NORTH / EAST VOL. 2 NO. 26
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July 2, 2014
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NEIGHBORHOOD BUZZ
Turner returns Susan Turner has been appointed executive director of elementary education for the upcoming school year. Turner retired from her position as an elementary supervisor in 2013. Upon the retirement of Nancy Maland, Turner answered Superintendent Dr. Susan Turner Jim McIntyre’s call to return for one year “as we transition our curricular supervisory structure to better support our school administrators,” he wrote. Turner served as principal at A.L. Lotts, BrickeyMcCloud, Rocky Hill and Ball Camp elementary schools. She joined Knox County Schools in 1980 and has taught at both Rocky Hill and Cedar Bluff Middle School.
Central City Dems Central City (1st District) Democrats will meet at 6:15 p.m. Monday, July 7, at Burlington Branch Library, 4614 Asheville Highway. Candidates expected are John McKamey, running for governor, and Cheri Siler, running for state Senate. Info: Tony Brown, dribm2009@gmail.com.
Civil rights icons in Knoxville Rabbi Israel Dresner and Dorie Ladner will march to commemorate the signing of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 on the day of its 50th anniversary. The march will leave from the Knoxville Safety Building at 6 p.m. Wednesday, July 2, and proceed to Mt. Olive Baptist Church, 1601 Dandridge Ave. Joining them will be local civil rights leaders who participated in the Freedom Summer. At 7 p.m. both Dresner and Ladner will speak at Mt. Olive Baptist. Rabbi Dresner was known as America’s “most arrested rabbi” for his civil rights activism across the South. Ladner was a Mississippi college student active with the Freedom Riders, the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee and the Freedom Summer of 1964.
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Read Patricia Williams on page 3
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Knoxville’s Engineering Department has closed Prosser Road for repairs. The view at top shows work underway on Prosser at Knoxville Zoo Drive. At near right is the Prosser work site from Magnolia Avenue. At far right is an incredibly well-landscaped spot of color – the Gene and Bob Monday Addition to Chilhowee Park, at the intersection of Prosser and Knoxville Zoo Drive. Photos by S. Clark
Prosser Road closed for repairs Prosser Road is closed for improvements to alleviate flooding, and city officials promise two lanes will reopen by Sept. 1 in time for the Tennessee Valley Fair. City Council approved several capital-improvement projects in April, earmarking $1.4 million for storm-drainage improvements on
Prosser Road. Twin K Construction of Huntsville was awarded the contract for the road work, which is scheduled to be completed in December 2014. The city is reconstructing approximately 1,600 feet of Prosser Road between Knoxville Zoo Drive and East Magnolia Avenue.
A roadway storm sewer is being installed and soil added to raise the elevation of Prosser Road. The work will include new asphalt pavement, concrete curbing and gutters, concrete sidewalks, storm drains, pavement markings and water-line relocation, according to a city press release.
Jim Hagerman, the city’s director of engineering, said the project was delayed while engineers examined how the area’s natural drainage system worked. “It will be great to have a functional street that will be reliably available to residents.” Info: www.cityofknoxville.org/engineering/projects/ProsserDrainage.pdf.
Knoxville repaving set It’s the peak season for street repaving, and the city of Knoxville will be resurfacing more than 54 miles of roads in the coming year, roughly nine miles in each City Council district. In District 6, represented by Daniel Brown, the city lists these streets for resurfacing: ■ Ailor Avenue, between North 21st Street and Western Avenue ■ Brooks Avenue, between Wilder Place and Boyds Bridge Pike ■ Dale Avenue, between the I-40 ramp and Western Avenue ■ Dartmouth Road, between Wedgewood Road and McDonald Road ■ Exemouth Drive, between Tynemouth Drive and Wedgewood Drive ■ Plymouth Drive, between McDonald Road and West Sunset Road ■ Wedgewood Drive, between Skyline Drive and West Sunset Road ■ Sutherland Avenue, between Hollywood Road and Tobler Lane Among the roads to be repaved in District 4, represented by Nick Della Volpe are: ■ Three sections of Green Valley Drive, from South Chilhowee Drive to Farragut Drive, from Far-
The Rev. Richard Brown, pastor of Payne Avenue Missionary Baptist Church, leads the closing song as podium guests join hands: Joshalyn Hundley, city of Knoxville planning team; Avon Rollins, C.T. Vivian, the Rev. Harold Middlebrook, and the Rev. Dr. Joe B. Maddox, pastor of New Hope Baptist Church. Photo by Patricia Williams
Vivian calls for action on Juneteenth By Patricia Williams
This year marks the 50th anniversary of the signing of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Celebrated as the date the Civil War ended, June 19 (aka Juneteenth) is recognized as the anniversary of the end of slavery in this country. The Rev. Dr. C.T. Vivian, a veteran of the civil rights movement, To page 3 was guest speaker for a June 19
mass meeting at Payne Avenue Missionary Baptist Church, symbolic of mass meetings held at African-American churches as planning sessions for civil rights activists 50 years ago. Vivian, 89, talked about the distribution of wealth, as the policies of our country eliminate the middle class that will ultimately leave two classes – the poor (of all
colors) dependent on charity from the super-rich, he said. “There are three important words at the heart of every religion. They are justice, truth and the greatest of them all is love. “There is too much poverty at the foot of the Christ, and we must change that if we are to succeed as a nation. We have the stuff to change that.”
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