North/East Shopper-News 012815

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NORTH / EAST VOL. 3 NO. 4

IN THIS ISSUE ‘Walk, Don’t Ride’ The WordPlayers of Knoxville are kicking off Black History Month in a big way with “Walk, Don’t Ride,” billed as “a presentation of drama and song depicting events that helped shape American freedom.” An example of the best kind of “edu-tainment,” “Walk, Don’t Ride” has been booked in nine different counties and 16 different venues in East Tennessee, including middle schools, colleges and churches.

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January 28, 2015

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Austin-East in robotics race

See Carol Shane’s story on page 7

NEIGHBORHOOD BUZZ

Austin-East student Rebekah Plante designed a Roadrunners logo for the hard hats the team wore. Photo cour-

Open house at Freedom

tesy of Tanisha Fitzgerald-Baker

Freedom Christian Academy, 4615 Asheville Highway, will host an open house for prospective families 4:30-6:30 p.m. Monday, Feb. 16. Info: 525-7807 or freedomchristianacademy.org. In the middle of their first build, the A-E team found that Dashawndra Stripling had a knack for wiring the electrical circuits in their robot kit. Photo by Bill Dockery under HVAC conduits, surround- to work. By Bill Dockery Team 5744 is the first AustinDown a back hall, past stacks of ed by bare cinderblock walls, Rostored chairs and old technology, botics Team 5744 has found space East High School group to partici-

pate in the FIRST Robotics Competition, an international program that introduces high school students to engineering and science. FIRST stands for “For Inspiration and Recognition of Science and Technology,” a program founded by inventor Dean Kamen. “We’ve never done robotics at Austin-East,” said Tanisha Fitzgerald-Baker, the high school’s Project GRAD team leader for colTo page 3

Confederate cemetery nominated to Historic Register By Wendy Smith

Hall seeks young Kids Play Free is more than a slogan at the Beverly Park Par 3 Golf Course. George Hall, retired teacher from Halls Middle School and PGA golf instructor, spoke last week at the Halls Business and Professional Association. “I’ve coached about every sport there is,” he said. Hall led softball teams from both Halls and Gibbs high schools to multiple state tournaments. His son, Andrew, was a two-time all-state golfer for Halls High School. George Hall was seeking donations to the Tennessee Golf Foundation, which manages the Beverly Park course that is owned by Knox County and located on Tazewell Pike. In addition to free golf for kids, the course offers junior camps, clinics and competitions. The course has a brandnew, full-size driving range. Holes range from 80 yards to 170 yards. Adults as well as kids can play golf there, and Hall is available for lessons for adults and teens. Info: 423-794-0747.

7049 Maynardville Pike 37918 (865) 922-4136 NEWS news@ShopperNewsNow.com Sandra Clark | Bill Dockery ADVERTISING SALES ads@ShopperNewsNow.com Patty Fecco | Tony Cranmore Wendy O’Dell | Sara Whittle

Calvin Chappelle, executive director of Mabry-Hazen House Museum, and board member Arin Streeter stand in front of the Winstead Cottage, which has housed Bethel Cemetery caretakers for well over a century. The cottage and the cemetery have been nominated to the National Register of Historic Places. Photo by Wendy Smith

Preservation of cemeteries is a challenge, but Bethel Cemetery, located just east of downtown on Bethel Avenue, has a couple of things working in its favor. The first is the Winstead Cottage, which has housed the cemetery’s caretakers since it was built around the turn of the 20th century. The second is Arin Streeter, the young architect who is working to put the cemetery, and the cottage, on the National Register of Historic Places. Streeter’s extensive research is included with the application. According to his work, the federal government took responsibility for locating the graves of Union soldiers after the Civil War and reinterring them in the National Cemetery on

Tyson Street. But the burial of Confederate soldiers was the responsibility of each community. Ladies’ Confederate memorial associations formed across the South with the goal of placing Confederate soldiers in dedicated cemeteries with appropriate monuments. Knoxville’s Ladies’ Memorial Association applied to the Knox County Court for a portion of an indigent cemetery where Confederate soldiers were already buried. They received a deed for the new cemetery in 1873, and it was named

Push back on push-out By Bill Dockery African-American children in the Knox County school system are suspended from school almost three times more often than their white fellow students. And that rate has not changed since 2007, when a community Sheppard task force recommended ways to fi x the disparities in discipline. State statistics

reported for 2012 show that black Knox County students are still about three times more likely to be suspended than white students, despite the negative results such suspensions will have on their educational and legal futures. Those facts are part of the information presented at a workshop on “school push-out,” the name given to discipline policies that result in children leaving school and getting caught up in the criminal justice system. A group of parents, students, school personnel and civil rights ac-

tivists gathered Thursday at Mount Calvary Baptist Church to share stories and strategize about ways to change county schools so that their discipline system does not discriminate against blacks, people with disabilities and other minorities. Local activists with the NAACP and the Children’s Defense Fund sponsored the meeting. “We want parents to understand that suspensions are not an individual problem with you and your child,” said Andre Canty, one of the organizers of the meeting. “School push-out is a systemic

Bethel Cemetery. A 48-foot memorial, topped with a sculpted soldier designed by Knoxville artist Lloyd Branson and executed by George Whitaker, a Union veteran, was unveiled on Memorial Day, May 19, 1892. The cemetery had a full-time caretaker for two years before the job was taken over by William Winstead in 1886. He was a Confederate veteran who lost part of his leg after the Battle of Gettysburg.

problem that has some students being arrested for no reason. That’s messed up.” Amy Sosinski, a law student at the University of Tennessee, presented totals from 2012 state records that show that some 8,300 black students in Knox County schools are about 2.7 times more likely to be suspended than the system’s 44,600 white students. Among students with disabilities, slightly more than one in 10 white students will be suspended; around one in four black students with disabilities will be sent home from school. In November 2014, the EducaTo page 3

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