South Knox Shopper-News 080316

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SOUTH KNOX VOL. 42 NO. 31 1

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August July 29, 3, 2013 2016

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Ease on down the road? Hardly

Ed and Bob coming South Knox County commissioners at-large Ed Brantley and Bob Thomas are returning to South Knoxville for a community meeting 5-7 p.m. Wednesday, Aug. 17, at Love That BBQ, 1901 Maryville Pike. Everyone is invited. Dutch treat dinner.

Fiber artist Island Home Park fiber artist Nancy Roberson makes classically crafted garments for regular people. “I make outerwear that a large majority of the population can wear,� said Roberson, who figures she’s been weaving for 45 years – since age 16, when she discovered Guatemalan back-strap weaving. Working under the name RichRobes Made by Hand, Roberson is best known today for her lush and affordable scarves, shawls and capes, which you can find at her booth at the Market Square Farmers’ Market on Saturdays.

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Read Kelly Norrell on page 3

Oswald returns Meet Kip Oswald, an inquisitive seventh grader who will tackle any educational issue head on. This week Oswald asks, “What student fees are really necessary? The answer: Not as many as you might think.

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Read Oswald on page 8

West looks at UT basketball “I will pass along this thought for consideration: Other coaches with far less impressive credentials have had significantly better results in first-year recruiting (than has Rick Barnes). There is a vivid example at Mississippi State. “Now is when good things are supposed to start happening here. Strangely enough, nobody is talking about the big upswing coming in Tennessee basketball. Top recruits aren’t even visiting.�

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By Betsy Pickle Ah, there’s nothing like a morning rush-hour walk along Chapman Highway. Who doesn’t love to feel the fresh breeze bouncing off of cars and trucks speeding along the highway? Or hear the chirp, whistle and whine of traffic? Or smell the aroma of exhaust and occasional garbage? It’s a pedestrian’s nightmare. But it doesn’t have to be, says Ian Lockwood. Lockwood, an engineer with Toole Design Group and director of the company’s Orlando office, visited Knoxville last week at the request of the Knoxville Transportation Planning Organization and the Knox County Health Department, which advocates walking and cycling for good health. He met with several groups and agencies, did a walking tour downtown and held a public presentation on complete streets and arterial calming at the health department Wednesday night.

Thursday morning, he was up bright and early for coffee and bagels at Flenniken Landing in South Knoxville. After Lockwood and about 20 people from local government, area agencies and neighborhood groups were fully fueled, they set out on a walkability audit of a section of Chapman Highway. It wasn’t pretty. “This is not a complete street in any way,� said Lockwood, looking at the sidewalk along the east side of Chapman (there is no sidewalk on the west side). “It’s a nice street for motorists, but there’s no consideration for anyone else. The designated speed through here will keep this place down.� Lockwood, who grew up in the Canadian capital of Ottawa, immigrated to the United States when he was hired as city transportation planner for West Palm Beach, Fla. At the time, the city’s downtown area was full of abandoned buildings, drugs and prostitution.

Major arterial streets conveyed motorists through quickly, but there was no reason for them to stop and do legal business. Conventional traffic design didn’t help reverse the blight, so Lockwood came up with counterintuitive ideas that revived the area. Traffic lanes were narrowed, sidewalks were widened and trees were added to create buffers for pedestrians. Cars slowed down, and business was rejuvenated. Lockwood was able to compare the section of Chapman from Martin Mill Pike to Moody Avenue with West Palm Beach. The current businesses indicate a “lowvalue environment,� he noted. Precarious bus stops show “disregard� for users. “We’re low on the food chain,� he said of pedestrians, calling Chapman a “noisy, hostile route.� But he said that the Martin MillMoody section was “prime� for a redesign that could make the street more comfortable for pe-

destrians and cyclists and entice appropriate businesses to the area. In his KCHD presentation, Lockwood pointed out that throughout history, streets were used by all. It was only as the automobile industry advanced that people were squeezed out. On Thursday, waiting for safe opportunities to cross the road, Lockwood explained that it was the auto lobby that pushed for pedestrian crossings only at intersections and invented the term – and crime – “jaywalking.â€? As two persons in wheelchairs rolled hurriedly from one side to the other in the middle of a block during a lull in traffic, he noted the danger for anyone not using an automobile. “There’s no will or money to do an entire street,â€? he said. “Somebody who’s good at planning should pick the spots and ‌ change the street from one-sizefits-all and, where appropriate, have ‌ little urban nodes.â€?

Bob Booker sings a new song

Read Marvin West on page 4

Hey, big spenders Sandra Clark looks at huge spending in four Nashville school board races and observes that Thursday’s outcomes could foreshadow 2018 school board races in Knox County.

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Engineer Ian Lockwood talks about walkability issues on Chapman Highway. Photo by Betsy Pickle

Read Sandra Clark on page 9

(865) 922-4136 NEWS (865) 661-8777 news@ShopperNewsNow.com Sandra Clark | Betsy Pickle ADVERTISING SALES (865) 342-6084 ads@ShopperNewsNow.com Amy Lutheran | Patty Fecco Beverly Holland | Tess Woodhull CIRCULATION (865) 342-6200 shoppercirc@ShopperNewsNow.com

By Betty Bean The new album in the jukebox at Marie’s Old Town Tavern is a little bit Tony Bennett and a whole lot Frank Sinatra, with some Eddy Arnold and Jim Reeves and Ray Charles and the Drifters around the edges. Called “Doing It My Way,� it’s a debut effort for the artist, 81-yearold teacher, civil-rights pioneer, mayoral aide, state legislator, historian, DJ, nonprofit administrator, newspaper columnist and former City Council member Bob Booker, who jokes that he’s finally “come out of the shower� with a little urging from his friends. It started when Marie Owens, owner of the tavern at 904 N. Central St., urged him to get up and sing. “She’d asked Johnny Mills to come in and play old songs, and I’m humming along. She got me up – and I haven’t sat down since.� With the help of singer Vicky

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Ward, Booker collected his favorites and recorded them on a CD called “Doing It My Way.� He’s not selling it, at this point, but he’s sending copies to friends across the country and hopes to do a benefit event for the Beck Cultural Center, which he ran for many years.

A product of Knoxville’s segregated school system, Booker has fond memories of his childhood. He graduated from Austin High School in 1953 and spent a year washing dishes in restaurant kitchens, dreaming of a better life. He didn’t have the money for college, so he enlisted in the U.S.

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Bob Booker has released his first album at age 81. Photo by Ruth White

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Army to get the benefits of the G.I. Bill. He was sent to England and then to France, where he dined in French restaurants, saw the Folies Bergère and made good use of his high school French. He enjoyed army life but was still set on going back to school, so he went home and enrolled in Knoxville College – and found that not much had changed. “I had to deal with segregation all over again,â€? he said. “I’d been set free for three years in Europe, but here, the only decent restaurant I could go to was Sky Chef at McGhee Tyson Airport.â€? Meanwhile, the national civilrights movement was gaining momentum. College students organized sit-ins at Greensboro, N.C., lunch counters and Booker, who was student-body president To page 3


2 • AUGUST 3, 2016 • Shopper news

health & lifestyles

Larry and Lisa Guillain-Barre ordeal prompts couple to volunteer The Allspice CafĂŠ at Fort Sanders Regional may seem like an unusual place for a family gathering, but for Larry and Lisa Beeler, it’s a “second home.â€? It’s where they came that St. Patrick’s Day in 2010 when Larry was stricken with Miller Fisher Syndrome, a rare variant of GuillainBarre Syndrome (GBS) that left him paralyzed, on a ventilator and in an induced coma. It’s where a worried Lisa, “not knowing whether he would be the ‘Larry’ he was when he came in or if he would ever be again,â€? waited in the lounge of the Critical Care Unit for weeks on end. But it’s also where Larry and Lisa found so much hope, healing and caring that they now serve as volunteers for others who ďŹ nd themselves in similar situations. It’s also why the Beelers – complete with four children, in-laws, grandkids and parents – have returned every St. Patrick’s Day for the past ďŹ ve years to remember. “Our family meets here every year on March 17 because we’re so thankful,â€? said Lisa. “We can look back and see where we were and where we got back to. People ask, ‘Could you not ďŹ nd a better place to go celebrate?’ We ate here three times a day for three months!â€? “We’ll eat and walk around a little bit,â€? said Larry. “Sometimes, we’ll all go upstairs on the terrace because I loved to be wheeled outside. We reect on what happened and thank God that we’re not here. Sometimes, we go up to Patricia Neal (Rehabilitation Center) and a nurse will say, ‘Can I help you?’ and I’ll say, ‘No, I was a Guillain-Barre patient here ďŹ ve years ago and I was in this room, and I am just here reecting on what hap-

effect of the antibiotics he was taking for a sore throat. “Within 24 hours, he went from being as healthy as could be to being on life support,â€? Lisa recalled. “He couldn’t move his arms, his legs, he couldn’t open his eyes. He was paralyzed from head to toe.â€? Fort Sanders neurologist Darrell Thomas, MD determined that Larry had been stricken with Miller Fisher Syndrome, a variant of GBS that is characterized by abnormal muscle coordination, paralysis of the eye muscles and absence of the tendon reexes. “We didn’t know what GuillainBarre was, never heard of it,â€? said Larry. “We didn’t know if I was going to be paralyzed for the rest of my life. We didn’t know what the next step was. We didn’t know whether I would be a vegetable for the rest of my life. I could tell a little bit of what was going on around me if people talked to me. I could wiggle my toes a little bit for ‘yes’ or ‘no.’ I lost 30-something Five years later, Larry and Lisa Beeler conpounds. I was skin and bone.â€? tinue to remember. Wearing green, After being in ICU for four weeks, they returned to Patricia Neal ReLarry spent four weeks in Patricia habilitation Center on March 17, Neal where therapists and Sharon 2015 to acknowledge the fifth Glass, MD were ďŹ nally able to send anniversary of Larry’s admission him home in a wheelchair and walkto rehab and to reflect on what er. Another six or seven months of that time meant for their famoutpatient therapy followed before ily. In 2010, Larry and Lisa were Larry was able to return to his job smiling as he was discharged as a buyer at a hardware wholesaler. from Patricia Neal. Now, they “I’m living proof and a testament volunteer at PNRC and Fort to a lot of people that you CAN beat Sanders Regional to serve fellow this if you work hard at it,â€? says Larpatients and relay the experiences ry. “Because of this hospital – the they once had. doctors and the nurses and nutritionists and therapists and the spirit of God and my belief – they got me pened. They’ll ask me a lot of ques- gan March 16, 2010, on his drive to walk again, to talk again, got me tions. A lot of times, I will tell them home from work when he noticed to eat again and they helped me pull my story of what I went through.â€? his vision wasn’t quite right but through it.â€? What Larry “went throughâ€? be- brushed it off, thinking it was a side Now, Larry and Lisa are “giving

back� as Fort Sanders volunteers. Lisa serves once a week in the same ICU lounge where she spent so many weeks during Larry’s illness. “Waiting in the ICU lounge was bad – it’s not an easy seat to sit in – but the people they had working in the ICU lounge helped me get through it,� said Lisa. “That’s why I wanted to give back. I always say I come to volunteer hoping to be a blessing to somebody else, but usually I am the one who leaves with all the blessings. I always do. I love it.� While Lisa helps with all types of patients in ICU, Larry serves asneeded whenever there is a family dealing with Guillain-Barre Syndrome. “What we’re trying to do is give a little bit of hope and inspiration to people,� he said. “We just meet with families and people in the hospital and try to help them through it. We don’t diagnose them by any means or tell them what’s going to happen. We just try to give them a little bit of hope and say, ‘You are not alone.’ If I can show that I am there and I am strong and – I hate to use the words ‘beat it’ – but if we have a positive mental attitude about it then maybe I can give them some inspiration that might change the way they look at things. When we walk out of the room, we hope that we have left something with them. They are lying there in bed, they can’t walk but maybe they will say, ‘He was completely paralyzed but he was able to walk in and walk out and maybe I can do that too – if not for myself then for my family.’ � The couple received the 2015 “Volunteer of the Year� award in May at Fort Sanders Regional’s Volunteer Appreciation Luncheon.

Fort Sanders celebrates volunteer contributions The Fort Sanders Regional Medical Center 2016 Appreciation Luncheon was held at the Four Points Sheraton Cumberland House this spring in honor of all the volunteers who give a helping hand at the hospital. Over 100 volunteers attended along with many hospital staff who wished the volunteers well and praised the 70 year history of the Auxiliary and six volunteer programs: â– Heartstrings: A musical group that entertains patients and visitors each month. â– Fellowship Center: Volunteers who assist those staying in Fort Sanders’ hospitality house for the families of patients from outside the region. â– HABIT (Human Animal Bonding In Tennessee): Pet owners who share the unconditional love of a pet with patients and caregivers. â– Stephen Ministers: Lay ministers who provide spiritual support to patients and caregivers. â– Patricia Neal Rehabilitation Center Peers: Former patients help current patients by reading to them, helping them write letters, and providing conversation and friendly company. â– Student Volunteers : College students (18 or older) share their special gifts and energy with hospital patients and staff CEO Keith Altshuler kicked off the program with a glowing report of volunteer hours dedicated in 2015, equaling over 46,000 hours. Chief Financial OfďŹ cer Ronnie Beeler and PNRC VP Leslie Irwin accepted the 2016 Auxiliary Check for patient services and equipment for $240,000. The proceeds are raised by the Fort Sanders Hospital Gift Shop coordinated by Joan Howard. For more information on how to become a volunteer, visit www.fsregional.com/volunteers

Joan Howard, gift shop coordinator, presents a check for patient services and equipment to Patricia Neal Rehabilitation Center VP and administrator Leslie Irwin and Fort Sanders Regional VP and Chief Financial Officer Ronnie Beeler.

President and Chief Administrative Officer Keith Altshuler with the Coordinator of Volunteer Services Paula Minhinnett

2016 Volunteer of the Year: Peer Volunteer Art Jones pictured with Volunteer Staff Connie Painter and wife Robin Jones.

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Want to know more about volunteering at Fort Sanders Regional? Call (865) 541-1249 or go to fsregional.com.


SOUTH KNOX Shopper news • AUGUST 3, 2016 • 3

Weaver Nancy Roberson makes popular, accessible outerwear By yK Kelly ellly ell ly N Norrell orre or rell ell Island Home Park fiber artist Nancy Roberson makes classically crafted garments for regular people. “I make outerwear that a large majority of the population can wear,� said Roberson, who figures she’s been weaving for 45 years – since age 16, when she discovered Guatemalan backstrap weaving. Working under the name RichRobes Made by Hand, Roberson is best known today for her lush and affordable scarves, shawls and capes, which you can find at her booth at the Market Square Farmers’ Market on Saturdays. Her work is also featured at the Knoxville Museum of Art Gift Shop, the Foothills Craft Guild and festivals like MerleFe st, a four-day bluegrass music festival in April in Wilkesboro, N.C. She works primarily in two media. One is weaving, the intersecting of two sets of threads to make cloth, which she does on her more than six looms. The other is silk, which she buys in “blanks,� or undyed lots, and hand-colors with a very colorfast dye. One of her most popular items is a Mobius shawl, a garment made from a single piece of fabric that is twisted in front and stitched in the back. You pull it on over your head. Roberson’s are distinctive for their detailing, workmanship and generous proportions, so that you really can wear them like a jacket. She makes them in silk for summer wear ($68) and woven cloth with a soft fringe for colder weather ($99). Travelers favor them because they pack well and are versatile. Roberson’s pieces are best sellers at the Knoxville Museum of Art Gift Shop, said Susan Creswell, manager/buyer. “One of our constant best sellers year-

community Booker sings

From page 1

at KC, decided it was time to take action. Against the advice of his elders, he led a group of students on a walkthrough at downtown lunch counters. Afterward, he got a message from Mayor John Duncan. “I drove downtown to hear what he had to say – he threatened to put us all in jail. I said, ‘That’s your prerogative.’â€? But it didn’t take long for Duncan to come around. “My impression was that George Dempster and Cas Walker said we didn’t need to have that stuff going on. Dempster said, ‘Coloreds and whites eat together at my plant, so let ’em eat.’â€? Duncan took a delegation of business leaders and KC students to New York to talk to the presidents of Woolworth and S.H. Kress. “We’d decided we could short-circuit all the turmoil by having the lunch counters open to all, but they refused to meet with us.â€? So the demonstrations commenced under Duncan’s watchful eye. “He deserves credit. He made sure that the right policemen were on duty on Gay Street – he didn’t want them to overreact. Duncan told me himself that the governor of a state in the Deep South called him up and said, ‘Mayor, aren’t you When she colors silk, head of a Southern city? ‌ she achieves distinctive Why are you allowing this?’ patterns on the fabric by Duncan said, ‘Because I adding ice cubes during don’t want the problems in the dye process. Roberson my city that you’re having in said she rinses all her dyed your state.’â€? items four or five times and Booker said many white then runs them through the people got involved. washing machine to make “In many instances, there sure they are residue-free. were more white people on Info: Nancy G. Roberson, the picket lines than black Ngroberson9@gmail.com people. They would turn on their TV sets in the evening Nancy RoberNancy N R be Ro b rson with Ellie Moore, assistant director of Nourish Knoxville, trying on a woven Mobius shawl

Nancy Roberson’s silk Mobius shawls are popular items in the KMA Gift Shop.

Shawl shows Nancy Roberson’s distinctive goose-eye (diamond-shaped) twill weave. Photos by Kelly Norrell

round is her hand-woven Mobius shawl. She’s one of our top sellers. I am really happy to be representing her in Knoxville.� Passersby at all her venues love stopping to touch the vibrant silks, try on a soft, woven wrap – or tend to the purely practical. One recent, 95-degree day at the Farmers’ Market, a man stopped by her stall to buy a 21-inch silk square, acid-dyed yellow with a green pattern. “I need something to keep sweat from showing on my shirt,� he said. “Wring this out in water. Silk dries really fast,� suggested Roberson, who sells her square scarves for $10 and oblong ones for $15. She said she once sold scarves to members of an Irish rock band to tie on their wrists

to keep sweat from rolling down their arms and into their instruments. Roberson, who has two arts degrees (Bachelor of Arts, Florida State University; Master of Arts, University of Tennessee), admits taking joy in the ancient processes of textile production. “I like the planning and organizing. I like choosing colors and watching the cloth form,� she said. Using cotton, rayon and tencel yarn for woven garments, she dresses the loom (a four-harness jack floor loom for shawls). “There are about 2,600 yards in a pound of yarn. I go through about four pounds to make 10 shawls,� she said. Then she weaves her cloth, often using a goose-eye twill that “has a lot of loft and drapes well.�

and see folks being knocked down in Selma, but they hadn’t thought about the fact that here in Knoxville I couldn’t go to the lunch counter and eat a hamburger and drink a Coke.� He got his degree in 1962 and was teaching high school French in Chattanooga when Duncan offered him a job in city government. In 1966, he became the first African-American from Knox County to serve in the General Assembly in Nashville. One of six blacks there, he remembers being “constantly frustrated� but is proud of the role he played in getting 18-yearolds the right to vote and in getting liquor by the drink in Knoxville. He became Mayor Kyle Testerman’s administrative assistant in 1972 and found that he still ran into “that race thing� occasionally – he was kicked out of a South Knoxville business he’d visited as a representative of the mayor and wasn’t allowed into an Eastern Star meeting in Karns to which he’d been invited. “That said to me, ‘Bob Booker, it doesn’t matter what your title is. You’re the same as the guy hanging out on the end of the block.’� The CD’s title is a salute to Frank Sinatra’s anthem, “My Way,� and it’s not hard to understand why. “Paul Anka may have written that song for Frank Sinatra, but he wrote it for me, too. I’ve been knocked down, faced roadblocks along the way, but I’ve succeeded in spite of that,� he said. To find out more about Booker’s CD, call him at 865-546-1576, or at the Beck Cultural Center, 865524-8461.

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City Council member Nick Pavlis, Carol Evans and Monte Stanley after the Old Sevier Community Group meeting. Photo by Betsy Pickle

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Evans updates Old Sevier on G&O trail By Betsy Pickle Carol Evans has been working on the railroad. Sort of. It’s no surprise what the Legacy Parks Foundation executive director will do to further her mission of making Knox County a great place to play. Recently, she rode an engine along the G&O rail line that runs from Chapman Highway to Mead’s Quarry to survey the course of the upcoming railwith-trail. “It was great fun,� she told members of the Old Sevier Community Group at their recent meeting. Unlike similar projects that have converted old trail lines into walking and biking trails – called rail-totrail – the G&O will remain an active line. But it has only one customer, Marathon Oil, so it’s not really all that active.

Legacy Parks is working with developer David Dewhirst, who is renovating the old Kern’s Bakery building, on the entry point to the new trail. “It’s important that the Kerns development be connected into that,� Evans said. The three-mile stretch has numerous easements negotiated with individual property owners. “One easement might be 20 feet, one might be 50 feet, one might be 30 feet,� she said. “So it’s like a giant jigsaw puzzle on how we will navigate which side we’re on, and there’s at least one component where we know we’ll need to go on road.� The Littlejohn engineering firm is donating “a small amount of technical assistance� to help make sense of the jigsaw puzzle. Evans said the trail will

be a fine-gravel natural surface. “It will be wheelchair accessible and stroller-worthy as well.� A chain-link fence will make it look similar to parts of the Neyland Greenway. Evans said the plan is to keep the trail on the north side of the rail line to grant the most accessibility to the new businesses growing along Sevier Avenue. One or two bridges will have to be built. It will be an interpretive trail, with signs describing the history of railroads in Knoxville. Evans isn’t sure of the timetable yet. Once the trail is laid out, Legacy Parks will start fundraising. She wants to avoid the complications of using federal or state money. “We would love to start fundraising in the fall.�

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4 • AUGUST 3, 2016 • Shopper news

Basketball interrupts football countdown We interrupt this mad dash to a football championship with a basketball alarm. Ding, ding, ding, ding. Whether Rick Barnes’ next Tennessee team will be good or bad is not the subject. Expectations are low. It has been said the Vols may, indeed, lose to ETSU and Chattanooga. The current concern is the year after, better identified as recruiting. A more definitive way of putting that is the shortage thereof. Here’s what I am hearing … The coach has signed nine players in his first year and not one was a five-star prep prize or even a top 100 prospect. Some fans find that hard to believe.

I keep hearing, anonymous for two reasons: I don’t know who said what and they might not have said anything if they had to be identified and knew their thoughts would be offered to the world. Career summation: Barnes won at Texas with talent. So far he hasn’t done that kind of recruiting at Tennessee. Top prep players don’t even mention us. Nobody is saying Barnes has lost his touch, but I’m worried. Sure hope the big guy who visited (Chinedu Uyaelunmo, 7-footer from Nigeria via a couple of prep schools in Miami) wasn’t just sightseeing. More caustic critics are beginning to suspect Rick

Marvin West

Great players, good players and very ordinary players cost one scholarship each. Enormous effort and a brilliant sales job are often the separators. Recruiters form long lines to compete for top prospects. Tennessee is signing futures where the lines are shorter. We’ll find out later whether three-stars, properly instructed, can beat superstars focused on the NBA. What follows are words

picked his first best offer, Tennessee, as a soft landing for the completion of his career. Dave Hart added a few million to the retirement fund. As for me, I would not jump to that conclusion. Barnes loves to coach. He can coach. And he works at it. Kevin Punter is an excellent example of what a smart coach can do with a good idea and commitment. There was a time somebody on Barnes’ staff at Texas could recruit. That somebody might not be at this UT. Restrictions may be tighter here. Hart was hurt by the Donnie Tyndall blunder. Or, Barnes may realize he can’t sign big names and is aiming lower.

Or, Barnes may have chosen a better way of life. Preparing teams, coaching games and even fussing about referees is fun in comparison to the drudgery of recruiting. I will pass along this thought for consideration: Other coaches with far less impressive credentials have had significantly better results in first-year recruiting. There is a vivid example at Mississippi State. Now is when good things are supposed to start happening here. Strangely enough, nobody is talking about the big upswing coming in Tennessee basketball. Top recruits aren’t even visiting. Oh, you say it takes time to erase black marks in the

background. Is it still relevant that Bruce Pearl was fired during an NCAA thunderstorm? Do high school players care that Cuonzo never felt wanted? I suppose Donnie’s NCAA sentence did rock the boat. Here’s what I see: SEC basketball was sixth in conference comparisons. Tennessee recruiting was seventh in the SEC. The big tournament is way out there somewhere. The obvious question is how do we get there from here? Second obvious question: Is it closer than it was or farther away? Third thought: It’s almost football time in Tennessee. Marvin West welcomes reader reaction. His address is westwest6@netzero.com.

Complete streets mean better communities Transportation engineer Ian Lockwood, who was in town last week to talk about how complete streets change communities, had good things to say about Knoxville’s historic buildings, public spaces and art-filled alleys. O t h e r areas, like H e n l e y Street, he called “opIan Lockwood p o r t u n i ties.” Lockwood, a transportation engineer with Toole Design Group, made presentations to local government reps, agencies and the public last week to share a vision for how complete streets − those that allow safe, comfortable travel for multiple modes of transportation − create healthier,

was creating streets that were comfortable for pedestrians, which meant wide sidewalks, trees and raised intersections that slowed down traffic, making streets easier to cross. When he wanted to narrow a five-lane arterial road, the Department of Transportation said that wouldn’t be progress. But the creation of an inclusive public realm, where kids could walk to school and neighbors could get to know each other, revitalized the area. A neighborhood watch was instituted, and crime went down. Downtown West Palm Beach is now thriving, and none of the shops are vacant. Best of all, improvements were completed with the promise that the poor wouldn’t be displaced. Forward-thinking housing policies and form-based

Wendy Smith

more vibrant and more inclusive communities. Widening of roads in the 1990s spoiled several cities, like West Palm Beach, Fla., he says. When he moved there in 1996, numerous buildings had been torn down to build surface parking lots, and 80 percent of the shops on the city’s main thoroughfare were vacant. Drug dealing and prostitution were rampant. A new vision for the city was drawn, and as the city transportation planner, Lockwood had the task of making the streets match the vision. The first step

code allowed low-income families to buy their homes, so neighborhoods remain intact. Here’s the mind-bending part of Lockwood’s take on planning: roads shouldn’t be designed simply to move cars; they should also nurture businesses, increase social interaction and add character. His litmus test for a project is this: Does the change reward the short trip or the transit trip? Improving the short trip is always his goal. Adding lanes only benefits those who have a long way to go and want to get there fast, and it isn’t completely effective. But widening roads is very effective at making businesses less accessible and dividing communities. Back to West Palm Beach. Yes, there’s still congestion. But it’s beautiful, so nobody

minds, he says. If you need an illustration of what it looks like when people park their cars and walk, visit Market Square on a Saturday morning − or any other time. Kids and music play, neighbors visit and money flies out of wallets. About a year from now, the Cumberland Avenue project will wrap up, and

we’ll see a more complete street. Four lanes will change to three, and wide sidewalks will have shade and benches. Pedestrian and transit facilities will be improved. If it creates the kind of change Lockwood described, it could change our minds about the definition of progress.

GOSSIP AND LIES ■ Political conventions: Cut them to three days; although I did watch CNN for full coverage, rather than the one-hour hits on prime time.

■ Democratic convention: Too much diversity.

■ Ban children and spouses from the podium. It’s unfair to folks who simply want to live their lives ... yet only Barron Trump (either because of age or genes) showed the disgust that most kids surely felt.

■ Apologies for having been an early advocate for presidential primaries. Party bosses brought us Abe Lincoln and Thomas Jefferson.

■ GOP convention: Not enough diversity.

■ Three more months: Did we mention these campaigns are too long?

■ Primaries have brought us Trump and Clinton redux.

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government

Shopper news • AUGUST 3, 2016 • 5

Fred Houser and Lynn Redmon

Nashville is gaining on Memphis Seven Islands Methodist Church

South meets North to bring historic marker home This story started when somebody took a walk in the woods off Murray Road and discovered a marble slab engraved with the words, “Robert Hines, Born 1783, Died 1877,” hidden in the underbrush. The six-acre parcel where it was found had just been approved as a subdivision, and the discovery of an old cemetery there would have created a costly, timeconsuming problem for the developer because state law mandates special protection for abandoned gravesites. Pat Pennybacker brought the mystery to the Norwood Homeowners Association, and solving it became a group project. Neighboring property owners confirmed that the property had been privately held farmland for as long as anyone could remember and dismissed the graveyard theory. The next most logical hypothesis

Betty Bean was that someone had stolen the stone and dumped it on the Murray Road property. Association president Lynn Redmon did a quick internet search and discovered someone with the same name and vital statistics buried in the graveyard of Seven Islands Methodist Church in South Knox County. There was even a photograph of the marker. Redmon learned that this was the first Methodist church built in Knox County, established in 1802. Both the now-abandoned church and the graveyard are listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The existing church building was

built in 1864. Redmon asked MPC historic preservation planner Kaye Graybeal for help, and she steered him to Linda Claussen, who alerted her neighbor Fred Houser, the cemetery’s unpaid caretaker. He knew all about the marker because his mother, Agnes Pauline Johnson Houser, and some cousins had gotten together and pooled their money to buy the Hines marker many years ago. “Mom died six years ago. She’d say, ‘Fred, who you think stole my tombstone?’” Houser, who lives next door to the graveyard, says the church is as far south as you can get and still be in Knox County. He knows a lot about who’s buried there – his mother, as well as soldiers killed in the Revolutionary War, settlers killed by Indians and six students from Johnson Bible College

(now Johnson University). “Four or five of them drowned in the river. They used to have a dairy over there, and one of them was gored to death by a bull,” Houser said. But he doesn’t know much about Norwood, so he and Redmon agreed to meet at the only landmark with which Houser was familiar. “He met me at the Expo Center and followed me to Murray Road, and we put it in his pickup truck,” Redmon said. “He was thrilled.” Houser said Redmon’s observation is correct. “We went out there, and there it was! I told Lynn he couldn’t have made me happier if he’d given me a thousand dollars.” Houser took the marker home to the churchyard that he takes care of without benefit of any funding. “I believe she knows,” he said.

Brawls and ballots: It’s election week With the party conventions concluded, and the Clinton/Trump race underway, it’s easy to forget there’s an election on Thursday. In fact, if you had forgotten about this week’s state primary and county general election, you’re not alone. Early voting turnout was below average because there is no statewide nonjudicial office (governor or U.S. senator) on the ballot. Competitive statewide elections encourage political advertising and voter interest. There’s none of that this year. Thankfully, you still have time to vote. Visit the election commission website to find your correct polling place: http://www. knoxcounty.org/election/ ■ Shenanigans in District 18. The only local race drawing significant voter interest is the Republican primary for state house District 18. In that race, incumbent Rep. Martin Daniel faces former opponent (and former state representative and City Council member) Steve Hall, James Corcoran and Bryan Dodson. The drama of the campaign has centered around Rep. Daniel (allegedly) shoving Steve Hall during a

Scott Frith

joint appearance on a local radio show. At first, Daniel issued a wordy, non-apology about the incident. Then, after a criminal assault charge was filed by Hall, Daniel declined to answer any questions. That was a mistake. In this age of Donald Trump, Republican voters expect bombast and hyperbole. Rep. Daniel should have held a press conference and announced, “Sure, I pushed Steve Hall. He called me a liar. Steve Hall is lucky I didn’t punch him in the mouth.” Politics is a rough-andtumble business. Sometimes it even takes a little brawling to get elected. Of course, Rep. Daniel could still win. Yet, by bumbling his way through this non-scandal, Daniel missed a great opportunity. As a result, Steve Hall may be heading back to Nashville.

■ City Election Schedule. Speaking of missed opportunities, Knoxville City Council has missed a great chance to solve a chronic problem with its elections. As of this writing, the council is expected to approve moving the city primary election date to better accommodate military and overseas voters. City voters will be asked to approve this change in a referendum question this November. They should. It’s a good idea. Unfortunately, these changes do not go far enough. Oddly, city elections (mayor, city council and city court judge) are held in odd-numbered years and not the more traditional even-numbered

years like presidential and Tennessee’s gubernatorial elections. As a result, voter turnout is abysmal. Low voter turnout is bad because it gives disproportionate influence to city employees and neighborhood groups who are more motivated by self-interest to vote. Unfortunately, politicians elected by a few may cater only to the whims of the few. Here’s a suggestion. Move city elections to evennumbered years. It’s tough enough to get folks to vote. The city should not hold its elections when voting is the furthest thing from everyone’s mind. We can do better. Scott Frith is a local attorney. You can visit his website at www.pleadthefrith.com

Election is Thursday Polls will be open from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 4, for the county general election and state primaries. Law Director Bud Armstrong and former Property Assessor John Whitehead will be elected without opposition in the only countywide races. Several county commission seats are contested.

And in state House District 18, incumbent Rep. Martin Daniel is fighting off challenges from former Rep. Steve Hall, James Corcoran and Bryan Dodson. Many legislators are running unopposed, while in District 13 the stage is set for the county’s biggest race in November: Rep. Eddie Smith trying to fend off former Rep. Gloria Johnson.

Nashville is about to become Tennessee’s largest city, surpassing Memphis. Right now Memphis is only 1,200 residents larger than Nashville and at the current growth rates, Nashville will move ahead of Memphis within a year. ■ Why is county commissioner Bob Thomas starting his campaign for county mayor two years before the primary? Mayor Burchett is not quite Bob Thomas half way through his second and final term. Seems like some campaigns are year around. Apparently, it is to let Thomas legally raise funds as one has to file a treasurer’s form before donations can be legally accepted. However, there could be a downside to this for Thomas. Now that he is openly campaigning for mayor, every vote he casts on the commission will be seen as how it impacts his mayoral aspirations. Zonings, which mayors normally avoid, cannot be avoided by mayoral candidate Thomas now that he has announced but continues on County Commission. He may please the developers or the neighborhood groups, but it’s unlikely he will please both. Citizens coming to Commission will view his votes in the prism of whether they will vote for or against him in the May 2018 primary. The decision also impacts Commissioner Ed Brantley who says he may retire after one term. But it is hardly a secret that Brantley and Thomas are a political pair. It is widely assumed that Brantley will be Thomas’ chief of staff if Thomas is elected. He will be the new Dean Rice. Again, the downside to this is that Brantley’s votes will take on an aura that they otherwise would not have. The upside for Thomas is that he can raise money and secure early commitments, making it harder for a person to enter in mid2017 for the May primary, 2018. This tactic sometimes works and sometimes does not, depending on the caliber of a later entry. Others being mentioned include County Commissioner Brad Anders, GOP county chair Buddy Burkhardt and state GOP chair Ryan Haynes, who represented west Knox

Victor Ashe

County and Farragut in the state House. Someone else may materialize as well. The Democrats at this point do not seem to have a viable candidate. ■ The death of Louise Zirkle a few days ago marks the loss of a strong Republican who, along with the late attorney Richard Stair, led the Republicans in Sequoyah Hills for 50 years. She was a dedicated believer in the GOP and long time supporter of former City Council member Jean Teague. There are few like her in today’s world. ■ Knoxville Asian’s Festival will be Sunday, Aug. 28, at Market Square from 11 to 6. There will be great food. ■ The only former governor to live in Tennessee who was not a governor of this state died. He was Frank Barnett, 82, a Knoxville attorney who was lieutenant governor and then governor of American Samoa when the governor was appointed by the U.S. Secretary of Interior. Today the citizens of American Samoa elect their governor. Barnett was also a top aide to former Gov. Winfield Dunn, who came from Nashville to attend the receiving. Barnett and I briefly opposed each other for a U.S. Senate run in 1984 but remained friends. ■ Mayor Rogero’s strong attack in Philadelphia last week on the GOP dominated state Legislature has riled up local GOP lawmakers. Other than auditioning for a job in a Clinton Administration, there is no way her blistering attack on Nashville can help her relations with the local legislative delegation. The truth is that Rogero simply does not personally work relations one on one with the lawmakers. It is not her cup of tea. Both Council members George Wallace and Marshall Stair, who are seen as potential mayoral candidates, would do better in this area than Rogero.

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6 • AUGUST 3, 2016 • SOUTH KNOX Shopper news

Flash and friends visit Morning Pointe When excessive heat forced Morning Pointe of Lenoir City’s residents to cancel their visit to Shangri-La Therapeutic Academy of Riding, they welcomed special guests to visit indoors. Two miniature horses and a donkey named Flash stopped by from STAR’s Minis in Motion program. Residents spent a good part of the day making the animals feel welcomed Morning Pointe resident Eloise Smith visits with Flash, a and loved. As part of its Life donkey from Shangri-La TherEnrichment Program, apeutic Academy of Riding’s Morning Pointe invites Minis in Motion program. Phofurry and four-legged to submitted friends to the community, allowing residents mals,� says Eloise Smith, to embrace the benefits of Morning Pointe resident. “Having them come inpet therapy. “We just love these ani- side to us is even better.�

County to give extra time off to military Knox County Commission has adopted a proposal by Mayor Tim Burchett to amend the Knox County personnel ordinance to increases the number of paid leave days given to Knox County government workers who are members of National Guard or the U.S. Armed Forces Reserve services. Previously, employees were paid for up to 20 working days of military leave, or four weeks. The amendment increased that benefit to 30 days of leave, or six weeks. Burchett announced the increase Friday in a press conference with Major Gen. Terry “Max� Haston at the City County Building.

Ombudsman education seminar Westmoreland Health and Rehabilitation Center, 5837 Lyons View Pike, will host a free Ombudsman Program Education Seminar 5:30-7 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 18, as part of its Community Education Promoting Elder Excellence Program. Attorney Lynette Edwards serves as the district long-term care ombudsman for the 16-county area surrounding Knoxville and will speak during the event. A Q&A session will follow, and light refreshments will be served. In addition to serving as the district long-term care ombudsman, Edwards is managing attorney with

the Legal Assistance for the Elderly Program. Both of these programs are divisions of the East Ten ne s see Human Resource Agency Inc. (ETHRA). Edwards Lynette strives to Edwards protect the rights of residents living in long-term care settings such as nursing homes, assistedliving facilities and residential homes for the aged by investigating complaints, advocating on behalf of the residents, advising residents

about involuntary discharge hearings and Medicaid hearings, and educating them and the public on laws affecting quality of long-term care, access to care, and public benefits such as Medicaid. Edwards also routinely provides in-service education to facility staff on issues such as residents’ rights, abuse awareness and prevention, investigating allegations of abuse, advance directives, etc. Edwards’ practice has focused on elder-law issues since 2005. She received her bachelor’s degree with honors from Harding University and her law degree from the University of Tennessee

College of Law in 2001. She is a member of the Tennessee Bar Association, the National Academy of Elder Law Attorneys and the Tennessee Valley Mediation Association. Edwards is also listed as a Rule 31 Civil Mediator by the Tennessee Supreme Court Alternative Dispute Resolution Commission. She has two daughters in college, lives in Maryville with her husband of 32 years and is an active member of the Maryville Church of Christ. RSVP to Kelli Canan, 584-3902 or email West morela nd.pr@ healthservices.cc

Mobile Meals gets gift from Food Lion Feeds CAC Mobile Meals has received $2,000 from the Food Lion Feeds Charitable Foundation just in time to help feed local residents. Mobile Meals will use the gift to provide meals for frail, homebound seniors in Knox County. “We really appreciate this gift from Food Lion Feeds Charitable Foundation. It will allow us to deliver hot, nutritious meals directly to the homes of almost 600 local seniors,� said Judith Pelot, Mobile Meals manager.

Mobile Meals relies on community support to deliver fresh meals to about 850 seniors every weekday of the year except for holidays. “Many people would be surprised to learn that about one-third of our support comes from the community,� Pelot said. “If you included the thousand or so volunteers who give their time to deliver meals five days a week, community support would easily add up to more than half of our annual budget.

“Support from businesses that operate within our community, like Food Lion, is a big part of that, as they give back to our community with grants like this one.� Established in 2001, the Food Lion Feeds Charitable Foundation provides financial support for programs and organizations dedicated to feeding the hungry in the communities it serves. Since its inception, the foundation has awarded more than $9 million in grants. Food Lion, based in

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Salisbury, N.C., since 1957, now has 1,098 stores in 10 Southeastern and MidAtlantic states and employs more than 63,000 associates. Food Lion is a company of Delhaize America, the U.S. division of Brusselsbased Delhaize Group. Info: www.foodlion.com. For more than 50 years, Food Lion has been a strong philanthropic partner in the communities it serves. As a grocer, Food Lion’s business is food. The company believes that no one should have to choose between dinner and paying rent or gasoline and buying groceries. Through Food Lion Feeds, Food Lion is working to create a better tomorrow by uniting with customers and partners to eliminate the choices families are forced to make when they are hungry. By the end of 2020, the company has pledged to provide 500 million meals to families in need in its local communities. Info: www.foodlion.com/feeds

SENIOR NOTES â– South Knox Senior Center 6729 Martel Lane 573-5843 knoxcounty.org/seniors Monday-Friday 7:30 a.m.-4 p.m.

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Offerings include: dulcimer and guitar lessons; arts and crafts classes; dance classes; exercise programs; Tai Chi; card games; Joymakers practice; free swim 7:30 a.m.-3:30 p.m. MondayFriday. Senior Meals program noon each Wednesday and Friday. “Meet your Commissioner� open house discussion with County Commissioner Mike Brown, 9:3010:30 a.m. Friday, Aug. 26. Register for: Senior Day at the Hatfield and McCoy Dinner Show, Tuesday, Aug. 16; CAC bus leaves 9:30 a.m.; cost: $40; payment due Wednesday, Aug. 10. ■South Knox Community Center 522 Old Maryville Pike 573-3575 Monday-Friday Offerings include a variety of senior programs. ■John T. O’Connor Senior Center 611 Winona St. 523-1135 knoxseniors.org/oconnor. html Monday-Friday 8 a.m.-4:30 p.m.

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Offerings include: Card games, billiards, senior fitness, computer classes, bingo, blood pressure checks 10:30-11:30 a.m. Monday-Friday. Register for: AAA Driver Safety Program, 9 a.m. Thursday, Aug. 4; info/registration: Kate Fleming, 8629254. Veterans Services, 10 a.m. Monday, Aug. 8; RSVP: 215-5645. Lunch and Learn: Dr. Christen Fleming will discuss allergies and treatment options for managing symptoms, noon Monday, Aug. 8; RSVP by Aug. 4 for lunch.


faith

SOUTH KNOX Shopper news • AUGUST 3, 2016 • 7

Engle to lead music at Church of the Savior By Carol Z. Shane Like many schools and churches in the area, Weisgarber Church of the Savior United Church of Christ is gearing up for a new season. The choir, on hiatus for the summer, will be returning. And a new music director will be leading them. Alexandra Engle, originally from Erwin, Tenn., holds a bachelor’s degree in classical vocal performance from Belmont University and a master’s in voice from UT. For the past year, she’s been helping at Church of the Savior in an interim position, following the departure of the church’s previous music director, Dr. Geol Greenlee, now head of the music department at Roane State Community College. Passionate about church music and choir directing, Engle has done a lot in one short year, and is now officially on board. “I can’t remember a time when communal singing was not an important part

Young soprano, choir director and voice teacher Alexandra Engle has officially been named music director at Weisgarber Church of the Savior. Photo by Mary Lauren Pho-

tography

of how I relate to the world,� says Engle. “It seems trite to say that music enters when words fail, but it’s true.� As a child, she remembers struggling with her older brother over a shared toy. “Rather than throwing a tantrum,� she

says, “I sat down and sang a little song about sharing with one another ‘the happy way.’� Fortunate to have a musical mother, Engle grew up listening to oratorio rehearsals of Haydn, Handel and Mendelssohn. She sang in auditioned choirs from the time she was 7 and “hasn’t stopped� since then, she says. She’s appeared in productions with Marble City Opera, UT Opera Theatre and Opera Carolina. Her career has also taken her to Italy for the Amalfi Coast Music and Arts Festival. “Alex brings a sharp, inquiring mind as well as a wide-ranging musical experience to her position,� says Andrew Wentzel, church member and UT music department professor of voice. “She challenges, teaches and demonstrates, all the while elevating the group beyond what it thought was possible. Her joy of music is infectious.� As Church of the Savior

music director, Engle says she wants to “share music that is inspirational, and to help people find music that helps them express themselves. “As a voice teacher, I want to help people learn about how to use the marvelous instrument that is the human body. But I think our highest goal as church musicians should be to participate in the reconciling ministry of Christ, bringing people closer to God. “I don’t think music will ever lose its place of honor in the church, not only because of its effective powers but because it has such a strong scriptural role. We see the biblical use of music as a part of praise, worship and thanksgiving; for ceremonial events like coronations and festivals; for soothing troubles and fears; for prayer, for lamentation and for healing. “Music, and especially vocal music, plays a very valuable role in the spiritual life of the church.�

Super Senior Tuesdays ‘Lunch and Learn’ at New Life United Methodist By Carol Z. Shane New Life United Methodist Church member Laura Taylor, a licensed health consultant for Hughes and Associates, which provides Health, Life and Retirement options for families, works with seniors every day. Most of her clients are 65 or older. “I see such a need for them to have nutritious food, fellowship, companionship, to feel needed – all without paying,� she says. She can only provide so much in her work life, but Taylor says that her dream is “to fill that void.� Over lunch with New Life UMC’s pastor, the Rev. Teresa Atkins McClure, the topic of seniors and their needs came up. The two

“This program is free to anyone 55 or older, but they must RSVP so we have enough food. This costs nothing to those attending, who will have a great free meal, fellowship, and be educated each month on different topics.� Scheduled meetings are: ■Sept. 13 - Wills and Estates with Roger Reddings ■Oct. 11 - ABCs of MediLicensed health consultant care with Laura Taylor Laura Taylor hopes to help se■Nov. 8 - Office of Aging niors with a new series at New with Kathy Sergeant Life United Methodist Church. ■Dec. 13 - Special MusiPhoto submitted cal Performance featuring The Mull Sunday Tradition women agreed that a regu- with Tommy Spencer Taylor says that she and lar church program could McClure also hope to inhelp in this area. “We decided on a ‘Lunch corporate a Bible study and computer classes, among and Learn,’� says Taylor.

cross currents Lynn Pitts lpitts48@yahoo.com

Road closed

Simon Peter and another disciple followed Jesus. Since that disciple was known to the high priest, he went with Jesus into the courtyard of the high priest, but Peter was standing outside at the gate. So the other disciple, who was known to the high priest, went out, spoke to the woman who guarded the gate, and brought Peter in. The woman said to Peter, “You are not also one of this man’s disciples, are you?� He said, “I am not.� (John 18: 15-17 NRSV) Oh, Peter. Impulsive, bungling, fearful, lying, cowardly, dear Peter! On our trip west, I saw a road sign on a gate in Montana that said: “Road Closed to St. Peter.� I am assuming that St. Peter is the name of a town there, but I couldn’t prove it by looking in my road atlas. However, you know where my mind went. The road is closed? To St. Peter? I thought St. Peter was the one who would welcome us at the Pearly Gates! The one who would check his list (much like Santa Claus) to see who would be admitted into glory! Peter is one of my favorite people because he was so very human! Lloyd Douglas called him “The Big Fisherman� in the historical novel he wrote about Peter, and it’s true: Peter was big in everything he did. He messed up big-time, loudly denied ever knowing his Lord, repented heartbrokenly and lived the rest of his life telling the world about Jesus. He was crucified, as was his Lord, except that Peter’s humility was such that he felt he was not worthy to be crucified like Jesus and so was crucified head down. I truly hope the road is not closed to St. Peter. I want to meet the Big Fisherman!

other ideas. “This is just the beginning. We are praying for a huge community outreach.� All Super Seniors “Lunch and Learn� events take place at 11:30 a.m., beginning with lunch, at New Life United Methodist Church, 7921 Millertown Pike. ■Listening Hearts, A Gathering of Bereaved Moms, will hold Info and RSVP: 865-256Founders Appreciation Day at 3 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 6, Christus 7136 or 865-546-5153, or Victor Lutheran Church, 4110 Central Avenue Pike. Info: Debra, visit newlifeumcknoxville@ listeningheartsmoms@gmail.com or 679-1351. gmail.com

FAITH NOTES

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Karns pastor, Ron Stewart, retires Dr. Ron Stewart, senior pastor of Grace Baptist Church, has retired after 28 years with the church. A celebration of his ministry, “The Legacy of Grace,� will be held at 10 a.m. Sunday, Aug. 7. “Pastor Ron’s willingness to embrace change, relevant teaching and sound leadership have been key factors in Grace’s growth,� according to the church’s website. “We need a theology of change in our churches to influence our world,� he says. “Few churches handle change well — in fact, they resist it. Churches must be willing to change how they

do church, or they will die.� He and wife Becky have four children and nine g r a ndc h i ldren. Ron Stewart During his tenure, the church added Grace Christian Academy and Charis Ministries. He has served as president of the Tennessee Baptist Convention and as a trustee at both Carson-Newman University and the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Louisville, Ky.

Dr. Stewart graduated from Belmont College in Nashville and from Southern Baptist Theological Seminary where he earned both a master’s and doctorate.

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kids

8 • AUGUST 3, 2016 • SOUTH KNOX Shopper news

The art of coding and building robots By Ruth White

What do parents really have to spend? I am Oswald, and school starts Aug. 8. So we’re at Keshawn’s final baseball tournament, when you would have thought the moms were mourning the end of the season with their wailing and complaining. However, if you listened closely, they were distressed over the amount of money they are spending getting their kids ready to start school. So I asked Mom if she and Aunt Betsy are upset, too. Turns out yes, they are. If your family is like mine, you have to buy school clothes for all the kids, which in our family are five right now. That’s a lot of clothes, shoes and underwear! Then Mom read each of our school’s websites to find the supply lists. Supplies for Ally and Charlie are about $20 each, which includes buying boxes of 24 crayons each. Supplies for Keshawn and Talisha are going to cost about $70 each, and mine will be about $40. So Mom will have to spend about $220 on supplies. That doesn’t include paying at least $25 each in school fees for another $125. WOW! Do the schools think our parents get a bonus in August to cover this extra expense? So what do parents really have to spend? Do parents have to buy supplies or pay fees? My sister, Kinzy, the researcher, found the state law on school fees and supplies. The law states: “Certain fees may be requested, but not required, from students regardless of financial status, including: fees for activities that occur during regular school hours; fees for activities outside regular hours if required for credit or a grade; fees for activities and supplies required to participate in all courses offered for credit or grade.� The law also states that students are only required to bring pencils and paper. So basically, the public schools funded by tax dollars should be supplying everything a student needs. Send your comments and questions to oswaldsworldtn@gmail.com App of the week: The Homework App – Your Class Assignment & Timetable Schedule Planner

This summer Pellissippi State Community College hosted four camps that helped students take their STEM skills to a new level. Thanks to a grant from Consolidated Nuclear Securities Y12 (CNSY12) and the East Tennessee Foundation, selected rising sixth-graders who attend Boys and Girls Clubs of East Tennessee made robots and learned coding on Pellissippi’s Strawberry Plains campus. “The skills these students learned during the week included building robots, but also included learning to work in teams and how to talk in front of people – life skills,� said campus dean Dr. Mike North. Students worked in Pellissippi’s MegaLab and observed sorters, 3D

Elementary school

â– Mooreland Heights Elementary School: Meet Your Teacher, 6-7 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 4. Info: 579-2105. â– New Hopewell Elementary School: Meet and Greet, 8-9 a.m. Saturday, Aug. 6. Info: 579-2194.

3-4 p.m. Friday, Aug. 5. Info: 579-2100.

Middle school

â– All Knox County middle schools will hold sixth grade orientation 8:30 a.m.-noon Friday, Aug. 5. Buses will run. Parents are welcome. Call your school for more info. â– South-Doyle Middle School:

Written by Marc Talbert and Illustrated by Betsy James

CHAPTER FOUR: STORY SO FAR: Nick and his best friend, Clay, have decided how they will make enough money for a world record. Still on his back, his bloody jeans half off and binding his knees, Clay frantically pushed himself headfirst across the floor

Samara Cornett discusses the creation process of the artbot and ways the project was a success or failure during group time. strive to give kids exposure to opportunities and help them see the world. When a child finds his/her interests or what they are good at, that’s their ticket to success.� The camps are pathways for kids to explore possible interests and learn new skills for the future. “If you don’t offer opportunities, the light bulb moments may never happen.�

SCHOOL NOTES

â– South Knoxville Elementary School: Meet and Greet,

The Best in the World

printers and different robots up close. Denso brought in a robotic arm, and “Henry� played Connect 4 against students. Henry has played over 2000 games and has only been beaten a handful of times – one of those times by Kazia Hoover. Green Mountain Coffee Company and Alcoa also met with the students and discussed manufacturing and the role of technology in business with the group. In addition to learning code and building robots, Gresham Middle School teacher Eric Stansberry incorporated team-building skills into the lessons and stressed that it’s okay to struggle as long as you don’t stop trying. Boys and Girls Club of the Tennessee Valley president Bart McFadden said of the program, “We

Back to School Bash, 5-8 p.m. Friday, Aug. 5, at the football stadium; dinner provided. Info: 579-2133.

High school

â– All Knox County high schools will hold freshman orientation 8:30 a.m.-noon Friday, Aug. 5. Buses will run. Call your school for more info.

“a breakfast serials story�

Lights! Camera! Action!

with his feet, looking like a giant inchworm that had been attacked by a humongous bird. As the footsteps clumped closer, he hissed at Nick, “Do something! I don’t want my mother to see these jeans!� He struggled toward his closet, inch by inch.

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As Nick turned toward the door, the clumping footsteps stopped. He turned on his brightest smile, hoping that would keep Clay’s mother from suspecting anything was wrong. He slipped into the door’s opening, trying to look casual. Instead of Clay’s mother, Nick found himself smiling at Jazz, who stood just outside the bedroom, holding a filthy T-shirt, an enormous pair of gardening clogs over her own shoes. Nick’s smile vanished. “Jazz! What are you doing? You scared the pants off us!� “Yeah!� Clay said, hobbling behind Nick, pulling up his jeans. He took the shirt from Jazz and studied it. His anger disappeared. “Wow! This is disgusting! Thanks!� He popped it over his head. “Let’s get a move on.� Nick hesitated. Clay had been so scared about his mother seeing the jeans. “I don’t know about this,� he said. “About begging?� “Yeah. We aren’t poor. And you dressing up like that is, I don’t know, like cheating.� Clay frowned. “No, it isn’t. What about being a hobo for Halloween? Or a witch? Is that wrong?� “Well, no. That’s different!� “No it’s not,� Clay said. “Come on. Before my mom really gets home.� If what they were doing was all right, why was Clay so spooked? Nick wondered. They quickly finished their posterboard signs and crept downstairs. They collected the grocery bag and sneaked outside, hiding the bag by the garbage cans next to the garage. “One more thing,� Clay said. He stooped, grabbing a handful of soil. He rubbed it on his hair and face and then shook his head like a dog. “How do I look?� “Filthy,� Nick said. Jazz nodded enthusiastically. “Only shouldn’t you smell as bad as you look?� Nick reached for a garbage can lid. “What about rubbing some of this . . .� “No way!� Clay snorted. “Come on. We’re losing money just standing here flapping our lips.� As they walked toward the neighborhood mini-mall, Clay stayed behind Nick and Jazz so that he was shielded from people staring. Several people gaped anyway,

making big detours around them on the sidewalk. When they got to the m i n i - m a l l ’s parking lot, Nick turned to Clay, taking his sister’s hand. “We’ll go over there, by the ScudsySudsy Laundromat.� He pointed. Clay nodded. “I’ll stand by the front of Jerry’s Super-Duper Grocery.� Clay smiled. “Lights! Camera! Action!� N i c k watched as Clay walked through a line of parked cars. Clay’s sneakers looked too new and expensive for a homeless person. Nick wondered if it would ruin Clay’s luck and if he should tell him to go barefoot. Naw, he said to himself. He wanted to make more money than Clay, anyway. He turned to Jazz. “Ready?� She nodded. “Yep!� There was a line of benches in the front of the Laundromat, where people sat while their clothes were washing or drying. The benches were empty, so Nick walked to one in the middle. He helped Jazz stand on it and turned the sign right-side up for her to hold. Nick glanced toward Jerry’s SuperDuper. Clay was holding up his sign. From this distance, Clay looked like he could really be homeless. Several people walking into or out of the Scudsy-Sudsy glanced their way, but nobody stopped. “Let’s move closer to the door,� Nick said, helping Jazz to the next bench. A dog in a car parked in front of them began to bark. Nick turned to look. It was a mutt, small with scooped ears of different sizes. The moment it saw Nick staring, it began to snarl and lunge toward the windshield. “Nobody’s going to want to hear jokes around that!� Nick bared his teeth at the dog and shook his head. The dog paused and then shot to the side of the car. It seemed to scramble up the passenger window, hooking its paws on the top where the window was open. With a mighty growl-bark, it heaved up and squeezed over the glass. It fell in a heap on the ground and scrambled to its feet, tail straight up, mouth open and eyes squinted. With a furious bark, it came for Nick and Jazz. (To be continued)

Text copyright Š 2012 Avi. Illustrations copyright Š 2012 Timothy Bush. Reprinted by permission of Breakfast Serials, Inc., www.breakfastserials.com. No part of this publication may be reproduced, displayed, used or distributed without the express written permission of the copyright holder.


SOUTH KNOX Shopper news • AUGUST 3, 2016 • 9

Nashville races foreshadow Knox bouts A different set of issues has fueled school board upheavals in Knox and Davidson counties, but watch closely the outcome of four elections Thursday in Nashville. Stand for Children, a group that funds candidates who are favorable to charter schools, has dumped some $200,000 into the races of four Nashville candidates who seek to replace incumbents. Dave Boucher, reporting in the July 29, 2016, edition of the Tennessean, wrote that Stand for Children had spent more than $700,000 in Tennessee to influence the August elections, including support for Republican challengers to GOP incumbents. Shopper columnist Betty Bean wrote two years ago

Sandra Clark

how a stealth campaign in Grainger and Union counties ousted Dennis “Coach” Roach, a 20-year veteran from District 35. His crime? A vote against spending public money for vouchers to private schools. According to Boucher, Stand for Children is supporting Jackson Miller, running against incumbent Will Pinkston in the 7th District; Thom Druffel, running against incumbent Amy Frogge in the 9th District; Miranda Christy, running to fill the seat vacated

by the departing Elisa Kim in the 5th District; and Jane Grimes Meneely, running against incumbent Jill Speering in the 3rd District. Financial disclosures show $44,500 spent on fliers and another $40,000 for postage among the four Nashville races, in addition to $90,000 for polling and another $70,000 in advertising not specifically listed as going toward a particular campaign. Amazing. Similar spending in Knox County made Traci Sanger’s election in 2014 the most expensive school board race county history. Sanger is not running for re-election, and will be replaced by Jennifer Owen, a former teacher. Recent Knox County races have been driven by support for or opposition

to former Superintendent Jim McIntyre. With the exception of Sanger, antiMcIntyre candidates won every time. Interestingly, most were teachers or former teachers who strongly support public schools. These big spenders are not going away, regardless of Thursday’s outcomes in Nashville. In fact, win or lose we can expect to see them here in 2018 when Patti Bounds, Amber Rountree and Terry Hill will face the voters. Rountree has entered a doctoral program at UT and may not seek reelection, but know this. The Tennessee Education Association is based in Nashville. If it can’t stand against “Stand for Children” there, then there’s little hope the TEA can prevail in Republican East Tennessee.

CrossFit ex libro wins Co.Starter grant Brian Sheely, owner of CrossFit ex libro gym in West Knoxville, has received $10,000 as first-place winner of the Co.Starters training program. Randy Boyd, commissioner of the state’s Department of Economic and Community Development, funded the grant through the United Way of Greater Knoxville. Co.Starters is a 10-week course that allows entrepreneurs to build and test small-business ideas with customer feedback and input from local, successful business owners. At the conclusion of the program, participants pitch their businesses to a panel of judges. CrossFit ex libro offers CrossFit training, weight training, functional fitness and open gym classes and also offers self-defense classes for women. Sheely

Randy Boyd, commissioner of the Tennessee Department of Economic and Community Development, congratulates Brian Sheely from the CrossFit ex libro gym. Not pictured are Terrence Carter, director of economic and business development for the Knoxville Area Urban League, and Ben Landers, president and CEO of United Way. Photo by Ruth White

Shopper s t n e V enews

Send items to news@ShopperNewsNow.com

WEDNESDAY, AUG. 3 Brown Bag Lecture: “The Heart of the Household: The Slaves of Andrew Johnson” by Randi Nott of Greeneville, noon, East Tennessee History Center, 601 S. Gay St. Info: 215-8824 or EastTNHistory.org. Using Your Smartphone/Tablet Camera for Seniors class, 6-8 p.m., Farragut Town Hall, 11408 Municipal Center Drive. Presented by Social Media 4 Seniors. Cost: $30. Info: townoffarragut.org/register; in person at Town Hall; 218-3375.

THURSDAY, AUG. 4 The Authors Guild of Tennessee meeting, 11:30 a.m., Faith Lutheran Church in Farragut. Published authors are invited to visit. Info: authorsguildoftn.org. Shakespeare on the Square: “King Lear,” 7 p.m., outdoors on Market Square. Free performance by Tennessee Stage Company; $10 suggested donation appreciated. Info: 546-4280 or tennesseestage@comcast.net.

FRIDAY, AUG. 5 Exhibit opening: “Connections” by Renee Suich, 5-9 p.m., Broadway Studios And Gallery, 1127 N. Broadway. Exhibit on display through Saturday, Aug. 27. Info: 556-8676, BroadwayStudiosAndGallery@gmail.com. Film premier: “8th of August: Tennessee’s Celebration of Emancipation,” 7:30-9 p.m., East Tennessee History Center, 601 S. Gay St. Info: 215-8824 or EastTNHistory.org. First Friday Comedy, 7-9 p.m., Saw Works Brewing, 708 E. Depot Ave. Free comedy showcase featuring Atlanta’s David Perdue and Nathan Owens, along with local comedians. Opening reception for Art Market Gallery’s August Featured Artists exhibit: “Who, What, Where” Show Revisited” by Kate McCullough and Johnny Glass, 5:30 p.m., Art Market Gallery, 422 S. Gay St. Info: 525-5265 or artmarketgallery.net. Exhibit on display through Aug. 28. Info: 525-5265 or artmarketgallery.net. Public reception for new exhibits, 5-9 p.m., Emporium Center, 100 S. Gay St. Exhibits include: “A

opened his facility in West Knoxville earlier this year and plans to use the money as working capital and to purchase equipment. The Knoxville Area Urban League hosts the training program for entrepreneurs at all stages, whether the business is just an idea or already in operation. “Co.Starters has been a great experience to see what is needed to help make a small business successful,” said Sheely. The next Co.Starter class begins Sept. 10, and the Knoxville Area Urban League is looking for applicants who are serious about starting or growing their business. Info: contact KAUL, 524-5511 or thekaul. org. CrossFit ex libro is at 5438 Hilton Industrial Way. Info: 243-4122 or crossfit exlibro.com.

Plein Air Show” by Tuesday Painters; “Expressions” by Terina Gillette; “The Wonder of Birds” by Melinda Adams and Marjorie Holbert; “A Gathering of Goddesses” by Sheryl Sallie; “Glasslike Surfaces” by Yvonne Hosey. Info: 523-7543 or knoxalliance.com. Shakespeare on the Square: “The Merry Wives of Windsor,” 7 p.m., outdoors on Market Square. Free performance by Tennessee Stage Company; $10 suggested donation appreciated. Info: 546-4280 or tennesseestage@comcast.net.

FRIDAY-SATURDAY, AUG. 5-6

business the Rotary guy Tom King tking535@gmail.com

Backpacks for kids This past April, David Hammontree was in Chicago at a sales meeting with the Essendant company. David is sales manager at A&W Supply, which buys its products from Essendant, its core vendor. David also is past president of the Rotary Club of Knoxville Breakfast. He overheard a conversation about a program involving backpacks filled with school supplies and the Essendant Charitable Foundation, and being a Rotarian he started connecting the Hammontree dots. That conversation he overheard has led to a partnership between A&W, the Essendant Foundation and four of our local Rotary clubs to provide 200 children at Pond Gap Elementary and Beaumont Elementary – 100 at each school – with new backpacks filled with school supplies for this new school year. The schools were selected because they meet the foundation criteria that 75 percent of the students at a school must be on the free-/reduced-lunch program. Four clubs contributed $2,500 to fund the backpacks and supplies. The Rotary Club of Farragut donated $1,000, and the Breakfast Rotary Club, the Rotary Club of Bearden and the Rotary Club of Knoxville each donated $500. Hammontree said each school will decide which students receive a backpack. A group of Rotarians, including District Gov. Fred Heitman, gathered last Friday at the A&W offices to pack the backpacks, and they will be delivered just as school begins. Bearden Rotary has a long history with Pond Gap, and the Rotary Club of Knoxville has been working with students and projects at Beaumont. “Last year Essendant did 79,000 backpacks around the country, and their goal this year is 100,000,” Hammontree said. “I hope that in years ahead we’ll have all of our seven clubs participating in this and also be able to tie it in with the Bearden club’s dictionary project of giving new dictionaries to every third-grader in Knox County schools.”

Now on Facebook The Volunteer Rotary Club, which meets at noon on Fridays at the Marriott, is now showcasing itself on a new Facebook page. You can find it by entering the URL into your browser: https://www.facebook.com/ volunteerrotary/?fref=ts

inflatable waterslide, snow-cones, popcorn, lots of fun. Community is invited. Info: centerfaith.com under “Events.” “Carolina in Crisis: Cherokees, Colonists, and Slaves in the American Southeast, 1756-1763” lecture, 2:30 p.m., East Tennessee History Center, 601 S. Gay St. Free lecture with Dr. Daniel Tortora. Info: 215-8824 or EastTNHistory.org. Shakespeare on the Square: “The Merry Wives of Windsor,” 7 p.m., outdoors on Market Square. Free performance by Tennessee Stage Company; $10 suggested donation appreciated. Info: 546-4280 or tennesseestage@comcast.net.

MONDAY, AUG. 8

Russell Biven Summer Clayfest Tournament, Chilhowee Sportsman’s Club in Maryville. Event benefits mental health, addiction and social services provided by Helen Ross McNabb Center. Info/sponsorship/registration: Jennifer Boyle, 329-9120 or mcnabbcenter.org.

QED Comedy Lab, 8-10 p.m., The Pilot Light, 106 E. Jackson Ave. Free comedy show blending stand-up, improv, sketch and other performance styles. Donations accepted.

SATURDAY, AUG. 6

MONDAY-TUESDAY, AUG. 8-9

Beekeeping workshop, 11 a.m., Marble Springs State Historic Site, 1220 W. Governor John Sevier Highway. Cost: $20. Info/registration: 573-5508 or marblesprings.net. Kitten and cat adoption fair, noon-6 p.m., West Town PetSmart adoption center, 214 Morrell Road. Sponsored by Feral Feline Friends of East Tennessee. Info: www.feralfelinefriends.org. Open auditions for the Tennessee Pirate Fest, 2-5 p.m., 125 Barrie Lane, Kingston. Craft and food vendor applications deadline: Sept. 1. Vendor applications and guidelines: TNPirateFest.com under the vendor tab. Tennessee Pirate Fest will take place Oct. 8-10 in Harriman. Info: TNPirateFest.com. Shakespeare on the Square: “King Lear,” 7 p.m., outdoors on Market Square. Free performance by Tennessee Stage Company; $10 suggested donation appreciated. Info: 546-4280 or tennesseestage@comcast.net. Tour the Great Smoky Mountains National Park with Sam Venable, 9:30 a.m., GSM Heritage Center, Townsend. Cost: $60. Advance reservations required. Info/reservations: 448-8838. Vintage baseball, noon and 2:30 p.m., Historic Ramsey House, 2614 Thorn Grove Pike. Games and parking free; concessions available. Bring lawn chair or blanket for seating. Info: ramseyhouse.org. Welcome home barbecue and picnic for Gulf War veterans (1990-2016) and their families, 10 a.m.2 p.m., The Cove at Concord Park, 11808 Northshore Drive. Hosted by Vietnam Veterans of America, Bill Robinson Chapter 1078. Free food and drink. Bring lawn chair or blanket. Info/registration: vva1078.org.

Advanced iPad/iPhone Basics for Seniors class, 1-3 p.m., Farragut Town Hall, 11408 Municipal Center Drive. Presented by Social Media 4 Seniors. Cost: $45. Registration and payment deadline: Friday, Aug. 5. Info/registration: townoffarragut.org/register; in person at Town Hall; 218-3375.

TUESDAY, AUG. 9 Knoxville Civil War Roundtable lecture/discussion, 8 p.m., Bearden Banquet Hall, 5806 Kingston Pike. Speaker: Richard McMurry, noted Civil War historian, will explore the role Joe E. Johnston played in producing the minor miracle that was the transformation of the Army of Tennessee into a formidable fighting force in the winter of ‘64. Lecture only, $5; dinner at 7 and lecture, $17. Info/RSVP by noon Aug. 8: 671-9001.

WEDNESDAY, AUG. 10 How to Use Facebook for Seniors class, 1-3 p.m., Farragut Town Hall, 11408 Municipal Center Drive. Presented by Social Media 4 Seniors. Cost: $30. Registration and payment deadline: Tuesday, Aug. 9. Info/registration: townoffarragut.org/register; in person at Town Hall; 218-3375.

THURSDAY AUG. 11

“Abundant Color” luncheon sponsored by the Knoxville Christian Women’s Connection, 10:45 a.m., Buddy’s Bearden Banquet Hall, 5806 Kingston Pike. Speaker: Susan DeVos from McCormick, S.C. Topic: “Color Me Changed.” Cost: $12 inclusive. ComplimenBack to School Bash for the Karns Community, 3 p.m., tary child care by reservation only. Info/reservation: 315-8182 or knoxvillechristianwomen@gmail.com. Center Faith Church, 3223 Meadow Run Lane. Hot dogs,

SUNDAY, AUG. 7


10 • AUGUST 3, 2016 • Shopper news

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