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VOL. 4 NO. 44
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Grant will create SDMS playground
Alan Gratz, author of 12 books for young adults, is originally from Knoxville. Photo submitted
By Carol Z. Shane Although Alan Gratz’s latest book, “Projekt 1065”, is pitched at young adults, older readers can easily get caught up in its breathless plot. “World War II is raging. Michael O’Shaunessey, the son of the Irish ambassador to Nazi Germany, lives in war-torn Berlin with his parents,” reads the descrip-
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plot,” says Gratz. The author, who recently appeared at Union Avenue books to sign his latest release, is an avid reader himself and says his own work is influenced by classics such as Jules Verne’s “20,000 Leagues Under the Sea” and the mystery novels of Raymond Chandler. “So much of adult fiction now is boring to me. I can’t wait for the
story to get started! Sometimes an adult reader will say, ‘This book is pretty slow, but I’m going to give it another hundred pages and see if it picks up.’ But no kid in the history of time has ever said that. They demand an engaging story from page one, word one. That’s the kind of book I like to read, and like to write.” To page 3
By Betsy Pickle
The Appalachian Mountain Bike Club has the seven-year itch, but that’s OK. AMBC’s annual Fall Festival – which has been held for six years at the South Knoxville home of Brian Hann and Mary Beth Tugwell – is moving to the Baker Creek Preserve this year. The club has leased the park from the city for the event. Activities start at 9 a.m. Saturday, Nov. 5, and wind up at 2 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 6, at the
preserve, 1516 Taylor Road. Overnight camping will be allowed. The move gives the festival – which is free and open to the public – more room for programs, says AMBC president Matthew Kellogg. “In addition to that, we have parking, for once.” There will be group bike rides for all levels throughout the day and a short-track race at 5 p.m. that will be fun for spectators. The festival takes place two days after the official opening of the kids’ track at Baker Creek Preserve – the
ribbon-cutting is at 4 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 3. There also will be skills clinics and bike demos by a variety of vendors. On Sunday, there will be a Downhill race run by Go Nuts Biking. AMBC members are looking forward to having the event at the new location, Kellogg says. “Baker Creek has just been everybody’s favorite toy for the past six months,” he says. To page 3
Amber Rountree’s big October By Betty Bean South Knox’s Amber Rountree has every reason to “call in tired” for the Nov. 2 school board meeting, but here’s betting she will find a way to attend. The board will vote on her resolution to exempt Knox County from using standardized tests in students’ grades and for teacher evaluations.
Analysis The tests are not yet aligned with the curriculum, she says. A similar resolution passed the board last year, but this one has drawn fire from interim Superintendent Buzz Thomas and Gov. Bill Haslam. Rountree was elected the board’s vice chair Oct. 5, after a 4-4 deadlock between Terry Hill and Tony Norman with Mike Mc-
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on Wednesday. Longrequested repairs suddenly got done, and by the time the governor showed up, the school was Knox County Education Association president Lauren spit-shined to Hopson, astronaut Barry Wilmore and school board mema fare-thee- ber Amber Rountree at Mount Olive Elementary School well and the teachers’ parking lot was full of bigwigs’ cars. point of personal privilege so the Going to Mount Olive was a Teachers Advisory Committee two-fer for Haslam. He got to plug could take up the matter (which state Rep. Eddie Smith (fight- they did, and voted 12-8 to suping a stiff challenge from former port Rountree’s position). Rep. Gloria Johnson) and he got How was the Mount Olive event in some licks against Rountree’s received? resolution. Depends on whom you ask. Not The resolution was on the everyone appreciated the lastschool board’s October agenda, minute school facelift. The term but was bumped by her colleague To page 3 Gloria Deathridge, who took a
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Millan absent. She’s a doctoral candidate at UT, and on Saturday, she and husband Bart added a second son to their family. Just two days earlier, Oct. 27, Gov. Haslam brought astronaut Barry Wilmore to Mount Olive Elementary School in her district to celebrate two-years-old science scores. Rountree was there. Haslam, as quoted in the daily newspaper, had a Lake Woebegon moment (…“where all the children are above average”) when he said: “Here’s the big deal: Tennessee is the only state in the nation to grow faster than the nation in fourth grade and eighth grade …. That makes Tennessee the fastestgrowing state in the nation in science results.” They didn’t get a confetti cannon, but everybody at Mount Olive knew something big was up, even before the VIP invitations went out
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tion on Gratz’s website. “Like the other boys at his school, Michael is a member of the Hitler Youth. But Michael has a secret: “He and his parents are spies.” See? You’re probably already wanting to know how the trio “infiltrate, befriend and sabotage,” right? “I love writing for kids because, to paraphrase Philip Pullman, kids’ books are the last bastion of
Bike club invites all to annual party
(865) 922-4136 NEWS (865) 661-8777 news@ShopperNewsNow.com Sandra Clark | Ruth White
November 2, 2016
Author Alan Gratz has
BUZZ
A $150,000 grant to Legacy Parks Foundation from the Trinity Health Foundation of East Tennessee will fund the construction of a unique adventure play park specifically designed to encourage middle school aged children to get out and play. And guess what! This new park will be adjacent to South-Doyle Middle School and will be designed by Ross Fowler based upon research with students from that school and surrounding neighborhoods. Bryant Research asked current and incoming students what they would like to see in a play space and those wishes were translated into a custom adventure play park design. Legacy Parks crafted the grant for this project because of South-Doyle Middle School’s connection to the existing Baker Creek Preserve and the need to address this particular age group. “Middle school students experience the greatest decline in physical activity of any other age group,” Carol Evans, executive director of Legacy Parks Foundation said. “We wanted to design a space that encouraged the students to play and be active and hope that they will cross the street and continue that activity with Baker Creek Preserve and along the more than 50 miles of trails found in Knoxville’s Urban Wilderness.” Legacy Parks will partner with the Knox County Health Department to measure change in overall health and physical activity of the South-Doyle Middle School students. The Health Department currently conducts a Youth Risk Behavior Survey and data within that survey specifically addresses physical activity and other health indicators. The design for the play space includes four play zones with structures for climbing and swinging; a three-hole disk golf course; trails; open meadows for running and playing; and benches and boulders for socializing and resting. The play area will connect directly into Baker Creek Preserve. Construction is expected to begin early in 2017. The Trinity Health Initiative grants stimulate projects related to Trinity’s mission of improving the physical, emotional and spiritual health of East Tennessee. – S. Clark
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