Karns/Hardin Valley Shopper-News 060116

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VOL. 10 NO. 22

BUZZ Sand volleyball ahead for town The town of Farragut is now accepting registrations for its summer sand volleyball and fall softball leagues. The sand volleyball leagues begin the week of July 11; the softball leagues begin the week of Aug. 8. All leagues will be played at Mayor Bob Leonard Park, located at 301 Watt Road. Area churches, businesses and other organizations are invited to participate. The registration and payment deadline for sand volleyball is Monday, June 27, at 5 p.m.; the deadline for softball is Monday, July 25, at 5 p.m. Sand volleyball leagues are $165 per team, and softball leagues are $325 per team. Info: townoffarragut.org/ register or 218-3373

Bike to Work Day The 16th annual Bike to Work Day was delayed by rain and rescheduled for 7:30-8:30 a.m. Friday, June 3, at Market Square. Stop by on your bike and grab baked goods from Wild Love Bakehouse and coffee from Trio Cafe! Want to bike to work, but aren’t sure about the best route? Or would you just like some company along the way for a change? Meet at Third Creek Greenway trailhead (130 Forest Park Blvd.) at 7:15 a.m. to go from Bearden to downtown and UT.

Karns Lions Club pool is open It was a rough opening day for the Karns Lions Club Community Pool last Friday as staffers had to close the pool early because of weather, as well as address complaints of a dirty pool posted on the “I Love Karns� Facebook page. Tony Wright said: “The pool is an icon of the community that has been there since the ’60s. It’s just old, but it is clean and it is safe.�

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Read Nancy Anderson on page A-3

Behind the scenes at Savelli’s Elizabeth “Liz� Savelli is completing 23 years running a popular neighborhood restaurant, Savelli’s, in West Knoxville. She opened up on March 1, 1993, and has been at 3055 Sutherland Avenue ever since. She said her most famous guest was Willard Scott, whom HGTV introduced to Savelli’s. But other well-known patrons have included Tommy Lasorda, and chef Tim Love.

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Read Victor Ashe on page A-5

(865) 218-WEST (9378) NEWS (865) 661-8777 news@ShopperNewsNow.com Sandra Clark | Sara Barrett ADVERTISING SALES (865) 342-6084 ads@ShopperNewsNow.com Amy Lutheran Patty Fecco | Beverly Holland CIRCULATION (865) 342-6200 shoppercirc@ShopperNewsNow.com

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angle of attack By Nancy Anderson As a three-time national pole vault champion, Karns resident and Olympic hopeful Mark Hollis is familiar with the thrill of victory and the agony of defeat. A native of Freeport, Ill., Hollis attended Olivet Nazarene University where he broke pole vaulting records and in 2007 was inducted into the university’s athletic hall of fame. In 2008 he turned professional, having jumped 18 feet 10.25 inches to be ranked 12th internationally. In 2012 he competed in the Olympic trials, narrowly missing a spot on the U.S. pole vaulting team. He was ranked fifth in the nation. Yet by the end of 2012, he could barely jump nine feet, if he made it off the ground at all. Performance anxiety got the better of him. He became unable to grip the pole, something that had been second nature to him since the age of 3. “There wasn’t a specific moment that set it off. I just gradually became hypersensitive until I overloaded my brain,� said Hollis. “I began having trouble with my grip. What was so automatic before became incredibly difficult. I began thinking maybe it was the tape, and I would change the tape. Maybe it was the chalk, then it would be something else. To page A-3

Mark Hollis relaxes at home in Karns with wife Amanda and pets Madi and Zoey. Photo by Nancy Anderson

At far left, Mark Hollis competes at the American Track League competition in Bloomington, Ind. May 2, 2014. Mark Hollis at the Olympic trials in Eugene, Oregon, June 28, 2012. Photos submitted

Webb student to headline Art on Main By Libby Morgan Union County will shut down Main Street this Saturday to celebrate all things artistic – especially music. Art on Main is set for 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday, June 4, in historic downtown Maynardville, the Cradle of Country Music. The free arts and music festival will honor Chet Atkins and celebrate the music of Union County. It is on, rain or shine. The Chet Atkins Tribute will be led by musicologist and radio host James Perry. Parker Hastings, 15, an Atkinslike thumb picker, will perform. Songwriter Eli Fox will bring his original Americana music to the Back Porch Stage. He is a multi-instrumentalist who has appeared on the Blue Plate, Knoxville

Stomp, and is scheduled to perform at the 2016 Bristol Rhythm and Roots. Fox is a rising senior at Webb School in Knoxville. Knox County Jug Stompers, The Valley Boys, Knoxville Banjo Cotillion with Greg Horne and Kyle Campbell, Swamp Ghost and Virginia Faith also will perform. Union County veterans will kick off the day with an opening ceremony at 8:45 a.m. Fine arts and craft demonstrations will be throughout the grounds, including glassblowing by Matt Salley of Marble City Glassworks, metalsmithing by Amber Crouse, apple butter making, corn shuck dolls by Anne Freels, slab woodworking by David West, and fine art painting by Brian Whitson.

There will be shade tree and porch pickin’ with everyone welcome to join in. Shabby Chic 33 Boutique will hold a Fabulous ’40s and ’50s fashion show, featuring female professionals modeling spring and summer attire. Kids activities include the Art on Main train, face painting, art projects and games. Seventy vendors will offer homemade and handcrafted goods, country food, concessions and live plants. Oakes Daylilies will give away daylilies while they last. There’s a farmers market at Wilson Park and a kids health day at the Maynardville Public Library. Info: Facebook at Art on Main 2016

Multi-instrumentalist Eli Fox has just signed on to the lineup for Saturday’s Art on Main in Maynardville

Marking history Karns historian Christopher Hammond is raising funds to have an historical marker placed at 2501 Byington Beaver Ridge Road in honor of Moses Byington Sr., one of the early pioneers in Karns. He sold land to the L&N railroad, which is how the town of Byington got its name. Byington was also involved in the building of the Solway Ferry Bridge and the Beaver Ridge United Methodist Church. The cost of this marker is $1,450, and Hammond says the fund is just $320 away from reaching that target. The Tennessee Historical Commission will vote on marker requests on June 24. Hammond and the Karns History Club invite interested parties to visit the Byington Historical Marker gofundme page at www.gofundme. com/2nv3q2zg

June 1, 2016

Mark Hollis’s

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