SOUTH KNOX VOL. 32 NO. 25 1
BUZZ From sun to dark at Meadow Lark Ever wish you could have a music festival in your backyard? Well, your wish can come true at Meadow Lark Music Festival this Saturday at Ijams Nature Center. From 1-11 p.m., nationally acclaimed and local talented purveyors of Americana, bluegrass and folk will rock out and mellow down from the outdoor stage on the Ijams lawn. Acts scheduled include Pokey LaFarge, Scott Miller and the Commonwealth Ladies Auxiliary, the Lonesome Coyotes, Emi Sunshine & The Rain, Guy Marshall, Mountain Soul, John Myers Band, Subtle Clutch and the Knoxville Banjo Orchestra (lineup subject to change). Tickets are $20 in advance and $25 at the gate. Find purchase links on the Ijams or co-presenter WDVX websites (ijams.org, wdvx.com). Bring the kids, sunscreen, and a chair or blanket and settle in for a great day of music. There will be food trucks and adult and family-friendly beverages for sale. Just don’t bring coolers or canines. The event will go on rain or shine. – Betsy Pickle
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South High alums plan
Tuneful tribute By Betsy Pickle
These days, the school system would throw the book at him. But during his years at South High School, chorus teacher Harold Mays would throw the book at his students. And they loved it. “The choir room was elevated,” recalls Philip Duncan, class of ’70. “He’d sit at the front, playing the piano, going over parts. If he’d catch you not paying attention, he’d heave a book right at your head. He had good aim, too.
“That’s tactics that wouldn’t be approved of in today’s educational society.” Not only did his students love Mays and his peculiarities, they’re still looking to honor and please him. The South High School Alumni Chorus will present a free concert – titled “As Time Goes By” – at 3 p.m. Sunday, June 28, in the auditorium at South-Doyle Middle School, 3900 Decatur Road, with Mays in attendance.
Belinda Carter Hammond directs the South High School Alumni Chorus from the piano during a rehearsal at South Knoxville Baptist Church. Photo by Betsy Pickle
It’s an encore to the concert they put together for him in July 2012. But while this is the first time Mays, who now lives in Fayetteville, Ark., has heard them since, his former students have been keeping the torch burning. “We’ve never quit,” says Anita Cash, class of ’73. “The core group has never stopped. One year we sang down at Café 4 one night a week, Christmas carols. And then
Halls Senior Center will host a ballroom dance from 7-9 p.m. Saturday, June 27, with live music by the Nigel Boulton Band. Admission is $5 at the door.
Annexation dies; nobody notices The Legislature has abolished involuntary annexation, but no one seems to care. Victor Ashe, once the poster boy for forced annexation, didn’t seem particularly perturbed by the Legislature’s rebuke of his policies, saying, “I’m not losing any sleep over it – I’m not in the mayor business anymore.”
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Read Betty Bean on page 4
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the fun
Tournament to boost baseball
IN THIS ISSUE
we’ve had a number of concerts here at the church (South Knoxville Baptist, their rehearsal home). “This past year for Christmas we sang at a number of assistedliving and nursing homes. We went every week for a month.” Belinda Carter Hammond is the director and piano accompanist for the group. Her asso-
Bubble
Ballroom dance
A cornhole tournament to raise funds for the Union County High School baseball team will be held 6 p.m. Saturday, June 27, at Lil Jo’s BBQ on Maynardville Highway. Early registration begins at 5 p.m. Cost is $20 per player. There will be cash prizes for first and second place. Rain date is July 11. Info: 621-4603 or 660-1839.
June July 24, 29, 2015 2013
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Ann Strange of Lake Forest gets a kick out of watching Stella DeLuca blow bubbles at the South Knoxville Neighborhood & Business Coalition pool party at Chapman Pool. About 70 members of SKNBC neighborhoods attended the event. Photo by Betsy Pickle More pictures on page 3
School deal puts Bounds in a bind By Betty Bean
The deal brokered between the county mayor and the superintendent of schools means that Tim Burchett will get to serve eight years without raising taxes, and Jim McIntyre will get to keep his job – at least until the next school board Patti Bounds election. By the time school board chair Mike McMillan faces re-election, he will have built two new Eighth District schools and so will County Commissioner Dave Wright, who will be term-limited out of office but may well have future political aspirations. Sixth District commissioner Brad Anders will get to brag about delivering a middle school to Hardin Valley; ditto his district school board representative, Terry Hill. So what’s not to love about the Memorandum of Understanding, which is being hailed as a rare and welcome example of cooperation
between the appropriating side of county government (commission/mayor) and the spending side (school board/superintendent)? Quite a bit, says Patti Bounds, the Seventh District’s school board representative: “I wish we could separate the capital improvement plan out of the MOU. There are parts of it that are going to be very helpful, but when it comes to the capital improvement part, it hurts District 7,” she said, labeling the plan to renovate rather than replace the dilapidated Adrian Burnett Elementary School “a travesty.” Bounds, who spends at least a day a week in each of the schools in her district and taught kindergarten in the district until she retired last year, said she was taken by surprise when McIntyre recommended building a new north central elementary school (which ultimately didn’t get funded) while ignoring the longstanding need for a new Adrian Burnett Elementary School, which keeps getting moved to the back of the line in favor of schools in more
vocal communities. She said that renovating the wooden structure is not a legitimate solution to the problems with a building that has no gymnasium and has hallways being used as classrooms. “I don’t believe in throwing taxpayer dollars away, and that’s what you’re doing trying to renovate that building.” She sums up her feelings this way: “The chair of the commission is Brad Anders, who is lobbying for a new Hardin Valley school. The assistant chair is Dave Wright, who is getting a new school in Gibbs. Meanwhile, in my district, we have 51 portable classrooms housing about 2,200 students, and subpar conditions in portables that date back to 1980. “Does it bother me that we are building in anticipation of overcrowding in Hardin Valley while you’ve got 2,200 students in portable classrooms? That’s half of the students housed in portables in Knox County. Maybe we could send some of our portables to Hardin Valley.”
On the other hand, Bounds likes many elements of the MOU – the fact that Knox County will be overseeing school construction, selling the Andrew Johnson Building, delivering additional money to teachers (although she wishes it were more). But beyond bricks and mortar and dollars, there’s another aspect to this bind: the politics of the school board. Bounds is part of a four-member faction that includes McMillan, Hill and Amber Rountree. Hill and McMillan will benefit politically from delivering new middle schools to Hardin Valley, and Gibbs, respectively. And Bounds, in her first year as a school board member, must weigh her frustrations about her own district against the value of preserving these alliances. So where will she land when the agreement already approved by County Commission lands on the school board agenda July 1? “Has this put me in a bind? Yeah, it has. And I just don’t know how I’m going to vote,” she said. “This is very difficult.”
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