Sharen Bennett, Lauren Monahan, Ku Adams, Mary Jane Pope, and Gale Montgomery. Photos by Nancy Anderson

Tellico Tappers hang up their dancing shoes By Nancy Anderson The Tellico Tappers Shuffled off to Buffalo for the last time at Strang Senior Center’s 18-year anniversary celebration on Feb. 10. For 20 years the popular seniors tap dancing troupe from Lenoir City performed four to five shows a month entertaining in nursing homes, veteran’s homes, senior centers, and events

throughout East Tenn. With five numbers including “Singing in the Rain,” “The Chattanooga Choo Choo,” “Grand Old Flag,” “I’ve Got Rhythm,” and “Rocky Top” each with a quick costume change, this year’s show was high energy with lots of pizazz. Most would agree that’s impressive for a group of 52 to 76-year-olds. When founder Marilynn

McKenna passed away in 2015 and four others either moved or went back to work, the group decided to hang up their tap shoes but not before dancing for the Strang Senior Center one last time. “Last year was tough. Really tough, we lost our director and several others so we felt it was time,” said dance captain Mary Jane Pope. “Without Marilynn it’s

just not same, she was the glue that held us together. “But we had to come to Strang Senior Center today. We wouldn’t miss it. It’s tradition. “I’m going to miss my tapper sisters. We had a lot of fun laughing at ourselves and each other. “I think that may be the most important thing Marilynn taught us.

Plants of spring It’s March and I cannot keep from noticing the subtle signs of spring. My star magnolia has bloomed, but sadly after two days the freeze got it. My Lenten rose is now in bloom, but the plant is freeze hardy, so it is fine. The jonquils will be out in a couple of weeks and hopefully will not get frozen.

Of course, heart leaf pig is not this plant’s real name. Its real name is bergenia. Another common name for this plant is pigs squeak, so named because when the wet leaves are rubbed together, they squeak. This beautiful little plant was discovered by me when my mother would take my sister and me for walks in the woods. She would let us pick the little pigs and use them in our playhouse. When this Bonnie plant blooms in the early Peters spring, it has a little five-petal white, bell-shaped flower. If you have a woodland yard as I do, it is a nice plant for your flower bed. Heart Leaf Pigs: Bergenias are evergreen Plants and their names perennials that form as low are always entertaining. clumps of bold, shiny green

“No matter what happens or what mistakes you make, just keep smiling. You’ll get through it.” “We’ve had a wonderful time and we will cherish the memories of all the wonderful people we’ve met along the way. “Today is a bittersweet day, but if Peyton Manning can retire so can we!”

the berries will burst and form the shape of a heart. I have grown one or two into small trees – about seven feet tall and perhaps an inch trunk diameter.

Lenten rose

leaves in the garden. With some winter sunshine, these glossy green leaves develop shades of polished bronze making them attractive contrasting plants. Bergenias are also frost/freeze hardy. They are happy in mild sun or partial shade and are often seen in established gardens under forests of tall trees. Mine is under a large Yoshino cherry tree.

Yet another encouraging attribute is that bergenias are classified as water-wise plants that require average moisture. It is said they are buck- and rabbit-resistant so are ideal for farm house or country gardens. Hearts A-Bustin’ with Love: In midsummer, this little shrub will form marble-size red berries. In late summer

Snow drops Snow Drops: Lest we get too carried away with the thought that spring is here, snow drops are in full bloom.

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KARNS/HARDIN VALLEY Shopper news • MARCH 2, 2016 • A-7

faith Connective tissue For this reason I bow my knees before the Father, from whom every family in heaven and on earth takes its name. (Ephesians 3: 14 NRSV) All that they were he would never have again. – Somewhere Safe with Somebody Good, Jan Karon

At the Bread of Life pantry at West Park Baptist Church are: volunteer coordinator Yvonne Sims, volunteer Clara Kyker, volunteer Terris O’Neal, inventory coordinator Michael Miller, pantry coordinator Terri Cage; back, volunteer Barbara Widelle, care counselor Marie Maurice, counselor coordinator Elaine Granade, volunteer Terrie Merriman and volunteer Pat Shelby. Photo by Nancy Anderson

West Park food pantry: It’s a God thing By Nancy Anderson When Terri Cage is asked about the Bread of Life Food Pantry at West Park Baptist Church her eyes light up with a passion for helping others. The brainchild of Cage’s Sunday school class four years ago, the Pantry has grown into a ministry helping more than 250 people a month fill the gaps in their own pantries with around $40 in groceries. About 80 volunteers, including the leadership

team, shoppers and resource counselors, keep the ministry running smoothly. “We’ve all become family not just with each other, but with our clients as well,� Cage says. “The Pantry is meant to help our neighbors in this community, but we don’t turn anyone away. We operate with the ethic of dignity and respect. No one wants to come to a food pantry, but with our economic times it’s easy to find yourself in need quickly.� Keeping the Bread of

Life Food Pantry wellstocked is a church family affair with each Sunday school class supplying an item such as cereal or canned chicken. A red wagon is kept by the doors making it convenient for the congregation to drop in a food item, and Second Harvest helps with food sourcing; but it’s the surprise donations that cause the most excitement. Cage said she received a call from a trucking company delivering bacon to a

local store. The bacon was the wrong flavor so the store refused delivery. “The driver parked his 18-wheeler in the parking lot Wednesday night, in the morning he unloaded 45 cases of bacon. It’s Wright Brand Hickory Smoked Bacon,� Cage says. “The right brand, but the wrong flavor. We now have a freezer full of bacon right out of nowhere. “It’s a God thing. “Like it says in John 6:35 ‘Jesus declared, I am the Bread of Life whoever comes to me will never be hungry.’� Info: westparkbaptist. org

Family is a broad concept. There is the family of mankind, which includes all of us. In the midst of a contentious political season, that is an important thing to remember! There are also clans, countries, organizations, political parties, clubs, churches, denominations, sororities, fraternities, and lodges, claiming a special kinship with one another. What all of those things have in common is connection. We are social animals, and we need each other. And speaking of animals, let us not forget that there are a great many other social animals besides us humans. For example, whales live in pods, fish live in schools, female elephants help each other during the process of birthing, male wolves get excited and protective when their mate is giving birth. When one reaches a certain age, one begins to notice that there are holes in the connection. People we have loved die; friends we have cherished move, lose

Cross Currents

Lynn Pitts

touch, disappear from our lives. As is so often the case, I know the following quote because I heard it sung many, many times when I was in junior high school. I never had a chance to sing it when I moved up to high school, but I remember it fondly, both the lyrics and the tune. “No man is an island, no man stands alone. Each man’s joy is joy to me, Each man’s grief is my own. We need one another, so I will defend Each man as my brother Each man as my friend.� – Based on a poem by John Donne

FAITH NOTES Meetings/classes ■St. James Episcopal Church, 1101 N. Broadway, will host Lenten Quiet Day Retreat, “Mutual Indwelling: Finding Home in Christ� 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Saturday, March 5. Led by Br. David Butzu, OSB, of Holy Trinity Monastery. Info/RSVP: 523-5687. ■West Haven Baptist Church, 5651 Matlock Drive, will host VBS FunShop, a VBS training and networking event, Saturday, March 5. Group Publishing VBS expert will provide hands-on training on its “Cave Quest VBS.� Registration: group.com/vbsfunshop. Info: Elizabeth, 237-4090.

Lee Ann Vinson is a key organizer of the India Jewelry Sale, a mission-minded fundraiser at First Baptist Concord. The upcoming sale will feature 6,000 pieces of jewelry. Photo by Carolyn Evans

Jewelry treasures benefit India missions By Carolyn Evans

in the Family Life Center Tickets must be purchased Treasures from India will gym, with shopping avail- in advance at the church’s fill tables at First Baptist able before and after dinner. website at fbconcord.org Concord on Sunday, March 6. Volunteers are unpacking multiple boxes for the third annual India Jewelry Sale, and the community is invited to purchase the colorful treasures. The purpose of the sale is to help keep missionaries in the field, says Sarah Scheafnocker, a FBC outreach staff member. This is especially meaningful to First Baptist Concord members who have worked with a missionary family in India for the last three years. The India jewelry sales were created by a missionary, her mother and sister. As the missionary was looking for a way to raise money for missions, her sister suggested selling the colorful jewelry found in the Indian markets. The missionary gave her mother and sister two large tote bags. They shopped the markets, and, by the end of the day, the tote bags and several other large bags were overflowing with jewelry. Since then, the missionary’s mom and sister have consistently brought jewelry to the U.S. market to help with mission work. The event is 5-7 p.m.

Special services â– Mount Harmony Baptist Church, 819 E. Raccoon Valley Road, will hold revival 6 p.m. Sunday, March 6, and 7 p.m. through the week. Evangelists: Louis Branch, pastor of Bethlehem Baptist Missionary Church; and Randy Carver, pastor of Heavenly View Missionary Baptist Church. â– St. James Episcopal Church, 1101 N. Broadway, will host

the BucsWorth Men’s Choir from East Tennessee University in concert 7:30 p.m. Monday, March 14. The ETSU Swashbucklers, a student-led a capella ensemble, will also perform. ■Westside Unitarian Universalist Church, 616 Fretz Road, holds meditation services 6:30 p.m. each second and fourth Wednesday. Includes quiet reflection, simple music and readings. Info: westsideuuc.org.

Youth programs â– Beaver Ridge UMC, 7753 Oak Ridge Highway, hosts Morning Breakfast and Afternoon

Hang Out for youth each Tuesday. Breakfast and Bible study, 7:20 a.m.; Hang Out Time, 3:30-5:30 p.m. Info: 6901060 or beaverridgeumc.org.

Vendor/consignor wanted ■Central Baptist ChurchBearden, 6300 Deane Hill Drive, is seeking consignors for its children’s consignment sale, to be held Friday-Saturday, April 15-16. Fee: $10, nonrefundable. Proceeds go to West Hills Elementary School Back Pack Program. Registration: cbcbearden.org/events. Info: cbbclothingsale@gmail. com or 588-0586.

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A-8 • MARCH 2, 2016 • Shopper news

Area students named PTA scholars

The Knox County Council PTA has awarded scholarships to area high school seniors. Pictured are: (front) Courtney Blake Hardesty, Paul Kelley Academy (Dr. Paul Kelley Memorial Scholarship); Kiersten Anna Morris, L&N STEM Academy (PTA scholarship); Uriah Danielle Richey, Fulton High (Zaevion Dobson Memorial Scholarship); (back) Noah Fawver, Carter High (Bill Williams Scholarship); Kaci Deakins, Farragut High (Diane Jablonski Memorial Scholarship); Mary Allyson White, Hardin Valley Academy (PTA scholarship) and Markeesa Stanford, Fulton High (Alice B. Deeds Memorial Scholarship). Not pictured are Frenando Blevins, West High and Hannah Kidd, Powell High. Both were awarded the PTA scholarship. Photo by R. White

Cahak to coach at Concord Christian By Sara Barrett Concord Christian School has announced Ryan Cahak as its new head boys basketball coach. Cahak’s coaching background Cahak

includes stints at UT, Colgate University, Lipscomb University and Blackman High School. He played for coach Jim Boeheim at Syracuse University while earning a degree in sociology. When Cahak isn’t coaching, he enjoys spending time with his wife, Cara, and their three children, Alee, Annah Cate

and Charli. He is also pursuing a master’s degree at UT. “We are so excited to have Coach Cahak leading our program. It’s not every day you get references from Tobias Harris and Cuonzo Martin,� Head of School Ruston Pierce said. “He will be a great fit with our CCS family.�

West Valley Middle School Student Council Stop Hunger Now committee members Cade Standifer, Ziyan Jahangir, (back) Catherine Passovets, committee chair Kristy Dean, Kyra Cole and Matthew Horobet brainstorm fundraising ideas for April’s event. Not pictured are committee members Tori Patton and Samaya Baljepally. Photo by S. Barrett

West Valley plans to ‘Stop Hunger Now’ By Sara Barrett Last year, West Valley Middle School Student Council member Kristy Dean participated in a Stop Hunger Now event with other members during a Southern Association of Student Councils convention. “Stop Hunger Now is a company that is working to end world hunger in our lifetime,� says Dean. Plastic bags are filled with rice, vegetables and spices that can be sent overseas to people in need.

“All of us were so amazed at how much food we could package in one hour,� she says. Afterward, during a student council meeting at WVMS, it was agreed unanimously that West Valley should host a similar event, and Dean offered to take charge. To host an event, student council needs to raise $5,000 which will cover enough supplies for 17,000 meals. “That means 17,000 peo-

ple who do not always get to eat will have a hot meal,� she says. Each meal costs 29 cents. The food packaging event will be held 9 a.m.-noon Saturday, April 30, in the school gymnasium and cafeteria. “Anyone is welcome to help us package the meals. We would love for this to be a communitywide event,� she says. To make a donation or to volunteer, visit events.stopphungernow.org/westvalleymiddle

Good vibes rule at Community Schools Celebration By Betsy Pickle Beaming faces were everywhere at the Community Schools Celebration at South Knoxville Elementary School. The kids taking part in the program and those helping out around the gymnasium were all smiles as they represented SKES. Visitors from a number of community schools from throughout the county and members of the League of Women Voters of Knoxville/Knox County, which sponsored last Thursday’s event with the school, looked happy and interested. Most upbeat of all were the three “visionaries� honored for their roles in bringing the community school initiative to Knoxville: Dr. Bob Kronick of the University of Tennessee, Knox County Schools Superintendent Dr. Jim McIntyre and Great Schools Partnership president Buzz Thomas. Each in turn received a framed piece of artwork created by community school students at Pond Gap, Dogwood and South Knoxville, respectively. After a welcome by LWV president Rynn Dupes

and words from Knoxville Mayor Madeline Rogero and Knox County Mayor Tim Burchett, LWV board member and past president Jamey Dobbs jumped right into the art presentations. Riley Greaney represented Pond Gap; Madalynne Mathis and Chloe Galyon, Dogwood; and Alexis Banks, South Knoxville. Kronick recalled coming up with the idea for community schools while driving on a two-lane road between Pikeville and Crossville. He stopped to eat at “a chicken joint� in Crossville and started writing down his ideas about “the school as a human-service agency.� Kronick founded the University-Assisted Community Schools now at Pond Gap and Inskip. The other 10 local community schools are managed by the Great Schools Partnership. McIntyre called Kronick “a very persistent man� and said “we are all the beneficiaries of his persistence.� The superintendent spread thanks around generously – to principals, coordinators, people in the community, the school board and the two mayors.

Thomas said the community schools initiative isn’t a “project – it’s a strategy for how we build healthy, safe, prosperous communities and schools.� Stephanie Welch, vice president of operations for the Great Schools Partnership, highlighted projects going on at specific community schools, including a nature trail, a walking school bus and community dinners. The evening ended with tours of SKES and snacks.

Stephanie Welch of Great Schools Partnership leads a small group, including Karen Holst (in violet) and Blaine Sample, coordinators of the University-Assisted Community Schools at Pond Gap and Inskip, respectively, on a tour of the SKES campus.

Community Schools resource coordinators Adam Fritts of DogBob Kronick receives artwork wood and Susan Martin of South Knoxville have an enthusiasfrom Pond Gap student Rylee tic partner in Ben Epperson of the Knox County Health DepartGreaney. ment.

Buzz Thomas is presented with art created by South Knoxville Elementary student Alexis Banks.

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KARNS/HARDIN VALLEY Shopper news • MARCH 2, 2016 • A-9

Outstanding educators at Karns Elementary Karns Elementary School staff has selected a stellar group of educators as its teachers of the year. The size of the school warrants many title holders, but Amy Clapp, Nova Grove, Lauren Rader and Yolanda Williams fit the role well. “We are setting an example of how to teach,� says Williams. She strives to create models of herself in her fifth graders, she adds, just as her teachers instilled their values in her. Although all four may not have realized early on their calling to educate, they each say they wouldn’t choose to be anywhere else. After substitute teaching at Ridgedale Elementary School many years ago, Grove said she saw a need with the special education

Karns Elementary School teachers of the year are Amy Clapp, Yolanda Williams, Nova Grove and Lauren Rader. Karns High School students Sydni Stinnett and Josh McGinnis were finalists at the Bijou Awards. Photos by S. Barrett students there and realized “these babies need me,� she says. “You’re called to be a teacher,� adds Rader, who says she values the relation-

ships she develops with her second graders more than any other part of teaching. “The transformation these kids go through from the first 12 weeks of school

to now is incredible,� say Clapp, now in her 18th year at KES. “I love teaching. I love teaching third grade. I love teaching at Karns Elementary.�

Karns’ talent reaches the Bijou

Hoops to help Sarah Perez By Sara Barrett Episcopal School of Knoxville alum and current Knox Catholic student Sarah Perez was injured in a car accident in 2011. She still receives therapy at Project Walk, a spinal cord injury recovery center in Atlanta. Four eighth graders at ESK decided to help Sarah while also completing the community service component of their portfolio projects. Chris Daley, Ben Lovely, Saad Mohammad and Mason Stivers facilitated the first Hoops4Hope 3-on-3 charity basketball tourna-

ment Feb. 20 at ESK. Students from seven schools attended the tournament and 17 teams participated. Winners were named in the family, high school and middle school brackets. In the middle school bracket, Tyler Nordin’s team from Webb won. Jackson Rowan’s team from Knox Catholic took first in the high school bracket, and Team Lovely took first place in the family bracket. More than $2,000 was raised during Hoops4Hope, and ESK is considering making it an annual event.

Karns High School students Josh McGinnis and Sydni Stinnett have fairly recently discovered their musical talents, but Knoxville is already taking notice. Both vocalists were named finalists in the Bijou Awards, a talent competition at the Bijou Theatre for middle and high school students in Knox and surrounding counties. Sydni won the competition’s Rising Star award in middle school and says the experience concreted her plans for the future. Now a freshman, she’s just completed her first album (availESK eighth-graders Ben Lovely, Saad Mohammad, Mason Sti- able on iTunes), posts videos vers and Chris Daley helped cover ESK alum and current Knox of performances on YouCatholic student Sarah Perez’s therapy at Project Walk Atlanta Tube and performs around by facilitating the first Hoops4Hope event. Photo submitted town with a two-piece band. Josh realized he could sing when he chose the “easy way out� to obtain a fine arts credit sophomore year and signed up to be a techie in musical theatre. He was hanging around during auditions for a musical when teacher Caryn Marlowe pretty much insisted he try out. The rest is history. Josh is planning to perform during college and

Making feet happy, internationally By Sara Barrett There are 500 feet around the world that will be much happier and healthier thanks to students at Webb School of Knoxville. The Interact Club of Webb’s Upper School hosted a weeklong shoe drive to benefit Soles4Souls, a nonprofit that collects and redistributes gently-used shoes to people in need around the world. Students donated 250 pairs of shoes that were then delivered to Soles4Souls’ drop-off center for processing. According to Soles4Souls’ website, millions

of people in developing countries are exposed to unsanitary conditions because they don’t have proper footwear. Since its beginning in 2006, the nonprofit has distributed 26 million pairs of shoes in 127 countries and to every state in the U.S. More than 30 Upper School students are members of Webb’s Interact Club, which is a high school version of Rotary International. Rotary promotes “service above self� by encouraging community service and raising awareness of national and international issues. Info: www.soles4souls. com.

Webb School of Knoxville multicultural coordinator Liz Gregor and Webb Interact members Abby Roesch and Kalina Scarbrough stand with some of the shoes donated during the Soles4Souls project. Photo submitted

Sara Barrett earn his degree in music education so he can teach choir and theater. So far, he has auditioned at Lee and Carson-Newman universities. “All because (Caryn) Marlowe forced me to audition,� he says with a laugh. “I love knowing I can make people happy when I sing,� says Sydni. Her preperformance rituals include “trilling,� a type of warbling sound, and drinking hot tea and lemon. Josh prays prior to each performance. “I enjoy it. It makes you feel so vulnerable, putting yourself out there – but all that’s gone when you get on stage,� he says. Josh will perform the lead role in the upcoming KHS production of “The Music Man�, and you can find Sydni on iTunes or on Facebook at facebook.com/ sydni.stinnett

HEALTH NOTES

CALL FOR ARTISTS

■“Learn How to Love the Foods That Love You Back!� 6 p.m. Monday, March 7, Take Charge Fitness Program, 1921 N. Charles Seivers Blvd., Clinton. Speaker: Camille Watson, holistic health coach. Free and open to the public. Info: 457-8237.

â– The Arts & Culture Alliance of Greater Knoxville is seeking nomination for Poet Laureate for the city of Knoxville. The deadline for nominations to be received is Friday, April 1. Info/nomination forms: knoxalliance.com/poet.html, or send an SASE to Liza Zenni, Arts & Culture Alliance, PO Box 2506, Knoxville, TN 37901.

â– Peninsula Lighthouse Group of Families Anonymous meetings, 6:15-7:15 p.m. each Tuesday, 1451 Dowell Springs Blvd. Newcomers welcome; no dues/fees; no sign-up; first names only. Info: Barbara L., 696-6606 or PeninsulaFA2@aol.com. â– UT Hospice Adult Grief Support Group meeting, 5-6:30 p.m. Tuesday, March 15, UT Hospice office, 2270 Sutherland Ave. A light supper is served. Info/reservation: Brenda Fletcher, 544-6277.

â– Knoxville Photo 2016 Exhibition: juried exhibition of photographic works to be held June 3-24 in the main gallery of the Emporium Center, 100 S. Gay St. Entries must be original works completed within the last two years. Entry deadline: Sunday, April 17. Info/application: knoxalliance. com/photo.html.

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A-10 • MARCH 2, 2016 • Shopper news

A concert of ‘lasts’

After 39 years “on the bench� as professor of piano at UT, Dr. David Northington will present his final faculty recital this Sunday. Photos by Carol Z. Shane

Schubert’s ‘Piano Sonata in B flat,’ finished a few months before he died.� Northington says the “Bagatelles� ˉ or “trifles� ˉ are “mini-encapsulations of Beethoven’s style. In six small pieces, everything

is there ˉ the lyricism, the dynamic contrasts, the classicism, the beginnings of romanticism.� All were written in 1823, four years before the great composer’s death. Speaking of his students, Northington says, “In so many ways, they keep me young.� He admits that he’ll miss that. But, he says, he just can’t keep up the same schedule and the same intensity of performing and teaching. “If I can’t perform and be an inspiration to my students through performing, I shouldn’t teach; I want to be the kind of inspiration to them that I feel a student needs.� He’s got a substantial bucket list. Both he and his wife, Stephanie, are eager to visit New Zealand, where

We first heard of it years ago from one of the young people at the Cornell Lab who helped dream it up, and who is now the eBird project leader. His name is Chris Wood. He has been our guide on several birding trips we have enjoyed around the country, and he has patiently tried to help me understand the vision they had: a worldwide system that would consist of a great depository of bird information, fed by the tens of thousands of birders everywhere, sending in the lists of everything they were seeing throughout each year. Launched in 2002, the vision has come to pass – with remarkable success! So what sort of information do they get from all us citizen scientists? They learn where the many species of birds are, in real time, where they spend the winter, where they are to be found while nesting and rearing young, when and where they are when on the move during migration. Now with all the data they have collected, they have produced animated maps for individual species of migrating birds, with subtitle dates like the TV weather maps, showing the tsunami-like waves of birds ebbing and flowing to

and from North and South America season by season. Those maps give a visual face to the hard-to-imagine concepts of millions of birds passing to and fro over our heads year after year. The folks at eBird have come up with a lot of other fun and interesting things. Probably the biggest is the system whereby individuals can sign up for membership, and then can at any time send in a list of birds you’ve seen, on a walk around the yard, a trip to the beach, wherever. Your sightings go into the huge data base, but they are also stored specifically for you, so you can check on your own list of birds and sighting records any time you wish. Yet another program, called ebird-alert, lets you subscribe free to receive daily emails from any state you wish, reporting the locations of especially-interesting or rare birds, complete with detailed Google maps of their locations, so you can hop in the car and go find them. It even tells you the locations of the nearest good places to eat! And then there’s the program called Merlin, a free app for your mobile device that helps you identify the most common 400 birds in the US, especially helpful

By Carol Z. Shane Though he’s presenting his final recital as a UT faculty member this coming Sunday, Dr. David Northington, the school of music’s Powell Distinguished Professor of Piano, is already excited about his next project. Northington is founder and artistic director of the East/West International Piano Festival at Shandong University in Weihai, China. And this summer he’ll be headed there to facilitate its inaugural season. “We have American and Chinese students,� he says. “There will be

lessons, master classes and excursions. I hope we will eventually expand it and have students from everywhere.� World-renowned as a concert pianist and educator, Northington will

be retiring in July after 39 years at UT. He’s chosen for his final faculty recital a “concert of ‘lasts,’� he says. “It’s not a long program. I’m playing Beethoven’s last works ˉ the opus 126 ‘Bagatelles’ ˉ and

eBird is amazing! eBird is indeed amazing. Maybe not so much for those of you in the computer generation, who learned to count at the age of 1 by playing kiddie computer games, and who are able to fluently communicate your lives minute by minute on the social media. However, it’s a fact that I can remember my grandmother’s crank, 4-party-line telephone from when I was small, and I still tell errant callers on my home phone that they have “dialed� the wrong number. So maybe you can understand why I am in awe of a system that can collect 10 million bird sightings from around the world, over a 4-day period, and have them all neatly stored away, to be accessed and used in every way imaginable. That amazing process would be eBird. Here’s some background about how it came to be. Cornell University is located in Ithaca, New York, in the scenic environs of the Finger Lakes District in upper New York State. Cornell has been the epicenter of academic bird study for a very long time. A home-town example of what they’ve been doing all those years comes

Dr. Bob Collier

from right here in Knoxville. UT professor and Bird Club member, the late Dr. James Tanner, was working on his doctoral thesis for Cornell University when he and his wife, Nancy, now deceased also, famously honeymooned in the swamps of Louisiana while Jim was studying the ivory-billed woodpeckers there over the years of 1937-1939. That published thesis has become a classic, a detailed study of those now-extinct birds. In their later years, Jim and Nancy Tanner were thought to be the last two living humans to have seen an ivory-billed woodpecker. These days, the big bird doings at Ithaca happen at the Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology, set high on a wooded hill above the town. Spouse and I included it on the itinerary of one of our spring, Northeast birding trips, and had a really fine visit there. The lab consists

of a big main building nestled in the woods, with huge two-story windows looking out over a beautiful treelined lake. The lake has an active great blue heron nest, and there are bird feeders everywhere, with birding scopes set up to watch them with. Off the main lobby, you can access the famous Macaulay Library of bird songs and calls, the largest collection of bird songs in the world. A person can sit in there and listen to most any bird in the world, one by one, to their heart’s desire. And behind the scenes, there are lots of labs and cubicles filled with bright young computer-savvy ornithology-type people doing amazing things with birds, computers and data. The Cornell folks call all of us amateurs “citizen scientists,� and happily gather our millions of observations and bird lists into a giant data base of information that they can organize, use and study in ways that no group of researchers or academic institutions could ever achieve. That is where eBird began.

neither has been, as well as other countries new to them. He’ll be returning to some favorites, but “as a tourist, not as a performer ˉ without all the stress and schedule constraints.� A wine aficionado, he looks forward to some “tasting tours.� And he’ll have two grandchildren and a stack of books calling his name. “I think that every person enjoys certain advantages in every stage of life. I have advantages in my life now that I could not previously enjoy. “I’m looking forward to opening those new doors.� Dr. David Northington presents his final faculty recital at 2:30 p.m. this Sunday, March 6, in the Sandra Powell Recital Hall in the Natalie L. Haslam Music Center on the UT campus. The event is free and open to the public. Info: 974-3241 or visit www. music.utk.edu. Send story suggestions to news@ shoppernewsnow.com.

for beginning and intermediate birders. For many years now we have counted the birds at our feeders at intervals from November to March, and sent those counts in (initially on long paper forms at the end of each season, but now via a spiffy datareporting site that even I can navigate) to Operation Feederwatch, another datagathering program from Cornell – great fun during an otherwise bird-sparse period of time. And, we just finished the Great Backyard Bird Count on Feb. 12-15. People from all over the world counted birds anywhere they wanted, over the four-day time span, and sent in their results to eBird. Incredible – they have so far received 157,272 checklists, listing a total of 5,545 species of birds (over half of all known species on earth!) for a total of 18,117,713 individual birds seen. Not bad for a bunch of amateurs! Err, I mean, citizen scientists. It appears to me that this computer thing may actually prove to have some useful applications after all – especially if it helps us know more about the birds. You might want to click on the eBird site, maybe even sign up for something, and try it out!

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Shopper news • MARCH 2, 2016 • A-11

News from the Rotary Guy

Breakfast Rotary, Blue Grass build partnership By Tom King Every school day at Blue Grass Elementar y School the 620 students recite the core beliefs of Rotary International – known Tom King simply as “The Four Way Test.� These are the same four principles that Rotarians around the world say at every Rotary meeting. ■First, Is It the Truth? ■Second, Is It Fair to All Concerned? ■Third, Will It Build Goodwill and Better Friendships? ■Fourth, Will It Be Beneficial to All Concerned? ■Reciting the Four Way Test is the result of the Knoxville Breakfast Rotary Club’s partnership with the school that began in 2013.

“It’s so special when you are in the hallways in the mornings during the school’s 10-minute TV show. You stand there and hear The Four Way Test reverberating through the school,� says Scott Taylor, a club member and Knoxville attorney who was instrumental in pulling this partnership together. “It’s very special.� “The Rotarians have made a great impact at Blue Grass on the students, teachers and on our community. We think of them as part of our family here,� said Blue Grass principal Jaime Cantrill. “They are a regular fixture around here. The Four Way Test is about character development and it’s an important part of our day.� Taylor said the club had wanted to take on a major project. Helping Blue Grass seemed like a perfect fit. “With the school being so close to where we meet at Gettysvue, approaching Blue Grass seemed a natural

Kayden Segich holds up The Four Way Test for the camera.

Six students and two teachers were honored with the February Rotary Good Citizen awards. Pictured are (front) Ashlynn Murrel, kindergarten; (second row) Izzy Galehouse, 4th grade, Grant Cross, 2nd grade, Austin Madigan, 1st grade; (back) Molly Dalton, 5th grade, Gianna Hugg, 3rd grade, Breakfast Rotarian Scott Taylor and teachers Lauren Rosenbush and Phyllis White.

thing to do,� Taylor said. The club meets each Wednesday morning at 7 a.m. at Gettysvue Country Club. Blue Grass is just down the road on Westland Drive. This partnership began in August 2013 with a cleanup/beautification day on the school grounds. Each August now club members join parents and staff for the workday. This includes mulching, pressure washing sidewalks and steps and building exteriors, install-

ing new swing sets and new storage sheds, working on the shrubbery and landscaping, replacing the seats in the outdoor theater, and new picnic tables. “These Rotary guys sometimes work until dark on those cleanup days,� Cantrill said. This coming August will make the fourth straight year for the workday. Breakfast Rotary also has a hand in the morning TV show. The club raised $8,000 in 2015 to replace

outdated equipment, purchasing two video cameras, a teleprompter, a tripod, an electronic media processing control box, an iPad and MacBook Pro for a major upgrade to the school’s broadcast department. For the past three years the club has sponsored monthly student and staff Rotary Good Citizen Awards. Six students – one from each grade level – and two teachers or staff members are honored. Aubrey’s Res-

taurants donates gift cards. Club members are there each month for the presentations. Taylor estimates the club has invested about $20,000 in the last three years and this partnership continues. “This has been a great partnership and it is our signature project,� Taylor said. “For a small club (about 22 members) we’ve done quite a bit and we truly enjoy it and love the school.� This partnership is leading to another Rotary partnership as well. In the fall of 2016 the Breakfast Rotary Club will sponsor a new Interact Club at West Valley Middle School. “This is a natural progression for the Blue Grass students who go on to West Valley,� Taylor explained. “When they leave Blue Grass, they know all about Rotary.� Tom King is a retired newspaper editor, a Rotarian for 28 years and past president of the Rotary Club of Farragut. He can be reached p at tking535@gmail.com

Workday at By Sandra Clark Sixty-plus Rotarians and members of the youth group Interact worked Saturday at Ridgedale School in northwest Knox County to spruce up the campus. “These are things that we simply can’t afford to do,� said principal Diana Gossett. “And since we’re not a neighborhood school, we looked to the Rotarians for help.� Ridgedale serves as a “second chance� alternative school for middle school students from across Knox County. It also houses a separate special education program. Seven area Rotary Clubs chose Ridgedale for volunteer work on World Rotary

Day. Interact club members from Catholic High and Webb School also helped, as did an Air Force ROTC unit from McGhee Tyson Air Base. “They are so young‌â€? said a weary Rotarian as the youthful volunteers climbed ladders and tossed mulch. Projects included: New paint for two interior rooms and the outdoor pavilion, landscaping cleanup and new mulch, and planting azaleas. George Wehrmaker of Bearden Rotary chaired the day’s event. David Walker of Bright Side professional landscaping management brought heavy equipment to assist in the planting and landscaping.

Jim Holleman of the Knoxville Volunteer Rotary and Doug Lesher were putting final touches on the pavilion. Wehrmaker said volunteers pressure-washed it the previous week.

Doug Lesher (Knoxville Breakfast Rotary) paints the eaves of the pavilion at Ridgedale.

Phyllis Driver, president-elect of the North Knoxville Rotary Club, and Sandy Martin, president of the Rotary Club of Knoxville, team up to paint a workroom off the library at Ridgedale School.

Rachel Ford, Rotary Club of Knoxville, works on landscaping at Ridgedale School.

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Directing traffic in the main hallway are Patty Daughtrey (Farragut Rotary), Tom Daughtrey (president of Bearden Rotary), Kathy Sergeant and George Wehrmaker (Bearden).

$ $ % ' BUSINESS NOTES ■Donna D. McHargue, MD, internal medicine physician, has begun practice at Tennova Primary Care - Farragut. She is seeing patients at her new office at 110 Campbell Station Road, Suite 103. Dr. McHargue has served the healthcare needs of adults in the Knoxville community since 1990. Prior to joining Tennova Primary Care – Farragut, she was in private practice at Parkside Internal Medicine in West Knoxville. ■Clothes donations: Thirtyfour regional dry cleaning

establishments are joining during March to help provide job training for people in their community. Goodwill’s Project Wear and Share will provide donation boxes at the dry cleaners for gently used clothing and linens. Info: gwiktn.org or 865-588-8567 ■First Tennessee’s local market wrapped up 2015 with more than 116 employees volunteered over 7,000 service hours to 185 area nonprofits. The First Tennessee Foundation, which was founded in 1993, supports nonprofits in communities that the bank serves. In 2015, total foundation giving reached nearly $6 million through grants to 525 nonprofit organizations.

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March 2, 2016

HEALTH & LIFESTYLES

N EWS FROM PARKWEST, WEST KNOXVILLE ’ S H EALTHCARE LEADER • T REATED WELL .COM • 374-PARK

Volume speaks volumes when choosing a joint surgeon Parkwest Joint Center known for tackling hard cases When the going gets tough, the really tough cases go to Parkwest Joint Center – The Retreat. That’s because Parkwest has quietly gone about building a reputation as the place to go when joints – and joint replacements – have gone bad. “We take on really complicated cases,” said orthopedic surgeon Dr. Paul Naylor, co-director of the Parkwest Joint Center. “We’ll go to any extreme to save a leg, but you’ve got to have a dedicated team, the right equipment and the rehab facilities to make it work,” Naylor said. One such case was that of Linda Kidman, a 52-year-old grandmother from Virginia, who sought out orthopedic surgeon Dr. Hal Cates, Naylor’s colleague and Joint Center co-director, after two failed knee replacements and six surgeries had left her leg bent and twisted at a 45-degree angle. Doctors at a prestigious teaching hospital in another state told her that she should have her leg amputated because nothing more could be done for her. “She goes to a very well-established academic center, and they say, ‘Gosh, you need an amputation,’ and that would’ve worked but there are other ways,” said Cates. “All complex cases are different – you can’t ‘cookbook’ those. Whether it’s a firsttime knee with a bad deformity or a complicating medical problem that makes recovery complex, there are all kinds of things you can do.” Cates points out that patients

Joint pain can be debilitating, however, the skilled, experienced orthopedic surgeons at Parkwest take on the most complex cases to get their patients back in action. Joint Center Medical Director Paul Naylor MD stresses that every case is unique and must be approached as such. He says, “You have to form a winning game plan before you go into the operating room.”

considering joint surgery should do some homework when choosing where to receive their care. He recommends doing a side-by-side comparison in the facilities and ask questions about experience, skill level and staffing. “Studies show that true joint surgeons who do several hundred procedures a year have fewer complications and better outcomes,” Cates stated. Cates and his colleagues at Park-

west perform nearly 2,000 surgeries annually – approximately five surgeries a day for a calendar year. This number is much higher than an “average” joint center, and their outcomes are impressive, despite the number of complex cases. Approximately 15 percent of the surgeries are reworks of previously failed operations. When a patient arrives with a history of a failed operation, missing bone, missing muscle attachments, ligament issues or bad

knees along with bad hips, Cates may consult with colleagues Naylor, Dr. Herman Botero, Dr. Brian Covino, Dr. Conrad Ivie and Dr. Paul Yau. “Having seen those kinds of complex cases over the years, you learn to look individually at those and it helps with the thought process,” said Cates. “We often have discussions about how best to address that particular patient, that particular problem. We employ everybody’s thoughts and experiences and come up with a well-thought-out plan.” “So, the patient isn’t just seeing one person – they may be ‘seeing’ 15 people who will discuss your complex case.” “You want one operation, not two more or 10 more,” said Naylor. “So you must get it right the first time. You have to go in there prepared for every kind of eventuality, bring along all kinds of extra equipment. That takes a lot of pre-op planning, calling a lot of different reps to make sure you have all types of different implants you could possibly use and all different equipment. You have to form a winning game plan before you go into the operating room.” Sometimes, “winning” requires creating custom implants, a highly prized skill that has earned Cates and Covino spots on the implant design teams of multiple major manufacturers. “In cases where the defect and the missing bone are so bad that a conventional implant won’t work,

Joint Effort: ‘The Retreat’ leads the way Dr. Paul Naylor and Dr. Hal Cates make no bones about it – it takes a joint effort. It takes dedicated staff working across departments, patients giving honest feedback, a marriage of research and technology, and doctors working with researchers and other doctors. Put it all together and you have the Parkwest Joint Center – The Retreat, one of Tennessee’s leading providers of hip, knee and other joint replacements. Parkwest has had a designated area for Joint Replacement since 1993. In 2007, the center moved to occupy the fifth floor of Parkwest Medical Center where Naylor and Cates – co-directors of the center and former medical school classmates at the University of Tennessee-Memphis – assembled what has become an orthopedic dream team capable of any joint surgery one can imagine. “We were well ahead of our time and remain so today,” said Cates. Today, Parkwest Joint Center is among the busiest programs in the area. Although Parkwest has roughly 40 to 50 active and courtesy physicians, about 90 percent of the total joint surgeries are performed by Cates, Naylor and Drs. Herman Botero and Brian Covino with the remainder handled by Drs. Paul Becker, Paul Brady, Richard Cunningham, Ryan Dabbs, Conrad Ivie, Rick Parsons, J. Christopher Shaver and Robert Smith. “We collect numbers like length of stay, number of infection events, deep vein thrombosis, patient satisfaction scores, and we can match anybody in the country – Mayo Clinic, Cleveland Clinic, special surgery in New York,” said Naylor. “We are as good or better

Hal Cates MD (standing) and Paul Naylor MD. than any joint center in the country. We stack up with the best.” The Joint Center keeps in touch with patients after the procedure. Patients from the previous quarter are invited to a dinner in which they are encouraged to give the physicians feedback on their experience while at Parkwest. “We tell them, ‘All right, we hear the positives. We want to hear the negatives. We don’t get better by patting us on the back Tell us what it is that we lack. Did we wake you up too many times during the night? Did we stick you too hard with a needle? What can we do to make it better? Anything? We want to be best in the country so we strive to find out what, if anything, is bothering you.’ ” The feedback, Naylor said, has been enormously useful, resulting in earlier times for the food service and medication schedules. And when the hospital switched some ice coolers,

the patients were quick to point out: the coolers are nice, but they don’t hold as much ice. “So we went back to the low-tech ones because that’s what the patients wanted,” said Naylor. “You think you are doing the right thing, but the patients come back and say, ‘No, no, you don’t understand. …’ Little things like that really make a difference in a patient’s experience.” “Some of them become volunteers,” Cates said. “They believe so strongly in the center that they become volunteers once a week or once a month to help other patients because they are the best advocates of joint care.” Cates added that Parkwest’s history and patient volume “speaks for itself.” “When patients ask other patients about how they did, there’s a reason people come to Parkwest,” he said. “It’s because the doctors there do a good job, stay current, doing what’s best for the patient. We welcome those patients and they seek us out.” There is no shortage of patients, either. According to Naylor, Medicare is predicting that the number of total joint replacements in the United States will triple within the next 20 years, largely due to the aging Baby Boom population. “The demand is unbelievable,” said Naylor. Looking back on his 24-year career, Naylor says he’s not only seen many changes in the field of orthopedic medicine, but changes in Parkwest as well. “We’ve built a really collegial staff and we also excel in outcomes and patient satisfaction.” “It’s not the surgery – it’s the patients that make it satisfying for me,” said Naylor. “You can’t imagine what

you may have to make a special custom device. You have to make what goes in that patient,” said Cates, who has done just that in more than 60 cases – second most in the state. “In the Southeast, hardly anybody does custom implants, but we do it all the time. ” Cates’ own expertise is irrefutable. As founder and president of the Tennessee Orthopedic Foundation, he has authored articles for medical journals and publications, and is frequently called upon to speak at conferences in New York, Nova Scotia, Osaka, Las Vegas and other venues. His topics often cite research collected by the Foundation. “We track patient outcomes and have done so since I came into practice,” said Cates. “So I’ve got about 20 years’ worth of data, probably 25,000 photos and 20 years’ worth of interesting cases and follow-up that not a lot of surgeons have.” “I give all my patients a copy of what their joint looks like during surgery and a copy of what it looks like before we close – I’ve done that for 20 years,” Cates said. “They get operative notes and color photos. The visual information helps them have a more complete understanding. Patients use what they know to get back to the lifestyle they prefer following joint replacement surgery.” For more information, visit www.treatedwell.com/theretreat or call 865-373-0091.

The Parkwest Joint Center performs almost 2,000 total joint replacements yearly, giving patients a precise and highly functional implant that will last them for many years to come. The center provides extensive education to patients prior to surgery and at discharge to ensure that they have the best possible outcomes with their new joint.

it’s like when somebody comes in and they can’t walk and you fix them and they come back and say, ‘Doctor my life is so much better! You’ve changed my life. I’m walking and playing with my grandkids, I’m playing golf, I’m

doing things with my friends again.’ There’s no greater reward than hearing that.” For more information, visit www. treatedwell.com/theretreat or call 865-373-0091.

Register now for 2016 marathon Registration is open for the 2016 Covenant Health Knoxville Marathon. The annual event includes a full and half marathon, relay, 5K and Kids Run. New in 2016 – the full and half-marathons and relays will be held on Sunday, April 3, and the 5K and Covenant Kids Run will be held on Saturday, April 2. The full marathon is still certified as a qualifier for the Boston Marathon. Join other runners across the region and nation as they wind through Fort Sanders and downtown, enjoy the screaming fans in Sequoyah Hills and finish on the field at Neyland Stadium. If you’d like to watch from

the sidelines, encourage your friends and family to join you at the starting line on the Clinch Avenue Bridge, at Tyson Park to see runners on the Third Creek Greenway or at the finish line at the stadium. The runners will need your support as they complete each mile. All the Covenant Health Knoxville Marathon races require volunteers to staff water stations and make sure runners stay on course. For more information or to register for any of the Covenant Health Knoxville Marathon events, visit www. knoxvillemarathon.com

ORTHOPEDIC EXCELLENCE Patients who undergo elective orthopedic surgeries at high-volume, regional hospitals have better surgical outcomes and experience fewer complications than those who undergo those surgeries at local hospitals.* Ask how many joint replacement surgeries your surgeon does and trust your care to the experienced orthopedic surgeons at Parkwest.

TreatedWell.com | 374-PARK Source: Hospital for Special Surgery (New York City) in an analysis of more than 974,000 orthopedic patients. HSS is nationally ranked in orthopedics by U.S.News & World Report and is a multi-year recipient of the HealthGrades Joint Replacement Excellence Award.

Parkwest’s top orthopedic surgeons each average hundreds of orthopedic surgeries per year.

0813-1536

EXPERIENCE COUNTS


B-2 • MARCH 2, 2016 • Shopper news

Vehicles Wanted Transportation

FAST $$ CASH $$ 4 JUNK AUTOS

Automobiles for Sale BUICK LACROSSE - 2005, 78K mi, leather, silver, exc cond., $7900. (865) 376-0537; 399-3408

865-216-5052 865-856-8106

Cemetery Lots

Merchandise - Misc.

Farmer’s Mkt/ Trading Post

2 BURIAL LOTS, West, Berry Highland Memorial, Christus Garden section. Both for $6500 obo. (954)740-9120.

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2 LOTS SMOKY MTN Mem. Garden, Pig. Forge, lawn crypts & fam. sz. mrkr. 6K value, $3000. (865)654-6114

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Dogs

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Garage Sales

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DOBERMAN PUPS, AKC, Sire XL natl & intl champ - 125 lbs, Dam Lrg Russian champ. - her sire was 2013 World Champ. $900. Credit cards accepted. 615-740-7909

MALTI POOS Tiny toy puppies $500. Toy male $400. Shots. (865) 717-9493

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PUPPY NURSERY Many different breeds Maltese, Yorkies, Malti-Poos, Poodles, Yorki-Poos, Shih-Poos, Shih Tzu, $175/up. shots & wormed. We do layaways. Health guar. Go to Facebook, Judys Puppy Nursery Updates. 423-566-3647 SHIH TZU puppies, AKC, beautiful colors, Females $600; Males $500. Taking deposits. 423-775-4016 STANDARD POODLES AKC - Ch. ped. Health guar. 8 wks. M $900, F $1000. (865)654-4977

North

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THE PICKY CHICK CONSIGNMENT EVENT

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3/3 10AM-8PM

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Open to the Public

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Commercial Vehicles 1991 FORD DIESEL ENG. 24 passenger Church Bus w/handicap lift, new tires, 170K mi. $2000. (865)567-0656

All You Need from Infant to Teen! www.thepickychick.com

********************

4 prime lots together at Lynnhurst Cemetery off Adair Dr. $3500 each or will sell all 4 for $12,500 obo. (865) 207-0964 BERRYS HIGHLAND SOUTH, 2 burial lots, Cross sections, lot 73C, spaces 1 & 2, incl. opening/closing, $3000. (865)573-5310; 865-804-2284. HIGHLAND MEMORIAL CEMETERY - 4 plots together. $7,550 for all. (317)727-2764 HIGHLAND WEST, BEARDEN 2 lots, Crucifixion Garden. $1000 ea. (865)680-7304

Collectibles

BUYING OLD US COINS

90% silver, halves, quarters & dimes, old silver dollars, proof sets, silver & gold eagles, krands & maple leafs, class rings, wedding bands, anything 10, 14, & 18k gold old currency before 1928 WEST SIDE COINS & COLLECTIBLES 7004 KINGSTON PK CALL 584-8070

DIECAST TOY SHOW

AMERICAN BULLDOG PUPS, NKC reg., 2 Male Brindle, 3 Female Red, $500 & up. (865)609-1133.

TOYOTA COROLLA - 1993. Burgundy, looks & runs good. 1k orig. mi. $2400. (865)376-7644; 399-3408.

3 Burial Lots For Sale. $3,800 each. Original section of Sherwood Memorial Everlasting Life Garden. Please call 865-406-5531, 216-6910.

Sat. Feb. 27, 9-1. Bridgewater Pl. 205 Bridgewater Rd. 37923. 423-337-1510

1/2 Yorkie & 1/2 Chihuahua puppies, no papers, 6-8 lbs grown, $250 ea. Wartburg (865) 210-2151

TOYOTA CAMRY - 2002. Very good cond. in/out. $3995. 865-898-8825 (865)397-7918.

4 Wheel Drive

WANT TO BUY STANDING TIMBER, Hardwood & Pine & Land Clearing. 865-982-2606 & 865-382-7529.

2 SIDE BY SIDE CEMETERY lots at BERRY HIGHLAND SOUTH, $1500 total. (865)577-9578

Appliances

GOOD AS NEW APPLIANCES 90 Day Warranty

865-851-9053

2001 E. Magnolia Ave.

HUGE CRACKLE GLASS SALE - 550 pcs. Many very unique. Prices low. All must go. March 1, March 2, Tues. & Wed. Rocky Branch Community Center on Rocky Branch Rd. in Walland, TN. 2 blocks off Route 321, Lamar Alexander Pkwy. About 7 mi. E of Blount Mem. Hospital, Maryville. Cash only please. Questions call Richard (865)982-5455

Store Fixtures

STORE FIXTURES CLOSEOUT Gondolas, bookcases, office chairs, wire racks, pallet racks, shrink wrap collector shelves. No clothing or slat board. Maryville, (865)984-3960

Tools AUTOMOTIVE REPAIR TOOLS & Equipment. Call for more information. (865)254-3086

Furniture ALL FUNITURE ELECTRONICS ETC. - Moving sale, wood book cases, Large LED TVs, file cabinets, computer desk.hutch, queen bedroom suite etc.. Make offer. (919)338-4127 CILLINI ITALIAN mahogany dining set w/lg. china cab. Kimball french prov. sofa. Lane leather sec. sofa. Italian coffee & side table. (865)6752393; 300-5029 Divorce Sale. Nice china cabinet, lrg DR table & 6 chairs & antique 7’ long sideboard. All $5900. (865)337-4866 ESTATE SALE - 4 rooms of quality furn., each room group w/access. DR set, LR set, 2 queen BR sets, lamps, pictures, rugs, etc. Call for appt. or questions. 865-983-7080

MOVING SALE MUST SELL BY FEB 29TH! Antique Pump Organ $300 Antique upright piano dates back early 1800’s beautiful cond $1200 TV cabinet by Hooker $200 Thomasville Queen solid cherry triple dresser & chest, complete with box springs & mattress like new $1200

Make reasonable offer! 865-250-9209

Guns & Ammunition BUSHMASTER XM-15 - Fitted with Leupold XMIII scope. Pristine never fired. Extra clips Paid $2400. Best offer. (919)338-4127

Lawn & Garden DR POWER GRADER 48”, remote control, Pull with ATV or riding mower. New $1500, sell for $600. Needs new battery. (423)921-9001 JOHN DEERE GX 335 - 54” deck, 291 hrs, like new. $4995 obo (865)5990516 NEW HOLLAND TN65 - 150 hrs! garage kept, like new. shuttle shift, rear hydraulics, canopy.$18,000obo (423)957-9194

Merchandise - Misc.

1,2,3 BR $355 - $460/mo. GREAT VALUE RIVERSIDE MANOR ALCOA HWY 970-2267 *Pools, Laundries, Appl. *5 min. to UT & airport www.riversidemanorapts.com BEST DEAL OUT WEST! 1BR from $375. 2BR $550-$695. No pets. Parking @ front door. (865)470-8686 BROADWAY TOWERS 62 AND OLDER Or Physically Mobility Impaired 1 & 2 BR, util. incl. Laundry on site. Immediate housing if qualified. Section 8-202. 865-524-4092 for appt. TDD 1-800-927-9275

Announcements MORNINGSIDE GARDENS

Adoptions ADOPT: - Adoption is a gift of love. Active, financially secure woman will cherish your gift forever. I promise to provide your baby with a loving home filled with laughter and a stable future. Expenses Paid. Call Sarah 1-855-974-5658.

ADOPT: A loving Mom, a devoted Dad, and a bright future are waiting to welcome your baby! Expenses paid. Anne & Colin. 1-877-246-6780

ADOPTION MEANS LOVE Adoring couple promises your newborn secure forever love. Expenses paid. Netti & Anthony 1-800-772-3629

1 BR Apt Now Available ELDERLY OR DISABLED COMPLEX A/C, Heat, Water & Electric Incl, OnSite Laundry, Computer Center & Resident Services Great location! On the Bus Line! Close to Shopping! Rent Based on Income, Some Restrictions Apply Call 865-523-4133. TODAY for more information

WEST, 2BR, 2BA - patio, laun., FP, no smoking, no pets. Very Clean. $700 + dep. (865)531-7895.

Homes Unfurnished FTN. CITY VERY NICE 2 BR, Hardwood Floors, Appls, Full basement, Cent. H/A, 2 Porches, lg. level lot, Great Neighborhood, No Pets. $750. (865) 579-1140

Condos Unfurnished Financial

Exercise Equipment VPX 2000 MACHINE Full body vibration, $600 (865)232-0932

Apartments - Unfurn.

Consolidation Loans

FIRST SUN FINANCE

We make loans up to $1000. We do credit starter & rebuilder loans. Call today, 30 minute approvals. See manager for details. 865-687-3228

CONDO CLOSE TO UT HOSPITAL - 1930 Cherokee Bluff, 2 BR, Close to U.T. Hospital 2 car garage,gas appliances fireplace, Washer and Dryer. Gated with guard. Could offer furnished (865)809-6436 LARGE, LUXURIOUS 3BR Airy condo in West Knoxville, retirement comm., 3BR, 3BA, Door man, upper bracket, 865-250-3019. SEQUOYAH SQUARE 3636 Taliluna Ave., Sequoyah Hills, 1BR condo, appx. 750 SF, great nghbrhd., close to downtown & UT, $750 mo., 1 yr. lse. 865-607-1747. WEST UNFURN. CONDO - Wrenwood Subd. Community pool, 2 BR, 1 BA, LR, kit., DR, appl, W/D.$700 + dep. No pets or smoking. Close to Turkey Creek. Extra storage. (865)966-9202

Real Estate Sales Condos-Unfurn PARKSIDE DR./LOVELL RD. Zoned HVA high schl, 2 BR, 1 BA, 1100 SF, secure loc., ready, $97,500. (865) 368-2375

Lake Property 3BR, 2BA 1600 SF, Lake View, Norris Lake, Sugar Hollow dock area. $185,900. (937)417-7978. DEEP WATER cove, 2 acres off main channel in Blackberry Landing with new 2400 SF cov. dock, ready to build on, 5 min off S. Northshore. $379,000. (865) 368-2375

Farms & Acreage CLINTON, 8 ACRES old house. Priced under tax appraisal. (865)463-9613

For Sale By Owner

Duplx/Multplx UnFurn NORTH NEAR I75 FTN. CITY - Elder Apts. 1 BR, all ammenites, W/D conn., quiet, priv. No smoking, no pets. $475. (865) 522-4133.

Waterfront Rentals LAKE CHEROKEE - Lots from $1500 to $2200, water, sewer & power, full service marina, restaurant, pool, 40x80 pavillion, Call Mike, (865)828-5300.

Rooms Furn/Unfurn MIDDLEBROOK INN • Best Deal in WEST KNOXVILLE • Only $104.50 wk + tax • HBO & ESPN & Comcast • 2 Rooms avail. only • On KTC Bus Line • Near Wright’s Cafeteria 588-1982 (Keep Trying)

$121,900 8 year old house and 44 acres at 1245 Snake Hollow Road, Sneedville. House has 3 bedrooms 2 baths, total of 1,056 square feet. New hardwood laminate floors in living area, new interior paint, and a new wood burning stove. Owner will finance with $6,100 down. Call Bill at 877-488-5060 ext 323

Real Estate Commercial Commercial RE Lease 672 SF, remodeled, office space or small retail. Off Broadway near I-640. Special incentive for long term lease. $550 mo. (865)696-9555

Real Estate Rentals

Offices/Warehouses/Rent

Apartments - Unfurn. 1 BR POWELL SPECIAL no cr. ck, no pet fee, water paid, All appls, $520/mo. Phone 865-9386424 or 865-384-1099.

4000 SF Office/Warehouse with dock & drive in, prime location Middlebrook Pk. $3,000 mo. 2000 SF Office/Warehouse drive in bay, Papermill, $1,300 mo.

865-544-1717; 865-740-0990

BARBER SHOP EQUIP. $1500 for all. (865)483-0546

GENERATOR BIG 8500 watt, 2016, Honda elec. start. Batt. & whl kit incl. Never used. New retail $4995. Wholesale $3750. 1st $1850 cash, 864-275-6478.

Real Estate

There’s no place like...here Action Ads

Coming March 23 & October 5

My

Place

Call 922-4136 or 218-WEST for advertising info


Shopper news • MARCH 2, 2016 • B-3

Shopper Ve n t s enews

Send items to news@ShopperNewsNow.com

THROUGH FRIDAY, MARCH 4 “Painted Paper Baskets” exhibit, lobby of the Bagwell Center for Media and Art, 10915 Hardin Valley Road. Admission is free; hours: 7 a.m.-7 p.m. weekdays. Info: pstcc.edu or 694-6400.

THROUGH SUNDAY, MARCH 13 Knoxville Children’s Theatre presents “To Kill A Mockingbird,” Knoxville Children’s Theatre, 109 E. Churchwell Ave. Performances: 7 p.m. Thursdays and Fridays, 1 and 5 p.m. Saturdays, 3 p.m. Sundays. Info/tickets: 2083677; knoxvillechildrenstheatre.com; info@ childrenstheatreknoxville.com.

THROUGH FRIDAY, APRIL 15 Selected works by artist Kay List on exhibit, Envision Art Gallery, 4050 Sutherland Ave. Hours: 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Wednesday-Thursday, 11 a.m.-7 p.m. Friday. Info: kaylistart.com; envisionartgallery.com; 438-4154.

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 2 Clarence Brown Theatre Family Feast, 6 p.m., UT’s Natalie L. Haslam Music Center, 1741 Volunteer Blvd. A performance of “A Lesson Before Dying” and a pre-performance buffet-style dinner. Must attend as a family. Recommended for mature middle schoolers and up. Info: clarencebrowntheatre.com. Jazz Lunch at the Square Room featuring “Tribute to Ahmad Jamal with Justin Haynes,” noon, 4 Market Square Building. Cost: $15; includes lunch buffet by Café 4. Info/tickets: knoxjazz.org or by visiting Café 4 prior to show.

THURSDAY, MARCH 3 Flower Lover’s Garden Club meeting, 2 p.m., John T. O’Connor Senior Center. Info: 687-0744. Friends Mini Used Book Sale, 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Karns Branch Library, 7516 Oak Ridge Highway. Info: 470-8663, knoxfriends.org. How to Use Facebook for Seniors, 1-3 p.m., Farragut Town Hall, 11408 Municipal Center Drive. Presented by Social Media 4 Seniors. Cost: $30. Registration/ payment deadline: Thursday, March 3. Info/registration: 218-3375; townoffarragut.org/register; in person at Town Hall. Sean McCollough, 4-4:45 p.m., Karns Branch Library, 7516 Oak Ridge Highway. Info: 470-8663.

FRIDAY, MARCH 4 Clarence Brown Theatre: Season For Youth Student Matinees, 9:30 a.m., Ula Love Carousel Theatre, UT campus. Performance of “A Lesson Before Dying.” Recommended for mature middle schoolers and up. Info: clarencebrowntheatre/season-for-youth. Grand opening of “Peep Show” art exhibit, 5-9 p.m., Broadway Studios and Gallery, 1127 N Broadway. Exhibit on display March 4-27. Parental discretion is advised for children under 18. Info: BroadwayStudiosAndGallery.com; Jessica Gregory, 5568676. Opening reception for Beth Meadows exhibit, 7-10 p.m., The Central Collective, 923 N. Central St. Free and open to the public. Exhibit on display through Tuesday, March 29. Info: 236-1590 or info@thecentralcollective.com. Opening reception for “Three Views of Reality” exhibit, 5-9 p.m., Emporium Center, 100 S. Gay St. On display March 4-24. Info: 523-7543 or knoxalliance. com. Opening reception for exhibit of works by painter Lynda Best and pipe maker Ron Smith, 5:30 p.m., Art Market Gallery, 422 S. Gay St. On display through March 27. Info: 525-5265; artmarketgallery.net; Facebook.com/Art.Market.Gallery. Public reception for Knoxville Watercolor Society exhibit, 5-9 p.m., Emporium Center, 100 S. Gay St. exhibit on display March 4-24. Info: 523-7543 or knoxalliance.com.

FRIDAY-SATURDAY, MARCH 4-5 The Appalachian Ballet Company encore presentation of three ballets, 7:30 p.m. Friday and 2 p.m. Saturday, Clayton Center for the Arts, 502 E. Lamar Alexander Parkway, Maryville. Featuring: “My Mama had a Dancing Heart,” “When Uncle Took the Fiddle” and “Little Lil and the Swing-Singing Sax.” Tickets: ClaytonArtsCenter.com, 981-8590, at the door.

FRIDAY-SUNDAY, MARCH 4-20 Tennessee Stage Company New Play Festival, Theatre Knoxville Downtown, 319 N. Gay St. Performances: 8 p.m. Thursdays-Saturdays, 3 p.m. Sundays. Info/tickets: 546-4280.

SATURDAY, MARCH 5 AARP Driver Safety class, 9 a.m.-5 p.m., Far-

ragut Presbyterian Church, 209 Jamestowne Blvd. Info/ registration: Carolyn Rambo, 382-5822. “Beginning Genealogy,” 1-4 p.m., East Tennessee History Center, 601 S. Gay St. Instructor: Ann Blomquist, MEd. Preregistration, valid email address, good Internet searching capabilities required. Free and open to the public. Info/registration: 215-8809. The Bing Brothers featuring Jake Krack, 8 p.m., Laurel Theater, 1538 Laurel Ave. Tickets: $14, some discounts available. Info/tickets: www.jubileearts.org. Friends Mini Used Book Sale, 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Karns Branch Library, 7516 Oak Ridge Highway. Info: 470-8663, knoxfriends.org. Garden Tool Use and Maintenance workshop, 10 a.m.-noon, UT Arboretum Auditorium, 901 S. Illinois Ave., Oak Ridge. The workshop will focus on the use and maintenance of chainsaws, lawnmowers, garden hand tools and sprayers. Free; donations welcome. Info: 4833571; utarboretumsociety.org. Kitten and cat adoption fair, noon-6 p.m., West Town PetSmart adoption center, 214 Morrell Road. Sponsored by Feral Feline Friends of East Tennessee. Info: www.feralfelinefriends.org. Mardi Growl, 11 a.m.-2 p.m., Market Square. Includes pet-friendly parade and festival. Proceeds benefit Young-Williams Animal Center. Info/registration: mardigrowl.org; young-williams.org; 215-6599. Rummage sale/bake sale/concessions, 9 a.m.-2 p.m., Macedonia UMC, 4630 Holston Drive. Saturday Stories and Songs: Kindermusik, 11 a.m., Cedar Bluff Branch Library, 9045 Cross Park Drive. Ages birth to 5 years old. Info: 470-7033. Saturday Stories and Songs: Miss Lynn, 11 a.m., Lawson McGhee Library, 500 W. Church Ave. Info: 215-8750. Weed Wrangle, 9 a.m. Volunteers needed to help remove invasive plants in Knoxville’s Urban Wilderness, at the Knoxville Botanical Gardens and Arboretum, Ijams Nature Center, and Lakeshore Park. Info/volunteer registration: weedwrangle.com and click on the photo of Knoxville.

SATURDAYS, MARCH 5-26 Pilates/Yoga Fusion classes, 9-10 a.m., Farragut Town Hall, 11408 Municipal Center Drive. Cost: $40. Registration and payment deadline: Friday, March 4. Info/registration: townoffarragut.org/register; in person at Town Hall; or 218-3375.

SUNDAY, MARCH 6 UT’s Love United Gospel Choir concert, 6 p.m., Farragut Presbyterian Church Sanctuary, 209 Jamestown Blvd. Free and open to the public.

MONDAY, MARCH 7 Book Discussion: “A Lesson Before Dying,” 6 p.m., Cedar Bluff Branch Library, 9045 Cross Park Drive. Facilitated by Ginny Weatherstone. A light dinner will be served. Info: knoxlib.org.

TUESDAY, MARCH 8 Harvey Broome Group Sierra Club meeting, 7 p.m., Tennessee Valley Unitarian Universalist Church, 2931 Kingston Pike. Program: “Preview of 2016 Outings.” All programs free and open to the public. Post-performance Salon discussion: “A Lesson Before Dying,”7:30 p.m., Ula Love Carousel Theatre, UT campus. Info: clarencebrowntheatre.com.

TUESDAYS, MARCH 8-29 Pilates classes, 6:30-7:30 p.m., Farragut Town Hall, 11408 Municipal Center Drive. Cost: $40. Registration and payment deadline: Monday, March 7. Info/ registration: townoffarragut.org/register; in person at Town Hall; or 218-3375.

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 9 Clarence Brown Theatre: Season For Youth Student Matinees, 9:30 a.m., Ula Love Carousel Theatre, UT campus. Performance of “A Lesson Before Dying.” Recommended for mature middle schoolers and up. Info: clarencebrowntheatre/season-for-youth. The Foothills Craft Guild JuryFest. Membership applicants must reside in Tennessee, and crafts must be of original design produced within the past two years. Info: foothillscraftguild.org; Bob Klassen, klassenbob0619@gmail.com, or Ken Shipley, shipleyk@apsu. edu. “Getting Your House in Order” seminar, 2-3 p.m., Turkey Creek Medical Center, 10820 Parkside Drive, classroom #1. Free; registration required. Info/ registration: 1-855-TENNOVA (836-6682) or Tennova. com. “The Legacy and Challenge of Suffrage: Votes for Women in Tennessee” Brown Bag Lecture, noon, East Tennessee History Center, 601 S. Gay St. Speaker: Wanda Sobieski. Free and open to the public. Info: 2158824 or EastTNHistory.org.

WEDNESDAY-THURSDAY, MARCH 9-10 AARP Driver Safety class, 9 a.m.-1 p.m., Fort Sanders Senior Center, 1220 W. Main St., Sevierville. Info/registration: Carolyn Rambo, 382-5822.

THURSDAY, MARCH 10 Appalachian family square dance, 8 p.m., Laurel Theater, 1538 Laurel Ave. Sponsored by Knoxville Square Dance. Music by The Hellgramites. Callers: Leo Collins, Stan Sharp and Ruth Simmons. No experience necessary. Admission: $7, $5 students and JCA members. Info: jubileearts.org. “Ready, Set, Sow: Don’t Jump the Gun,” Hu-

mana Guidance Center, 4438 Western Ave. Presented by Master Gardener Barb O’Neil. Free and open to the public. Info: 329-8892.

THURSDAY-FRIDAY, MARCH 10-11 AARP Driver Safety class, 11:30 a.m.-3:30 p.m., Karns Senior Center, 8032 Oak Ridge Highway. Info/ registration: Carolyn Rambo, 382-5822.

FRIDAY, MARCH 11 Clarence Brown Theatre: Season For Youth Student Matinees, 9:30 a.m., Ula Love Carousel Theatre, UT campus. Performance of “A Lesson Before Dying.” Recommended for mature middle schoolers and up. Info: clarencebrowntheatre/season-for-youth. Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) Fair, 11 a.m.-2 p.m., Knox County Health Department Community Room, 140 Dameron Ave. Info: Katheryne Nix, Katheryne.nix@knoxcounty.org or 215-5170. The Gibson Brothers and Lonesome River Band, 7 p.m., Bijou Theatre, 803 S. Gay St. Info/tickets: 684-1200; Tennessee Theatre box office; all Ticketmaster outlets; KnoxBijou.com.

SATURDAY, MARCH 12 The Freight Hoppers Old-Time String Band, 8 p.m., Laurel Theater, 1538 Laurel Ave. Rescheduled from Jan. 23. Tickets: $14, some discounts available. Info/tickets: www.jubileearts.org. Kitten and cat adoption fair, noon-6 p.m., West Town PetSmart adoption center, 214 Morrell Road. Sponsored by Feral Feline Friends of East Tennessee. Info: www.feralfelinefriends.org. National Girl Scout Day, 10 a.m.-3:30 p.m., American Museum of Science and Energy, 300 S Tulane Ave., Oak Ridge. Free admission to AMSE and the Children’s Museum of Oak Ridge for Girl Scouts in uniform and their families. Info: 576-3200 or amse.org. “Pruning Roses” hands-on workshop, 10:30 a.m.-noon, All Saints Catholic Church, 620 N. Cedar Bluff Road. Presented by Master Gardeners Carolyn Kiser, Carolyn Noey and Marsha Lehman. Bring pruners, gloves and kneeling pads. Info: knoxcountymastergardener.org or 215-2340. Saturday Stories and Songs: Brianna Hanson, 11 a.m., Cedar Bluff Branch Library, 9045 Cross Park Drive. Info: 470-7033. Scavenger Hunt, Great Smoky Mountain National Park. Cost: $50/team. Proceeds benefit Great Smoky Mountain Institute at Tremont. Info/registration: 4486709; gsmit.org/hunt.html.

SUNDAY, MARCH 13 Clarence Brown Theatre: Sunday Symposium with Dr. Michelle D. Commander, 2 p.m., Ula Love Carousel Theatre, UT campus. Post-performance discussion on “A Lesson Before Dying” and its themes. Info: clarencebrowntheatre.com.

MONDAY, MARCH 14 All Over the Page: “Landline,” 6:30 p.m., Lawson McGhee Library, 500 W. Church Ave. Info: 215-8750.

TUESDAY, MARCH 15 Computer Workshop: “Introducing the Computer,” 2-4:15 p.m., East Tennessee History Center, 601 S. Gay St. Preregistration required. Info/registration: 215-8700. “Women’s Pay Equity: Why It Matters To You!” forum, 6:30-8 p.m., Tennessee Valley Unitarian Universalist Church, 2931 Kingston Pike. Info: Anne Loy, anneloy@comcast.net, 281-9689; Linda Murawski, murawskil@aol.com, 607-8032; Knoxville-tn.aauw.net.

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 16 Knoxville Symphony League Spring Luncheon, 11:30 a.m., Cherokee Country Club. Check-in, tablescapes viewing and book signing, 10:30 a.m. Guest speaker: cookbook author and southern hospitality expert Ginny McCormack. Performance by Knoxville Symphony Orchestra Concertmaster, Gabriel Lefkowitz. Reservations deadline: March 7. Info: 765-1660.

FRIDAY, MARCH 18 Cafe Mortel, 1:30-4 p.m., Bearden Branch Library, 100 Golfclub Road. Everyone welcome. Info: 588-8813. World Storytelling Day with the Smoky Mountain Storytellers Association, 1 p.m., Boys & Girls Club of Maryville, 510 S. Washington St., Maryville. Featuring storytellers: Jennifer Alldredge, Jean Davidson, Kathleen Mavournin, Susan Fulbright, Millie Sieber and Stephen Fulbright. Donations appreciated. Info: Sheri Liles, 680-8453, spinningmaid@gmail.com, smokymountaintellers.org.

SATURDAY, MARCH 19 Arbor Day celebration, 1-5 p.m., Marble Springs State Historic Site, 1220 West Governor John Sevier Highway. Free; donations appreciated. Info: marblesprings.net; 573-5508; info@marblesprings.net. “Civil War Genealogy on the Internet,” 1-3 p.m., East Tennessee History Center, 601 S. Gay St. Instructor: Eric Head, BA, Knox Co. Archives and/or Dr. George K. Schweitzer, PhD, ScD. Preregistration, valid email address, good Internet searching capabilities required. Info/registration beginning March 7: 215-8809. East Tennessee Kidney Foundation’s Lucky Kidney Run and Irish Festival, 10 a.m.-3 p.m., Market Square. Festival features: live music, dancing, vendor booths, and kids’ inflatables and midway games. Info/ Run or walk registration: etkidney.org.


B-4 • MARCH 2, 2016 • Shopper news

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