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VOL. 5 NO. 10
FIRST WORDS
School board will ‘buy local’
www.ShopperNewsNow.com |
March 8, 2017
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Fridays are for jammin’
at Carter Senior Center
By Scott Frith
Scott Frith is a local attorney. You can visit his website at pleadthefrith.com
NEWS News@ShopperNewsNow.com Sandra Clark – 865-661-8777 Sarah Frazier – 865-342-6622 ADVERTISING SALES Ads@ShopperNewsNow.com 865-342-6084 Amy Lutheran | Patty Fecco Beverly Holland | Mary Williamson CIRCULATION 844-900-7097 knoxvillenewssentinel@gannett.com
Songwriter Bobby Johnston (right) and friends get together every month at Carter Senior Center to jam.
By Esther Roberts
Singer Gracie Bruner entertains the crowd.
They were young, enthusiastic fans during the careers of musical legends such as Patsy Cline, Elvis Presley and Irving Berlin. Now young-at-heart and still enthusiastic, the seniors who participate in the weekly Guitar Jam at Carter Senior Center keep the music, and their memories, alive. “The center opened eight years ago,” center coordinator Tara Stirone explains. “One couple, Janice and Cliff Wade, decided
to organize a weekly Guitar Jam shortly after we opened.” “We started with three pickers,” says Janice Wade. “Now, we typically have 20 or more musicians and upwards of 50 in the audience.” Guitar Jam is held every Friday from 2-4 p.m. Any and all seniors are welcome. “If they already play, that’s great,” says Janice, “and, if they don’t play, but want to learn, that’s great, too!” Some of the regular participants, including Bobby Johnston and Ronnie Hughes, introduce their original compositions to an enthusiastic audience. Others, like Sam Fulton, contribute by playing
one or more instruments. Gracie Bruner sings and two-steps, while Herman Hickman dances in his signature red shoes. The performers “pass the mic” so everyone has a turn to play their favorite tunes. The audience is full of folks tapping toes and clapping hands. Some are inspired to dance to a favorite tune. Everyone enjoys the good music and good company. But for the silver hair and wise eyes throughout the center’s multi-purpose room, one can envision a classic high school dance at the gym, complete with the “cool” crowd who slips out a side door to grab a smoke. To page A-3
A new home for Old North Abbey By Carol Z. Shane “Let’s see,” says the Rev. Aaron Wright of Old North Abbey, “there was the house behind Fourth Presbyterian. Then there was Fourth Presbyterian. Then there were other houses, then we were above the KARM store, then we were at First Presbyterian.” Wright ticks off all the locations that Old North Abbey, part of the Anglican Church in North America, has inhabited in its seven years in Knoxville. Those days of wandering are over, however, with the congregation’s arrival this month at their permanent home on Fairmont Boulevard, where they held their first service on Feb. 19. “We don’t know what we’re going to do with
all this space!” says Wright. “We’ve always been pretty nomadic.” Already in the close-to-10,000square-feet building there are brightly painted, neatly planned children’s rooms. The sanctuary has been stripped of carpet and the window shutters are gone, flooding the room with light. Wright points out some changes that will occur in the altar area; steps and partitions will be removed in order to create a more open space with better flow for formal observances throughout the liturgical year. He’s thrilled to be able at last to create a space for the ritual-filled Anglican services from which he and his parishioners derive great comfort and strength in their beliefs.
“There’s a discipline and a rhythm that gives us the freedom to live into our faith,” he says. “We follow the story of Jesus. We practice comAaron Wright munion and feetwashing; it allows people to step into Jesus’ world for a little bit. And I think to participate in that story is good for us as humans – it’s a story that’s bigger than us.” Wright grew up in Knoxville and attended Karns High School but then left for seminary in Indiana. He met his wife, Brenna, when he was pastoring a church
in Kansas and returned to Knoxville in 2010 as a co-founder of the church he now serves. The Wrights have two children – Phoebe, 4, and Shepherd, 1. When Old North bought the building last November, it also inherited three upright pianos, a full kitchen and hundreds of coat hooks. “Sometimes we think just coats came to church here,” Wright jokes. “They’re everywhere.” But he admits it’s a happy predicament. “Part of our story is that we’ve been so thankful for churches allowing us to use their space,” he says, “but it’s been great to see the parish come through and live together.” Info: 865-214-7610 or visit oldnorthabbey.com.
Will rezoning bring resegregation? By Betty Bean While some worry that the proposed middle school rezoning plan will undo years of desegregation efforts and land Knox County Schools in federal court, the two players most likely to be on opposite sides of the courtroom look at the issue from very different perspectives, but do not seem overly concerned about that possibility – for now. “This (plan) is a good first step, as far as it goes,” said NAACP president John Butler, who filed a civil rights complaint with the U.S. Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights after the agreement to build a new Gibbs Middle School was unveiled.
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Knox County Law Director Bud Armstrong said desegregation was not the primary purpose of the 1991 rezoning plan that closed schools and bused inner city kids to distant parts of the county. He cited a 1991 opinion by U.S. District Court Judge Leon Jordan that found no evidence of intentional discrimination by Knox County Schools. Jordan said the only question the court could ask was “whether the motivation in adopting the plan was invidious discrimination on the basis of race, and the Court finds that there was not.” Armstrong said: “They did not close Gibbs and move them to Holston Middle School because
those schools were segregated. Conversely, if they reopen Gibbs, it won’t be to resegregate those schools.” Whether intended or not, the rezoning will result in some schools having a higher percentage of African-Americans while others have lower. To paraphrase former school board chair Sam Anderson: We can be sure black kids are treated fairly when they are sitting next to a white kid and both are treated the same. That’s what the U.S. Supreme Court decided in 1954 (Brown vs. The Board of Education): “separate educational facilities are inherently unequal.” Are we entering the post-Brown era?
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Knox County has built new schools in recent years only in predominantly white communities. “Now that you are zoning (minority students) back in, we need to Armstrong have facilities and staffs looked at and steps taken to eliminate inequity,” said Butler. He wants new, state-of-the-art middle and high schools staffed with faculties who understand the needs of minority students. He will not withdraw the complaint, even after Buzz Thomas, interim superintendent, asked him to do so.
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The Knox County Board of Education is picking a new superintendent, and some are surprised that both finalists are from East Tennessee. Don’t be. Political trends swing like a penduScott Frith lum. When looking for new leadership, folks often go in the opposite direction. Not convinced? The best local example may be in the county mayor’s office. Remember those feuds between Dwight Kessel and Victor Ashe? By 1994, voters grew tired of the bickering and elected Tommy Schumpert on the promise of peace. For the most part, Schumpert succeeded. Yet, as he finished a second term, some viewed his “getting along” and calm demeanor as not aggressive enough in promoting economic development. They looked to then-County Commissioner Mike Ragsdale, who possessed enough charisma and sound bites to fill the entire City County Building. Ragsdale was elected in 2002 and re-elected in 2006. But then, voters elected Tim Burchett, who couldn’t be more different. Think Lexus sedan vs. beat-up Jeep Cherokee; tailored suits vs. a brown Carhartt jacket. You get the idea. The same pattern emerges with the superintendent of schools. State law changed in 1992 to require school board appointment of superintendents. In 1999, our board picked Charles Q. Lindsay, a Mississippi native best remembered for relocating principals and getting directly involved in the messy politics of school board campaigns. Lindsay left in 2007. The next year, the board hired Jim McIntyre, an education technocrat, whose roots in Boston (and lack of political skill) couldn’t have been more different from Lindsay’s southern drawl and political brawling. McIntyre left last year. And now the school board appears to be buying local. Finalists are Bob Thomas (assistant superintendent since 1990) and Dale Lynch (superintendent of Hamblen County Schools since 2001). Thomas is the favorite to win. Do not be surprised. Both are the opposite of McIntyre.