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ISSUE 8 VOLUME 27

Copyright © 2014 farragutpress

50 cents

FARRAGUT, TENNESSEE

Sell with Success THURSDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2014

BOMA kills ‘guns in parks’ proposal again 3-2 ■

ALAN SLOAN asloan@farragutpress.com

Four activists in Farragut Gun Club, all having their maximum five-minute speech during Citizen Forum before Farragut Board of Mayor and Aldermen, hoped to persuade BOMA into re-examining its ban on permitted handguns in Town parks and greenways. But while there were some

expressions of hope in Town Hall rotunda from many of the estimated 12 citizens who came to support the efforts of speakers Liston Matthews, Doug Dutton, Mike Tisdale and George Caldwell Sr., BOMA killed those hopes less than an hour later during its Thursday, Oct. 23, meeting. Though Vice Mayor Dot LaMarche made a motion to reexamine the Town ban, which

was seconded by Alderman Bob Markli, dissenting votes from Mayor Ralph McGill and Aldermen Ron Honken and Ron Pinchok killed the motion. Markli said he sought “to put that on the agenda for a true discussion and consider the facts, put aside our individual prejudices,” adding BOMA needed to reverse course if it “could not demonstrate a clear benefit to this community in curtailing the

rights of the most law-abiding segment of our society.” Matthews said firearms are necessary “to respond to evil human predators,” adding the Town’s parks and greenways lack “any meaningful security. An employee driving through the park from time to time just doesn’t cut it.” Dutton answered one rationale said to factor into BOMA’s support of a park-greenway ban:

the presence of children during school outings. Dutton said he “had some communication” with McGill “about this attorney general’s opinion,” adding “the opinion” has been misunderstood concerning a municipality’s responsibility for children, for example, if firearm use does harm in a park or greenway. “We [the See GUNS on Page 4A

Freaky night; fun night ■ Farragut/ Turkey Creek half marathon Nov. 1

ALAN SLOAN asloan@farragutpress.com

It’s not to late to become a participant in the inaugural Farragut/Turkey Creek 13.1, 5k and Kids Mile presented by Knoxville Track Club Saturday morning, Nov. 1. “There are a lot of runners in Farragut and they’re excited about it; they’re out running the course all the time,” Steve Durbin, race director, said. Beginning and ending at Farragut High School, the Town’s new half-marathon will include participants from Oregon, Iowa, Texas, Colorado and Washington state among 13 states represented, based on early registration as of Friday, Oct. 24, Durbin said. “We’re at 720 [signees] for the half, a little less than 500 for the 5k and 25 kids” as of Oct. 24. “We’re looking for around 1,500 total.” Though online registration ended Oct. 28, those still wishing to participate in any of the three races may sign up either from 2 to 8 p.m., Friday, Oct. 31, at Embassy Suites, Parkside Drive, or from 7 to 8:30 a.m. on race day in FHS Commons. Cost is $75 for the half-marathon, $40 for the 5k and $15 for the Kids Mile. Race packets for all participants also can be picked up from 2 to 8 p.m., Oct. 31, at Embassy Suites. On race day, participants are asked “to use the West End [Avenue] entrance” to FHS, Durbin said, where parking in the school’s CTE lot and adjaSee 13.1 on Page 4A

6

TAMMY CHEEK tcheek@farragutpress.com

Zombies, princesses, lions and more turned out to enjoy this year’s Freaky Friday Fright Nite while supporting the Knoxville Ronald McDonald House. The 18th annual event, which took place Friday, Oct. 24, at Mayor Bob Leonard Park off Watt Road, was sponsored by town of Farragut and raised money and took in donations for Ronald McDonald House. Parents and children, dressed for Halloween, trekked around the park, stopping at booths manned by area businesses and non-profit groups, for candy. Some children and even their parents dressed as vampires, zombies and superheroes while others opted for Wizard of Oz and “Frozen” characters. “Town staff estimated there were 4,000 people attending the event,” Chelsey Riemann, Town public relations coordinator, said. “It’s a lovely night for this,” Libby Ritter of Hardin Valley said. She came with grandsons, Weston and Tyson Ritter and their mother, Jessica Ritter. Mamawah Hill of Nashville and her sons, Harper and Garrison, came as the guests of Carlos and Sheryl Houston of Farragut. “They were coming into Town so it worked out perfectly,” Carlos Houston said. Tina and Scott Sloan of Knoxville said they attended the event because they were looking for something to do, while Christy Raines of Farragut said her family has come to the event since her son, Shawn Douglas Raines, 5, was a baby.

Rotar y benefit fills Fox Den ■

Tammy Cheek

The Freshour family — Teague Freshour [lion], Eliana Freshour [Dorothy]; center, Ainsley Freshour [Glenda]; back, Enola Busha [witch] and Tyler Freshour [scarecrow] — paid tribute to The Wizard of Oz by turning out in character at town of Farragut’s annual Freaky Friday Fright Night Friday, Oct. 24, at Mayor Bob Leonard Park.

“We have always enjoyed coming out,” Christy Raines said. “It’s a family tradition.” “I love it,” Christina Doss of Farragut said about Freaky Friday Fright Nite. “We had a great time when we came last

year, so we came again this year to enjoy it again and see all the costumes.” “We’ve come every year,” attendee Malinda Johnson of See FREAKY on Page 2A

New greenway opens

Photo submitted

Town of Farragut held a ribbon cutting ceremony Thursday, Oct. 9, for the recently completed McFee-Wentworth Greenway Connector, which connects McFee Greenway with Wentworth subdivision, and bridge. On hand, from left, were Town administrator David Smoak; Marianne McGill; Mayor Ralph McGill; Aldermen Ron Pinchok, Bob Markli and Ron Honken and Town assistant engineer David Sparks.

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ALAN SLOAN asloan@farragutpress.com

The Rotary Club of Farragut’s biggest fundraising event, the brainchild of Farragut businessman Sam Taylor II, again filled Fox Den Country Club clubhouse with top-quality wine helping satisfy Rotarians, their spouses and other guests. Fourteenth Annual Wine Tasting and Silent Auction, all 14 featuring Dixie Lee Wines & Liquors’ top red and white wines, highlighted a special evening Tuesday, Oct. 21. “It’s an excellent opportunity for us to gather and bring in friends and introduce them to Rotary,” FRC member Doug Powell said. “It lets everybody get an opportunity to try different wines.” Staci Wilkerson, club member, said the event features “great food, great wine and great fellowship. You get to meet the spouses of a lot of members that you normally don’t’ get to meet at the meetings.” Ben Harkins, the event’s silent auction coordinator, said $3,325 was raised pending his continued effort at selling leftover silent action items. Ellen Jones, Dixie Lee Wines & Liquors co-owner with Linda Taylor, was pouring at the white wine table. “We poured a lot of Dark Horse Chardonnay and the other one that was popular was Cupcake Prosecco,” she said. “Of the red wines, what we poured the most of Carnivore Cabernet and the other one was Vogle Essential Red. See ROTARY on Page 2A

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2A • FARRAGUTPRESS THURSDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2014

Rotary From page 1A

Alan Sloan

Dixie Lee Wines & Liquors was well represented at The Rotary Club of Farragut’s 14th Annual Wine Tasting and Silent Auction Tuesday evening, Oct. 21, in Fox Den Country Club clubhouse. Ellen Jones, in front, and Linda Taylor are co-owners. From left are Sam Taylor II, president, who came up with the wine tasting fundraiser idea as a Farragut Rotary member; Andy Taylor, store manager, and Sam Taylor III, purchasing.

Freaky From page 1A

Powell said. She brought her son, Gregory Johnson, 2. Jennifer Matthew of Farragut said she had heard about the event and thought it would be fun. “I thought we would check it out,” Matthew said. “My parents host a booth here

“We poured 10 different wines.” In knowing what kinds of wines to feature at such events, Sam Taylor II, Dixie Lee Wines & Liquors president and FRC member, said “a lot of people who attend these things aren’t seasoned wine drinkers so they probably like the sweeter type wines.” “And then you’ve got some people that are real experienced, so you want a little drier wine for them,” Taylor added. Seasoned wine drinker or not, club member Ed Jones said he tried “a red wine and it was

sweet. I don’t know the name of it. But it was really good.” Jones added, “We try to hit everything in-between” sweet to dry. “… A lot of people will enjoy the chocolate wines after they’ve had their meal.” “Chocolate wines have always been a hit. We’ve been doing those now for probably four years,” Taylor said. Looking back to just after the new millennium, Taylor said he “suggested we try a wine and cheese party” as a promising fundraiser. “Of course, that evolved into more substantial food. … Maybe in the second or third year we went to something besides cheese.” Taylor said he and Linda

Taylor, his wife, “Have an obligation to give back to those who are less fortunate than us.” Club member Sam Mishu “does a big end of this thing with the food,” Taylor added. “He’s been doing that forever seems like.” Stephanie Myers, RCF member and event coordinator, was praised for doing “a wonderful job” with the fundraiser during the club’s regular meeting Wednesday, Oct. 22, in FDCC.

presstalk 671-TALK

L E T U S H E L P Y O U M A K E Y O U R H O M E A S A N C T U A RY

every year,” Teddy Ansink said. “We come to take the kids trickor-treating, and they have a wonderful time.” “We come every year,” Jackie Dalton of Knoxville said. “We get to have Halloween two nights.” “It’s been a big success,” Sue Beverly, director of the Knoxville Ronald McDonald House, said. “It’s just absolutely awesome, all the costumes and kids.”

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FARRAGUTPRESS THURSDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2014 • 3A


Daylight Saving Time ends this weekend.

opinion

Turn back your clocks one hour at 2 a.m., Sunday, Nov. 2

4A • FARRAGUTPRESS THURSDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2014

presstalk • One night recently, my wife and I were enjoying an evening out on our back deck. A short while after it became dark, she was bitten by a raccoon that had snuck up the steps unnoticed, in an apparent attempt to get attention or to find food. She is now undergoing the unpleasant experience of the series of tetanus, vaccine, and immunoglobulin injections required to ward off infection and rabies. Please remember that raccoons and our other woodland creatures are wild animals, and unpredictable, especially when they lose their fear of humans. Don’t leave food out for them, and please don’t feed them, no matter how cute they are. Even a small bite can be deadly serious because they can all potentially carry rabies and other diseases. Thank you for your attention, and please be sensible and safe outdoors. • A caller last week stated: “I’ve been in Farragut for 36 years [inaudible] and I’ve never seen one mailbox or flower bed burned up, not one plant touched.” I am happy that the caller has not had that experi-

671-TALK

presstalk@farragutpress.com ence but I have lived in Farragut for 21 years and have had multiple incidences. I was awaken at 1:30 a.m. several years ago by a deputy sheriff telling me that my big rolling trash can was on fire and had spread to the bushes at the entrance to my driveway. Rural Metro was close behind as there were multiple incidences that same night they were putting out my fire. The shrubs survived but the trashcan was a melted blob of plastic. The same shrubs were burned again about a year-and-a-half later. They had just started to fill in after the first damage. I had them cut down after that and replaced them with ornamental grass, which was burned about a year ago. A fire was set under a large magnolia in my yard, causing damage but saved because it was damp. I know I am not the only house in my area that has been victimized. I have seen others because I look for them when I have been targeted. • Alan Sloan’s article about Cheri Siler was obviously very slanted to favor Rick Briggs. Maybe because he lives in

Farragut. (HA!) Let’s take it paragraph at a time: Siler is facing GOP nominee Richard Briggs, currently Knox County Commission 5th District representative who defeated incumbent state Sen. Stacey Campfield in the Aug. 7 state primary election. * While I am sure 99 percent of the state appreciate the fact that Briggs beat Campfield, he was first appointed to County Commission, then won re-election. *An instructional coach with Knox County Schools who “works with math teachers on the high school level,” Siler ran unopposed in August. - **Cheri is an educator, and a math coach. Cheri graduated from The University of Tennessee, Knoxville, with a bachelors degree in business administration in 1991 and a masters in mathematics education in 2004. She currently works for Knox County Schools as an instructional coach. She and her husband, Stanley, own a small asphalt and concrete company, Volunteer Paving. *Alan, would you like for her to give you a math test in her office and see how well you do? I know I would-

n’t! Briggs defended his support of Amendment I on the grounds of safety. “This doesn’t restrict abortions at all,” he said about Amendment I. “… It just says there’s going to be certain standards that the doctors and the clinics have to meet. … We need to make sure that the doctors doing the abortions are qualified. … The facilities need to be inspected under the same standards as out-patient surgery clinics.” Is Dr. Briggs so lame that he thinks abortion doctors aren’t qualified, and the clinics aren’t inspected by state agencies? He’s trying to pull the wool over your eyes with this one. NEITHER of those items are in the amendment, as you can see. It will make it impossible for a female to get an abortion in the case of rape or incest. THAT is outrageous. Briggs was made a colonel, not from frying chicken, but when he joined the military after graduating med school. SO ... he didn’t EARN it from being in the military for a long time, as most colonels do. Cheri has asked numerous times [for a public debate with Briggs], but he refuses. His team says he is

fundraising in Nashville with lobbyists. There’s even doubt that he lives IN the 7th district! Do you really think he will care about the 7th if he gets in? NO! • I just wanted to call in saying that I thought it was very nice that the person called in about the veterinarian that is professional and affordable. But, it would have been really nice if she’d had mentioned who the veterinarian was. • Last week’s person saying no one in Farragut is causing harm is very, very wrong. I cannot speak about someone allegedly pulling up their own plants. However, we have been in Kingsgate [subdivision] over 30 years and over the last five years neighbors have indeed had mailboxes burned down, plants torched, leaf and grass bags set afire, fires set to their trees, that’s just a few things. There is some ... , there is most definitely someone doing great harm here and it is escalating. It definitely needs to be looked into.

Guns

13.1

From page 1A

From page 1A

firearm owners] are responsible, not the city,” Dutton said. “I think if you ask Mr. [Tom] Hale [Town attorney] he will agree with that interpretation and the attorney general’s opinion.” Hale did not respond after Dutton’s address. Dutton added, “Ninety-two percent of mass killings in this country … occur in gun-free zones. … Have you heard of any problems with guns in parks in Knox County [where permitted handguns are legal] in the last four years, now? No you haven’t. Nor anywhere else in the state of Tennessee [parks]. … In the national parks? No you haven’t.” Tisdale said his wife “is in an electric wheelchair, she cannot run from a threat, therefore I feel safer carrying [a permitted handgun] in a park when we’re walking in the event something happens. Criminals don’t obey your ban. … You read countless stories, too, of a carry permit holder, a good guy, stopping a

cent lots will be available. Half marathon begins at 9 a.m. and will start at the school’s North Campbell Station Road exit/entrance “next to the practice football field,” Durbin said. Running down to Campbell Station, half-marathon runners will turn left onto North Campbell Station, then right (westward) onto Kingston Pike, then left onto Old Stage Road before a left (eastward) onto Dixon Road to Virtue Road, “which becomes Allen Kirby Road,” Durbin said. “They cross McFee [Road] and get on the greenway there and run the greenway down to Boyd Station Road,” Durbin said. Runners then head eastward to where Boyd Station becomes Virtue, then they will turn right (eastbound) onto Turkey Creek Road until hitting Concord Road and turning northward toward Kingston Pike. “On Concord we’ll get on the sidewalk,” Durbin said. Runners will veer off onto South Campbell Station Road

then hit Municipal Drive “and run around Town Hall” before exiting back onto South Campbell Station Road. Runners then cross Kingston Pike onto what becomes North Campbell Station before finishing with a right turn at the high school entrance-exit. Just a few minutes after the halfmarathon start, 5k runners begin just a few hundred feet closer to North Campbell Station Road. Kids Mile begins the morning at 8 a.m. and will be “contained at the high school” and its sports fields, Durbin said. “We’re doing that one a little early so parents who are running the half [marathon] or 5k will still have plenty of time to get ready for their race.” Prize money for half marathon top overall finishers in each gender is $1,000 first place; $750 for second place and $500 for third. For Masters (40 and over), $500 for first-place and for Grand Master (50 and over), $250 for first-place. See Community, Page 2B, for race day road closures.

Alan Sloan

Citizens affiliated with Farragut Gun Club were the bulk of roughly 12 citizens who came to Town Hall Thursday evening, Oct. 23, to support voices speaking to Farragut Board of Mayor and Aldermen in favor of lifting Town’s ban on handguns in parks. After his five-minute address to BOMA, Liston Matthews, left, speaks with supporter Jeff Cornett in Town Hall rotunda. George Caldwell Sr. (tan coat) and Doug Dutton compare notes after their address to BOMA.

bad guy a lot of times.” Caldwell, a retired federal officer and retired police commission, said he “knows a little bit about how the game works. … The parks are one of the places in the United States where predators prey on the children, the wives. … Let us pray that it

doesn’t happen here. But the sad part about it is, it will. “Hoodlums, rapists, murderers, they don’t prey on the parks where they feel like there’s people there who are armed who could take action against them,” Caldwell added.

DIXIE LEE

WINES & LIQUORS

Dan Barile,

Elaine Grove,

Editor/Publisher ............ext. 8876 editor@farragutpress.com

Associate Publisher ......ext. 8878 egrove@farragutpress.com

Editorial Department Alan Sloan, Writer ....................................ext. 8890

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966-5551 13044 Kingston Pike at Watt Road Visit our website: www.dixieleeliquors.com Monday- Saturday 8:00 am-10:00 pm Closed Sunday

asloan@farragutpress.com

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No. 2 Lady Ads volleyball ‘4 points away’ ■

ALAN SLOAN asloan@farragutpress.com

Just four points from a TSSAA Class AAA volleyball state title against a powerhouse program, Farragut High School head coach Susan Davidson said about her team’s thrilling match against Brentwood, “I was playing it in my head all night” after losing.

Tied 11-11 in the fifth and deciding set against the mighty Lady Bruins Friday evening, Oct. 24, in Murfreesboro, two Brentwood blocks and two FHS errors resulted in heartbreak. “We just made two little but critical errors right there,” Davidson said, losing 15-11. Leading 8-6 in the fifth set while Brentwood never claimed

a fifth set lead until 10-9, “We came out on fire; if we could have just finLady Bruins 3 ished it Lady Admirals 2 u p , ” Davidson said. “The nerves start to get really tense when you know that you’re one or two points from either wining or losing” a state championship.

“We were four points short, but it was a awesome run. I couldn’t ask any more of these players, they played their hearts out and left it all on the floor.” Ending with the program’s highest finish ever at state, Farragut’s 2014 Lady Admirals set program marks for most wins, 54, and best overall record (544).

Winning the first two sets 2521, 25-22, “We passed phenomenal in the first two sets,” Davidson said. “It gave us options for our setter to be able to move the ball around really well.” Brentwood (60-1) won sets three and four 25-20 and 25-21. See LADY ADS NO. 2, Page 9A

Ads rip Govs, Thomas 222

Photo submitted

Hawks running back Ryan Ferguson, 25, gets loose and scampers downfield during play against Lenoir City Friday, Oct. 24, at HVA.

HVA dumps LC 56-0 Alan Sloan

Justin Kirkendall, Farragut junior receiver, tries to get away from a William Blount defensive back’s grasp after a reception.

ALAN SLOAN asloan@farragutpress.com

MARYVILLE — Jacob Naumoff’s mad scrambling 18y a r d Admirals 63 touchdown pass Governors 31 in the final five seconds of the first half, and Davis Simmons’ 5-yard interception return for a touchdown quickly turned a close Farragut football game into a blowout. Eager to give his offensive

linemen credit for “making holes you could drive a car through,” junior running back Tanner Thomas rushed for 222 yards and four touchdowns (scores of 6, 3, 1 and 7 yards) in the Admirals’ 63-31 victory at William Blount Friday evening, Oct. 24. While the Admirals improved to 4-5 overall, 3-2 in District 4AAA, the Govs fell to 3-6, 2-4. “Offensively, I think it was our best game of the year, in my opinion,” Thomas said. “Our line See FHS FOOTBALL on Page 7A

KEN LAY Correspondent

Hardin Valley Academy junior football player Isaiah Aguero made it no secret that he and the rest of the Hawks had plenty to prove Friday night, Oct. 24, against Lenoir City. “We came in here with a chip on our shoulder after [a loss to] West [Oct. 17],” Aguero said after Hardin Valley notched a 56-0 homecoming victory over the Panthers in a District 4-AAA tilt. The Hawks (5-4 overall, 4-2 in the district) kept their postseason hopes alive by making quick work of the Panthers (3-6, 1-5). HVA came out firing and scored 28 first-quarter points. Senior

running back Ryan Ferguson started the scoring parade with a 33-yard touchdown run that culminated the Hawks’ first possession and gave the home team a 70 lead with 6 minutes, 36 seconds left in the first quarter. On the ensuing kickoff, Logan Kington Hawks 56 successfully exePanthers 0 cuted an onsides kick. The kickoff specialist recovered the ball near midfield. The Hawks took a 14-0 lead a short time later when Aguero scampered 49 yards for a score to make it 14-0 midway through the stanza. From there, Hardin Valley’s defense joined the homecoming

scoring party when Joe DeFur recovered a Panthers fumble and rumbled 43 yards to the end zone to extend the Hawks’ advantage to 21-0 at the 4:58 mark of the quarter. Ferguson closed the first-quarter scoring with a 52-yard dash with just under a minute to play. “We knew coming off of last week that we had a lot to work on,” said Ferguson, who saw his night come to a quick end due to HVA’s lopsided advantage. Hardin Valley stifled Lenoir City’s attack but the Hawks, who had no trouble putting points on the board, added a pair of second-quarter scores. Aguero’s 15See HVA WINS on Page 8A

No. 2 Irish end 5-year skid against rival Webb ■

KEN LAY Correspondent

A long drought is over for the Knoxville Catholic High School football team. The Irish ended a long losing streak to longtime rival Webb School of Knoxville Thursday, Oct. 23. “This feels great,” KCHS senior running back and linebacker Logan Lacey said after the Irish ended a five-year losing streak against the Spartans with a 24-6 victory before a packed house at Blaine Stadium. “We’ve worked

too hard not to finally be able to take them down. “You have to give props to our linemen. They blocked their butts off.” It was Catholic’s first win over the Spartans since 2008. That year, the Irish won the Class 3A state championship and went undefeated. Last year’s game was a nightmare for Catholic, which limped into the contest without several starters, including tailback Amari Rodgers. Rodgers missed the 2013 showdown with a broken collar-

bone. Rodgers made life miserable for Webb this year as he rushed for a career-high 260 yards on 18 carries and had long touchdown scampers Irish 24 of 68 and Spartans 6 87 yards respectively. “I didn’t play in this game last year and I made up for lost time,” Rodgers said. “It’s awesome and I’m just so happy for my team. “I played my hardest and we got the ‘W.’”

Catholic (9-0) took an early lead when Jake Poczobut kicked a 35-yard field goal to give the Irish a 3-0 lead midway through the first quarter. The field goal capped a six-play drive that began at the Webb 41-yard line after Spartans’ punter Brant Mitchell shanked a punt. After that, the Irish defense took center stage and stifled Webb’s usually potent Wing-T offensive attack. The Spartans (5-3) did manage to sustain a drive early in the second stanza. Webb engineered an

11-play drive and moved the ball to the Catholic 13-yard line before Chase Kuerschen intercepted a pass from Webb’s Brock Beeler to halt the drive. “The bottom line is that we had the ball inside the [Catholic] 20yard line and we couldn’t score,” Spartans head coach David Meske said. “When you get the ball inside the 20, you have to score. “That’s a good football team over there.” See IRISH-WEBB on Page 8A


6A • FARRAGUTPRESS THURSDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2014

No. 1 Red Rebels keep BHS winless

KEN LAY Correspondent

Bearden High School’s young football team endured another long night Friday as the Bulldogs came up on the short end of a 620 decision against defending Class 6A state champion Maryville at home Oct. 24. The Bulldogs (0-9 overall, 0-6 in District 4-AAA) had had more than its share of difficult games this season, but Bearden has shown up and played hard this season and that’s given first-year coach Morgan Shinlever plenty of reasons for optimism. “We’ve had to learn some tough lessons this year and we’ve learned them with some young guys,” Shinlever said. “Our kids haven’t quit and we’ve persevered. “We’ve fought hard from whistle to horn and that’s one thing that we’ve wanted to establish.” Bearden might’ve given all it had but the mighty Red Rebels (9-

Alan Sloan

Reagan Williams, HVA senior forward (6), walls off a Jefferson County defender as a pass comes her way.

0 overall, 6-0 in the district) had too much firepower. Maryville scored 55 points before halftime and amassed 340 yards of total offense over the first 24 minutes. Maryville had two quarterbacks throw touchdown passes as Tyler Vaught and Austin Ensley each threw for a pair of scores. Red Rebels 62 Ensley also ran Bulldogs 0 for a touchdown. The loss might have stung for the Bulldogs but Shinlever, a former Maryville player, said that his team learned another painful —yet valuable — lesson. “I read an article last week where [Philadelphia Eagles’ head coach] Chip Kelly said that ‘culture beats scheme every time,’” Shinlever said. “And culture beats scheme every time. “We’re building a culture in our program and [against Maryville]; we played a team that already has a culture established. When we

look at Maryville, we want to be like them and we can learn a lot from this.” While the Bulldogs may have a bright future, 2014 hasn’t been without its bright spots. The season has seen Bearden make a few big plays and senior linebacker Griffin DeLong has recorded more than 100 tackles this season. He had 10 Friday night against the Red Rebels. “Griffin DeLong has emerged as our leader,” Shinlever said. “He went over 100 tackles and I think he had 10 [Friday] night.” After halftime, the Red Rebels got some junior varsity players some varsity playing time. While Maryville will prepare for another deep postseason run, Bearden will play its final game of the 2014 campaign when it hosts William Blount Friday night, Oct. 31 (opening kickoff is 7:30 p.m.). The Governors (3-6, 2-4) have also been eliminated from the playoffs. William Blount lost its home finale to Farragut 63-31 last week.

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Saying various parents had been inquiring about Hardin Valley Academy’s chances of finally reaching the TSSAA Class AAA Girls Soccer State Tournament, “I told them, ‘If we can get to the Saturday game, I don’t even have to worry about motivating them,’” HVA head coach M i k e Lady Hawks 6 McLean Lady Patriots 1 s a i d . “They were motivated off last year [overtime substate loss at Kingsport Dobyns-Bennett]. That’s all we talked about was just getting back to this day.” A 2-0 Region 2-AAA semifinal win against Powell Tuesday, Oct. 21, assured the Lady Hawks (181-2) would reach Saturday’s substate game. Hardin Valley’s 2-0 region title win against Bearden at HVA Thursday, Oct. 23, meant hosting Jefferson County Saturday evening, Oct. 25. Breaking down that state tourney barrier almost was too easy, winning 6-1 against the Region 1AAA runner-up Lady Patriots (138-2), which played in that program’s first-ever substate game. “It was probably one of the worst days of my life,” junior defender Kelsey Klett, who scored one goal Saturday, said about last year’s OT loss at KD-B. “We were just all so frustrated and none of us forget about it. We didn’t want to feel that again, so we wanted to win this.” “We had to deal with that difficulty, and I think that really con-

tributed to this win,” senior goalkeeper Tippany Patrick said. “That definitely motivated us because we didn’t want that to happen again,” senior center forward Taylor Bishop, scoring one goal Saturday, said. “Because that was so devastating having to go home right before state. We were just thinking about that before the game and we gave all of our heart.” With a 17-4 edge in shots-ongoal, other Lady Hawks goals were scored by freshman Gwen Breslin, sophomore Paige Hewitt, junior Gabby Powers, Bishop and junior Dominique Rowe. Hardin Valley led 3-0 at halftime. McLean said about his team’s overall play in recent weeks, “They’re playing well, they’re all coming together at the right time.” “We just have good chemistry, and I feel like lately we’ve just been putting all of our heart out there,” Bishop said. Against Jefferson County, “From our back line, Kelsey Klett came forward and scored a goal today on one of our corner kicks. She played well,” McLean said. “Gabby, she controlled the middle. She was up and down the field. “Up front, all three girls are doing different things. One’s holding the ball up, one’s moving off the ball, one’s scoring. All three of them have good chemistry,” McLean added about Bishop, Breslin and Hewitt. “You don’t know who’s going to score. They’re sharing the goals.” Shawn Way, Lady Patriots head See STATE BOUND on Page 7A

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FARRAGUTPRESS THURSDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2014 • 7A

Lady SoccerDawgs denied state on ‘pks’ Despite a hat-trick (three goals) from junior forward Casey Riemer, Bearden’s Lady SoccerDawgs were denied a trip to this week’s Class AAA Girls Soccer state tourney after falling short

on overtime “penalty kicks” 4-3 Saturday evening, Oct. 25, in a substate clash at Kingsport Dobyns-Bennett. While KD-B improved to 17-4-1, Bearden’s season ends with an 11-

11-1 record. “It just kind of felt like one of those games where it just wasn’t meant to be,” BHS head coach Ryan Radcliffe said about a match tied 3-3 after 110 minutes.

State bound

Science Hill in our region. We haven’t played a ton of teams in Knoxville like Farragut or Bearden.” The Lady Hawks began state tourney play Wednesday, Oct. 29, in Murfreesboro against Ravenwood (17-2-0). That winner plays the Houston versus Siegel (12-4-4) winner at 7:30 p.m., EDT,

Thursday, Oct. 30. State championship game begins at noon EDT, Saturday, Nov. 1, in Richard Siegel Soccer Complex. State tourney teams on the other side of the AAA bracket are Dobyns-Bennett (17-4-1), Collierville, Oakland and Clarksville.

from page 6A

coach, said Hardin Valley “is by far the best team we’re played. They possess the ball and just do the little things well. They anticipate where the ball’s going to be before it gets there. … They’re better than [Kingsport] D-B or

Alan Sloan

Tanner Thomas, Farragut junior running back, prepares for contact in a crowd of William Blount defenders Friday evening, Oct. 24, at WBHS. Thomas ended with 222 yards rushing and four touchdowns in a 63-31 Admirals victory. The win temporarily kept Farragut’s slim Class 6A playoff hopes alive while FHS improved to 4-5 overall, 3-2 in District 4-AAA.

FHS football From page 5A

was incredible. … And our quarterback, he had a great game. And our wide receivers did an awesome job catching the ball and executing up the field.” Eddie Courtney, FHS head coach, praised his top seven along the offensive line: center Chance Bolen, Nate Gilliam and Ambrose Bechtel at tackles, Drew Arnett and Clay Jolley at guards plus key reserves Ben Hoffman (also long-snapper) and Ian Forton. “With a few guys healthy and back” on the offensive line, Courtney added, “What that allows us to do is be more competitive at practice. We’re having good practices because we have enough good bodies to work with now.” Naumoff, a southpaw, fired three touchdown passes. The longest was 26 yards to Justin Kirkendall. A 5-yard TD toss was caught by Franklin Stooksbury. Down just 21-17 and moving the ball effectively behind sophomore quarterback Austin Myrick, the Governors failed to score after driving into FHS territory late in the first half. The Admirals took over and raced downfield, scoring in the closing seconds. Naumoff’s great escape job, avoiding a sack while rolling left, came before the junior fired an 18-yard TD pass to Derek Williams by throwing across his body rolling right with just 4.7 seconds left before the break. “A great play,” Governors head coach Justin Ridge said. “To not capitalize off that [field position], and then to allow them to score was really what swung the momentum in their favor.” Farragut was ahead 28-17 after the fourth of seven Carter

Phillipy conversion kicks. “We went in at halftime and our kids really fed off that,” Courtney said. “We came out in the second half and kept the momentum going.” “The receiving corps has really come on,” Courtney added. “And Jacob’s throwing the ball really accurate right now and that’s helped us a lot. And Tanner’s running hard, and running with a little more authority than he was the first half of the season.” Simmons’ interception for a touchdown made it 35-17 less than one minute into the third quarter. “We had really been planning for it, me and coach [Tom] Doucette. Just went out and executed and did my job, listened to what he said all week and it turned out good for us,” Simmons said. Farragut senior Jeremiah Partin added a 10-yard touchdown run late in the fourth quarter. Sophomore Joe Doyle converted two extra points. A interception and 52-yard return to the WBHS 3 by R.J. Stewart, senior defensive back, set up a Thomas TD early in the fourth quarter. Stewart also recovered a fumble. Defensively, “It starts with Cole Strange in the middle,” Courtney said. “The defensive front, we’re rotating a lot of guys in four spots. And Juan Aranda playing at Sam linebacker.” “We’ve gotten on a roll, we’re doing good,” Strange said. “We do really have a bunch of good players and we’re all coming together, finally, which we should have done at the beginning of the season.” The Admirals’ game versus the state’s top-ranked Maryville Red Rebels at MHS has been moved up to Thursday, Oct. 30 (opening kickoff at 7:30 p.m.).

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8A • FARRAGUTPRESS THURSDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2014

Photos submitted

Irish-Webb From page 5A

While Webb couldn’t find the end zone over the first 24 minutes, Catholic scored a touchdown on Rodgers’ 68-yard scamper with 11 minutes, 44 seconds

HVA wins From page 5A

yard touchdown made it 35-0 early in the frame. Tim Frizzell added an 11-yard scoring run to close out the scoring in the half. “Our kids came in here ready to play,” Hardin Valley head coach Wes Jones said. “Ryan had the two long runs of about 50 yards and then we let him get a rest. “Isaiah ran well. This game was a lot of fun and some young kids got to play and that was good.” The night might have been full of joy for the Hawks, but it was anything but fun for Lenoir City first-year head coach Jeff Cortez. “Hardin Valley played at a very high level tonight,” Cortez said. “They were hitting on all cylin-

(Left) Knox Catholic's Amari Rogers, 3, eludes a tackle by Webb's Christopher Stephens on his way to a 68-yard touchdown run Thursday, Oct. 23, at Blane Stadium. (Above) Webb senior quarterback Brock Beeler, 1, hands off to a Spartan running back.

remaining in the first half. Alex Jones’ extra point followed to make the score 10-0. Irish head coach Steve Matthews said he was pleased with his squad’s defensive effort in the first half. “The first half was kind of a half of missed opportunities,” he said.

“We had false starts but I was really proud of our defense in the first half because they gave us a chance to go up 10-0 against a great team. “Coach Meske does a great job with them.” Matthews noted that his team’s defense had some defensive laps-

es after halftime. But Webb’s success came after Catholic had built a 17-0 lead. The Irish scored first in the second half when quarterback Zac Jancek threw a 4-yard touchdown pass to Kuerschen early in the third quarter. The Spartans got on the board

when Beeler connected with Mason Staten on a 47-yard scoring strike with 1:11 remaining in the third frame. Rodgers capped the night with an 87-yard TD dash with 3:18 to go in the game. Catholic’s defense made a late stop deep in its own territory on the game’s final drive.

ders and we just couldn’t get anything going.” That was a credit to the Hawks’ defense, according to Aguero, who also had an interception in the contest. “Our defense played lights out,” Aguero said. DeFur agreed. “We came in here tonight all geared up,” he said. “We came in and shut them down and that gave us a chance to win. “We took care of business.” The entire second half was played with a running clock but Hardin Valley’s reserves continued to dominate the game. The Hawks didn’t score in the third quarter but Jordan Snipes had a 36-yard scoring run. Cedrick Cook recovered a Lenoir City fumble in the end zone to add the exclamation point to the rout.

Hardin Valley closes out the regular season against Heritage Thursday night, Oct. 30 (opening kickoff 7:30 p.m.) “I know they’ve improved and I know that they throw a lot and I

know that they can put points on the board,” Jones said of the Mountaineers (3-6, 2-4). “Coach [Tim] Hammontree has done a good job with their program.” Ferguson echoed his coach’s

sentiment. “We never go into a game thinking we can blow anybody out,” he said. “But we just have to go out next week and do what we did this week.”


FARRAGUTPRESS THURSDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2014 • 9A

Lady Ads No. 2 From page 5A

“Our passing was not as good in the third and fourth sets, and that’s where it all starts. It kind of eliminated some options our setter had,” Davidson said. Despite the third set loss, Davidson said middle hitters Natalie Hartman, a senior, and Anne Abernathy, a sophomore, “kept us in that set, kept it closer than it could have been. “We actually out-blocked Brentwood,” Davidson added, crediting Abernathy, Hartman, sophomore Alexis Parker and seniors Reagan Grooms and Emma Milstead for “key blocks. … Anne Abernathy one time had

three blocks in a row and earned the points.” Parker, an outside hitter, ended with 23 kills and 13 digs. Grooms, also an outside hitter, had 16 kills and 12 digs. Milstead ended with 22 assists, 13 digs and eight kills. Sophomore Madi Howell had 17 digs. Junior Mikaela Brock added 28 assists. As for overall quality, “It was probably a [Division]-II college match, it was that good,” Davidson said. “Very, very intense level.” Davidson quoted one of the Class AAA state tourney head coaches as saying, “’I’ve never seen high school kids hit the ball that hard, because Brentwood hits as hard as Alexis Parker.”

“That was Brentwood’s 10th championship, hats off to them,” Davidson added. “We don’t have one yet but we’re getting really, really close.” Having cheered for Christian Academy of Knoxville in its quest for the Class AA state crown Friday afternoon, which the Lady Warriors won in four sets versus Signal Mountain, Farragut’s team was paying back the Lady Warriors for their support in Farragut’s thrilling semifinal match win versus Siegel — on Siegel’s home floor — in the loser’s bracket final Thursday evening, Oct. 23. “Siegel on their own home floor is tough in itself, but the girls really responded and decid-

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ed it was time to get that done. … We probably had, including parents, maybe 30 fans, and Siegel had their entire student body in the gym,” Davidson said about Farragut’s 19-25, 26-24, 2325, 25-17, 15-13 win. Showing up in the fourth set with the Lady Ads trailing 2-setsto-1, CAK’s support “did make a big difference … it added a spark to our fire. It helped us get through that Siegel match,” Davidson said. Davidson recalled that Milstead, Grooms and Hartman all played as freshmen against Siegel in the 2011 state tournament in Murfreesboro when the Lady Stars eliminated Farragut. Also going five sets, “The score

in 2011 was 15-13 [deciding set] and we went home,” Davidson recalled. Milstead, Grooms and Hartman “remembered that, believe me, they said, ‘This is our time,’” Davidson added. “It was a big event to win that match for our program.” Beating Blackman in straight sets to open the tourney Wednesday, Oct. 22, the Lady Admirals lost to Brentwood in second round action, 15-12 in the fifth set, sending FHS into the loser’s bracket. Farragut beat Ravenwood (2519, 25-21, 25-19) and Houston (23-25, 25-17, 25-22, 25-20) in Thursday’s loser’s bracket before facing Siegel.


westsidefaces 10A • FARRAGUTPRESS THURSDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2014

While superintendent Dr. Jim McIntyre Jr. donned an apron, other Knox Count Schools officials joined Knox County Board of Education representatives and Great Schools Partnership leadership to serve breakfast while saying ‘Thank You.’” “Thank a Teacher Week” within KCS kicked off in Farragut High School library, with breakfast served to teachers and administrators from Farragut’s four public schools from 6:30 to 8:15 a.m., Monday morning, Sept. 29.

Nancy Hansard, FMS sixth-grade teacher

➤ ➤

Jane Skinner, left, FHS science lab and technology coordinator, and Debbie Fraser, FHS AP chemistry teacher

Karen Carson, Fifth District School Board rep, serves Carley Mitchell, FIS fourth-grade teacher

KCS superintendent Dr. Jim McIntyre Jr., left, and Reggie Mosley, FIS principal

➤ Sherry Barr, left, FHS family and consumer science teacher, and Emily Beale, FHS business teacher

➤ ➤

FHS coaches and teachers Rusty Partin, left, and Tom Doucette

Wes Edmonds, left, FMS assistant principal, and Kenton Deitch, FHS choir teacher

Haley Hampton, left, FHS freshman world history teacher, and Jennifer Semishko, FHS Spanish teacher

Photos by Alan Sloan


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12A • FARRAGUTPRESS THURSDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2014

3 MINUTE MAGIC CARWASH SCOREBOARD Presented by

Win

Loss

Total Points Scored

Total Points Allowed

1. Catholic

9

0

396

86

2. Hardin Valley

5

4

249

208

3. Farragut

4

5

289

304

4. CAK

4

5

230

274

5. Bearden

0

9

101

440

Catholic goes 9-0 with one week to go, HVA, FHS move up

KEN LAY Correspondent

And the winner is: Knoxville Catholic High School. The Irish have claimed their second consecutive farragutpress How the West was Won presented by 3 Minute Magic Carwash Trophy. While Catholic (9-0) has claimed the title, the Irish and three other area teams still have plenty to play for in the final week of the regular season as only Bearden has been eliminated from playoff contention. The Irish can sew up a District 4-AAA Championship and perfect season with a win over defending Class 3A State Champion Alcoa Friday night at Blaine Stadium. Catholic ended a five-game losing streak against rival Webb on Thursday, Oct. 23. Sophomore running back Amari Rodgers scored two touchdowns and rushed for a career-high 260 yards to lead the Irish to a 24-6 victory over the Spartans. Alcoa (8-1) defeated Maplewood 31-22 last week and has won seven consecutive games since losing to Maryville in Week 1. While the Irish will play in November, the future remains

uncertain for Farragut, Hardin Valley Academy and Christian Academy of Knoxville. All three teams must win to keep their respective postseason hopes alive. The Admirals (4-5 overall, 4-2 in District 4-AAA) will play its regularseason game tonight (0ct. 30) at Maryville. Kickoff is slated for 7:30 p.m. and the Ads enter the game on a three-game winning streak. Farragut outlasted William Blount 63-31 in a shootout in Blount County Friday night. Junior running back Tanner Thomas had 211 rushing yards and scored four touchdowns in the win. Quarterback Jacob Naumoff threw three touchdown passes. Defensive end Davis Simmons had an interception return for a score. He also recorded a sack and had two tackles for loss in the contest. At Hardin Valley, the Hawks (54, 4-2) posted a 56-0 win over Lenoir City. HVA scored four firstquarter touchdowns to put the game out of reach early. Ryan Ferguson and Isaiah Aguero each rushed for two touchdowns. Tim Frizzell and Jordan Snipes also had rushing scores. The Hawks added a pair of touchdowns as Joe DeFur returned an LCHS fumble and rumbled 43-yard TD and

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Cedric Cook recovered another fumble in the end zone for the game’s final score in the fourth quarter. HVA closes the regular season Friday night against Heritage. The Mountaineers (3-6, 2-4) dropped a 62-21 decision to West High last week. CAK (4-5) saw its roller-coaster season continue Friday night as the Warriors dropped a 35-14 decision at Livingston Academy. CAK’s Michael Thompson had a pair of 1-yard scoring runs for the Warriors, who host Kingston (3-6, 0-3 in District 4-AA) this week in the regular-season finale for both schools. CAK has lost three consecutive games but a win will likely clinch a playoff berth for the Warriors (1-2 in district play). Coach Rusty Bradley said he knows that the Yellow Jackets will present a challenge for his squad. “I don’t know a lot about them but I know that they’re better than they were last year,” Bradley said. “But I do know that it will be a tough game.” Meanwhile, Bearden dropped a 62-0 decision to defending Class 6A State Champion Maryville. With the loss, the young Bulldogs dropped to 0-9 overall and 0-6 in District 4-AAA).

Photo submitted

Hawk's quarterback Gavin Greene, 15, fires a pass to an open receiver down field during play against Lenoir City Friday, Oct. 24, at home.

While first-year head coach Morgan Shinlever has watched his team struggle in 2014, he’s not complaining about Bearden’s effort. “We’ve learned some tough lessons this year with some young guys and that’s big for the future,” he said. “Our kids have fought hard from whistle to horn.”

The year has not been without its bright spots for the Bulldogs. Griffin DeLong has 100 tackles this season, including 10 against the Red Rebels. BHS closes out the regular season at home Friday against William Blount.

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FARRAGUTPRESS THURSDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2014 • 1B

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business Cindy Doyle State Farm celebrates 10 years briefs ■ TAMMY CHEEK

tcheek@farragutpress.com

• Tim Williams has taken on new responsibilities with Matlock Tire Service. Williams will now be in charge of special projects, in addition to being director of purchasing. He has been with Matlock Tire Service Williams for 39 years. • Erin Downey has been named new regional director of East Tennessee operations for Rural/Metro. Meanwhile, Jerry Harnish is returning to his role as fire chief. He will be assisted by Gene Blaylock as deputy chief of operations. • Farragut West Knox Chamber of Commerce will have a networking from 5 to 6:30 p.m., Thursday, Oct. 30, at Lalka Tax Services, 420 N. Peters Road, Knoxville. • Hurricane Grill & Wings will have a groundbreaking at 10:30 a.m., Friday, Oct. 31, at its new site, 319 Lovell Road. • Applebee’s Neighborhood Grill & Bar will provide everyday household items, such as washers, dryers, and medical equipment, to veterans or active duty military service personnel on Veterans Day, Tuesday, Nov. 11. Visitors to ThankYouMovement.com can thank a veteran by writing a personal message to be posted on the website. • Town of Farragut Office of Sustainability is compiling a list of sustainable businesses that operate in the Town and is seeking a list of those businesses. For more information, contact Lori Saal, sustainability coordinator, at lsaal@townoffarragut.org with the person’s name, title, company name, company address and description and a description of what makes the business sustainable. • East Tennessee Foundation is accepting applications for funding from its Respiratory Disease Fund. Organizations must be tax-exempt 501(c)(3) or other exempt entities. Organizations do not have to reside in Knox County to be eligible. For more information, contact Jan Elston, director of competitive grant programs, at 865-524-1223, toll-free at 877-524-1223 or by e-mailing to jelston@etf.org. • The University of Tennessee Medical Center’s Bariatric Center is offering Tailgate for Men’s Health starting at 5:30 p.m., Monday, Nov. 3, in the center’s Conference Room. There will be free screenings offered for sleep apnea, BMI, carotid artery disease and skin cancer. A healthy tailgate buffet is included. For more information, call 865-305-6083. • Ken Yager has joined Michael Dunn Center Board of Directors.

For the past 10 years, Cindy Doyle State Farm, 248 N. Peters Road, Knoxville, has served Farragut and other area customers. “Time has just flown by,” Doyle said. “We absolutely love Knoxville. It’s a great city.” Through the years, Doyle said probably the biggest change in the industry is a larger emphasis on convenience for the customers. “Largely, that’s driven by ever changing technology,” she said. “Therefore, we now offer services to our customers 24 hours a day,” Doyle added. “We have a pocket agent app, which can be downloaded on smartphones so customers always have access to their ID card and accounts all of the time. “Ten years ago we were just starting to be able to have service available to answer phone calls and take messages after hours,” she said. “Now, that has expanded to roadside assistance, accepting payments, e-mailing insurance identification cards as needed, giving quotes and binding coverage for both new and existing customers who are trading in a car or buying a new one on week-

Photo submitted

Cindy Doyle, agent with Cindy Doyle State Farm, serves customer Henry Sanchez in her office, 248 N. Peters Road in West Knoxville.

ends or at night.” While Doyle has been with the Knoxville State Farm agency since 2004, she has been with State Farm Insurance for 26 years. “I started with Fort Walton Beach, Fla., in 1988 as a State Farm agent,” she said. In 1994, State Farm had asked Doyle to take on a leadership role, which led to holding other positions in agencies in various locations. “Although I loved every place we lived and every position I’ve

held with State Farm, I decided to become an agent again, which was my love,” Doyle said. In 2004, Tom Breazeale in Knoxville had decided to retire after 46 years of being a State Farm agent. “So, Tom and I met, and we just felt like the time was right for me to step in and continue the tradition of excellence that he had for so long here,” she said. ”That provided an opportunity for us to move to Knoxville, where my husband and I both have family,” she said.

“I’ve tried really hard to always focus on that same level of excellence with all of our customer dealings and community involvement,” Doyle added. “I have a team of 12 professional and caring team members who strive every day to do their best in taking great care of our customers.” For more information about Cindy Doyle State Farm, go to cindydoyle.com, call 865-6906300 or e-mail her at cindy@cindydoyle.com.

Farragut E.N.T. & Allergy Chamber networking

Farragut E.N.T. & Allergy’s team welcomed Farragut West Knox Chamber members to a Chamber networking recently in their office, 144 Concord Road, in Farragut. Team members, from left, are Clyde Mathison, M.D.; Lonny Huston, nurse practitioner; Leonard Brown, M.D. and Mark T. Gurley, M.D. Photos by Tammy Cheek

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Farragut West Knox Chamber of Commerce ambassador, Cynthia Moore of AFLAC, left, chats with Brittany Bidwell, information management officer with Farragut E.N.T. & Allergy, during a Chamber networking in Farragut E.N.T. & Allergy’s office, 144 Concord Road, Farragut.


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2B • FARRAGUTPRESS THURSDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2014

Owens reconnects with Farragut roots FHS Class of 1943 alumnus instrumental in creation of Farragut Folklife Museum

ALAN SLOAN asloan@farragutpress.com

Homecoming ’86 celebration throughout the state of Tennessee also was a homecoming, in terms of reconnecting to her Concord and Farragut roots, for Doris Woods Owens. A major force in the creation and growth of Farragut Folklife Museum, which was born from Homecoming ’86, Owens dedicated more than 20 years of her life, as museum director, to uncovering and displaying artifacts and information on Concord and Farragut history in the museum. “At the same time that the museum was fresh and we were setting it up, Mary Nell [McFee] got me in on it when they asked her to start it,” Owens, a retired school teacher and Farragut High School Class of 1943 graduate, said. “She asked me to do an early photographs museum because she knew that I knew people in the community. “My parents had just passed away and I really needed something, and that just came at the right time,” she added. “I said, ‘I will if you’ll let me ask Bill Dunlap to help me. … He was used to doing things like that. “We set up as many early photographs and then we had scrapbooks. … It became something alive to me.” About her love of local history, Doris said, “I didn’t really get into it in high school like I should have

because nobody pushed me, in other words, like my grandmother did.” Owens remembered being inspired by noticing how the country’s history and Farragut-Concord history shared a common date. “I noticed that the [U.S.] Constitution was signed in the same year that Andrew Campbell came to Campbell Station, and I related that and I was so proud of myself,” she said. Fond of recalling her family history in Concord and later Farragut, Owens said her grandparents on her mother’s side, John G. Welch and Viola LaUnabelle Rogers, “Came to Concord, about 1909 or 1910, and stayed until my mother and daddy got married.” Welch “loved to buy farms, and he would buy a farm here and a farm there,” she added. “The Woods came here in the 1880s,” Charlie Owens, Doris’ husband, said. “They were in marble in Rogersville and Hawkins County, and they more or less followed the marble. … Several generations had been in the marble business,” Doris added. “My grandfather [James Farmer Woods Jr.] had the quarry at Concord. Actually, when he started out when he was 21 he had the quarry here at Cedar Bluff. That’s the way he met my grandmother. “About the time I was born in 1926 they built a finishing shop, a new one, and it was on Front Street in Concord almost to the Concord Road now.”

Inaugural Farragut 13.1 Half Marathon, 5k, Kids Mile road closures Nov. 1 The following roads will be affected during the Farragut 13.1 half marathon, which begins and finishes at Farragut High School Saturday, Nov.1. The event begins at 9 a.m. and finishes at 1p.m. Drivers are encouraged to seek alternate routes, or expect delays, perhaps lengthy at times. N. Campbell Station Rd. from Sonja Drive to Kingston Pike: 9 a.m. - 9:15 a.m. Right hand lane CLOSED Kingston Pike from Campbell Station Rd. to Old Stage: 9 a.m. 10 a.m. Middle west bound lane CLOSED Old Stage Rd. from Kingston Pike to Dixon Rd: 9:15 - 10:30 a.m. CLOSED to traffic. Dixon Rd. will be CLOSED to thru traffic. 9:20 - 11:00 a.m. Virtue Rd/Allen Kirby Rd. between Dixon and McFee will be CLOSED 9:30 - 11:15 a.m. McFee Rd. from Allen Kirby to

Boyd Station Rd.: 9:40 - 11:30 a.m. Boyd Station Rd from McFee to Virtue Rd. and including Turkey Creek Rd. 9:45 a.m. - 12:15 p.m. Right Hand Side lane CLOSED. Municipal Blvd: 9:55 a.m. 12:45 p.m. Right lane N. Bound S. Campbell Station Rd will be closed. N. Campbell Station Rd, Kingston Pike to Sonja Drive: 9:55 a.m. - 12:50 p.m. Right hand lane of N. Campbell Station Rd. will be closed. The following roads will be affected Nov. 1 by the running of the Farragut 5k. N. Campbell Station Rd from Sonja Drive to Kingston Pike: 9 - 9:15a.m. Right hand lane will be closed Northbound NCSR traffic will be STOPPED to allow runners to cross to southbound lanes. Kingston Pike from N. Campbell

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Station Rd. to Jamestowne Blvd: 9:00 - 9:20 a.m. All west bound lanes CLOSED until runners turn onto Jamestowne Blvd. Jamestowne Blvd. to Village Green Parkway: 9:00 - 9:30 a.m. Runners turn onto Jamestown Blvd and run in the Right lane CLOSED. Drivers should avoid these roads if possible; otherwise use extreme caution. Old Colony Pkwy to N. Campbell Station Rd. 9:00 - 10:00 a.m. N. Campbell Station Rd to Farragut High School road 9:00 10:00 a.m. Runners will run down the right hand land AND bike lane, before crossing Campbell Station Rd to Farragut High School. Traffic will be STOPPED both directions of Campbell Station Rd to allow runners to cross.

B

USINESS

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Photos submitted

Top: Doris Woods during her teenage years as a Farragut High School student. Above: Doris Woods as a small child with her parents, Walter Gordon Woods and Ziza Welch Woods, and older brother, James W. Woods.

Local churches offer trick-or-treat alternatives

TAMMY CHEEK tcheek@farragutpress

Farragut churches are reaching out to the community to offer events that can be an alternative to trick-or-treating or an addition to Halloween festivities. One such church, First Baptist Concord at 11704 Kingston Pike, offers another take on Halloween and the holidays. “We just started a new campaign, Holidays on the Go, that gives ideas on just being intentional during the holidays with neighbors and family and placing Christ in the middle of holidays,” Dawn Wilson, family ministry administrative assistant, said. The church handed out booklets with ideas on how families can use the holidays to point

back to Christ, she said. Those ideas can be found on the church’s website, fbconcordfamily.com, as well. “There is a section that has the holidays and activities they can do,” Wilson said. For example, she said Halloween emphasizes darkness. “So, we want to use it to shine the light on Christ,” she said adding the church gives ideas on activities in which families can do that. On another note, at least six churches offered Trunk or Treat events, a party, concert and pumpkin patch trip at their church. During a Trunk or Treat, members decorate their cars and place candy in the trunks of their vehicles. Children can walk by each car and grab some treats. See CHURCHES on Page 4B

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Welcome Carley Fowler, MD Dr. Carley Fowler grew up in Nashville, Tennessee. After graduating from University of Tennessee College of Medicine in Memphis as the Alpha Omega Alpha Distinguished Graduate in her class, she continued her training in Dermatology at Vanderbilt University. Dr. Fowler is a Board Certified Dermatologist whose interests include General, Surgical and Cosmetic Dermatology. Dr. Fowler comes to Knoxville from Columbia, Missouri, where she practiced dermatology while her husband, Daniel Fowler, M.D., completed his plastic surgery residency. He now practices as a plastic surgeon here in Knoxville. The Fowlers are enjoying their new home in East Tennessee and spending time with their son, Thomas, who was born in January 2014. Outside of work, Dr. Fowler enjoys quality time with her family, as well as hiking, cooking, gardening and watching SEC Football. MAKE AN APPOINTMENT WITH DR. FOWLER AT ANY OF OUR 3 LOCATIONS BY CALLING 865-524-2547 POWELL | St. Mary’s North Building | 7557 Dannaher Way • Suite #G-20 | Powell, Tennessee 37849 | 865.362.8507 FARRAGUT | Farragut Medical Building | 11416 Grigsby Chapel Road • Suite 101 | Knoxville, Tennessee 37934 | 865.675.8000 WWW.DERMAKNOX.COM


FARRAGUTPRESS THURSDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2014 • 3B

’Press Planner LOCAL HAPPENINGS IN YOUR COMMUNITY, SCHOOL AND PLACES OF WORSHIP

community Now through Nov. 26 Knoxville Utilities Board crews will implement intermittent lane closures along a section of Westland Drive between South Northshore Drive and Buena Road from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., Monday through Friday, now through Nov. 26. Traffic flow will be expected to be maintained at all times via alternating lanes from the duration of this work. For m-ore information, call 865-594-7988.

Now CAC is looking for Volunteer Assisted Transportation for Knox County senior and people with disabilities who require aid and assistance to travel. For more information, call Nancy Welch, 865-673-5001 or e-mail nancy.welch@cactrans.org

Now Now-Nov. 12: Tennessee Consortium for International Studies will sponsor an art exhibit “Afghanistan: Unordinary Lives” from 10 a.m. to 6:30 p.m., Mondays through Fridays, Now-Nov. 12, at Pellissippi State Community College. The event is free and open to the public. For more information, call 865-5397280, or visit tncis.org/

will present “Halloween Spooktacular,” beginning at 7 p.m., Friday, Oct. 31, in Clayton Center for the Arts. Tickets are $5. Admission is free to those dressed in Halloween costumes. For more information, call Chloe Kennedy, 865-981-8209.

Oct. 31 Farragut Lions Club will host a Halloween theme dance from 8 to 10:30 p.m., Friday, Oct. 31, at Concord United Methodist Church. Cost is $5 and includes dance lesson, soft drinks, snacks and door prizes. For more information, contact dancingfriendstn@yahoo.com/

Oct. 31 Ijams Nature Center will host a Halloween-themed scavenger hunt for families, and every child that stops by in costume can get a goody bag at the front desk. The program is free and open to the public. For more information, call 865-577-4717.

Nov. 1 Knoxville Track Club will host the First Farragut 13.1 half marathon, 5k and Kids mile Saturday, Nov. 1, beginning at Farragut High School. Registration price is $75. Registration price for 5k is $40. Price is $15 for kids run. For more information, visit ktc.org/

Oct. 30 Blount Mansion will host candlelight and flashlight tours of the mansions about mysteries, legends, customs and myths, from 5:30 to 9 p.m., Thursday, Oct. 30. Cost is $10 per person. For more information, call 865525-2375.

Nov. 1 Humane Society of Tennessee Valley will host Waggin’ Tails 5k Fun Run beginning at 9 a.m., Saturday, Nov. 1, at Tommy Schumpert Park. Pre-registration is $25. For more information, visit humanesocietytennessee.com/

Oct. 30-31 Knoxville Symphony Orchestra will perform five Young People’s Concerts beginning at 9:30 and 10:45 a.m. Thursday, and Oct. 30-31, and 9:30 a.m., Friday, Oct. 31, at Knoxville Civic Auditorium. For more information, call 865-521-2317.

Nov. 1

Oct. 30

Nov. 1

Knox County Public Library Farragut Branch will host “Digital Photography Basics” beginning at 3:30 p.m., Thursday, Oct. 30, at Founders Park. For more information, call Shelia Pennycuff, 865-777-1750.

Pellissippi State Community College will host a daylong Young Creative Writer Workshop beginning at 9:30 a.m., Saturday, Nov. 1, at Strawberry Plains Campus. For more information, call 865-225-2340.

Oct. 30 and Nov. 1

Nov. 1

Marble City Opera will present two world-premier one-act operas composer by Larry Delinger: “Talk to Me Like the Rain” and “Amelia Lost” at 8 p.m., Thursday, Oct. 30, and 2 p.m., Saturday, Nov. 1, at The Square Room. For more information, call Kathryn Frady Marvel, 646-217-1580.

Harvey Broome Group will day hike Graysville Mountain and Roaring Creek Cumberland Trail Saturday, Nov. 1. For more information, call Warren or Carol Devine, 865-483-7894.

Oct. 30-Nov. 16 The Carousel Theatre will present “4000 Miles” Oct. 30 through Nov. 16, sponsored by Clayton Foundation and Pilot Flying J. For more information, call 865-974-5161.

Oct. 31 Maryville College Orchestra

Knox County Public Library Farragut Branch will host “Gluten-Free Holiday Baking,” beginning at 10:30, Saturday, Nov. 1. For more information, call Shelia Pennycuff, 865-7771750.

Nov. 1 The University of Tennessee, Knoxville’s deadline for incoming freshmen to be considered for competitive scholarships and Chancellor’s Honors Program is Nov. 1. Regular application deadline is Dec.1 for students to be considered for institutional scholarships, including the new Volunteer Scholarship. For more information, visit vip.utk.edu/default.asp/ or commonapp.org/login/

Nov. 1 Go! Contemporary Dance Works, will open its 12th season with Continuum, at 3 and 7:30 p.m., Saturday, Nov. 1, at Clarence Brown Theatre. Advanced tickets are $18 for adults, $12 for seniors and students, and $20 and $15 at the door. For more information, call 865-539-2475.

Nov. 1 Knoxville Police Department, Knox County, City of Knoxville Solid Waste Offices, and Knox County Health Department along with members of East Tennessee Regional Medication Collection Coalition will properly dispose of old or unwanted prescription medications and over-the-counter medicines from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m., Saturday, Nov. 1, in the 600 block of Market St. For more information, call Jennifer Linginfelter, 865-215-4579.

Nov. 2 Second Harvest Food Bank, Bush Brothers & Company and Kroger will partner for the Ninth Annual East Tennessee Chili Cook-Off beginning at 6 p.m., Sunday, Nov. 2, at World’s Fair Park Festival Lawn. For more information, call Blaire Hall, 865243-8212.

Nov. 2 Goodwill Industries is hosting its annual Ghoulishly Goodwill Costume Contest Sunday, Nov. 2. For more information, visit gwiktn.org/events/

Nov. 3 Knoxville Watercolor Society currently is accepting membership applications for artists who work in watercolor and other water mediums. Paintings should be dropped from 10 a.m. to noon, Monday, Nov. 3, at Westminster Presbyterian Church. For more information, call Kate McCullough, 865-604-1406.

Nov. 3 Pellissippi State Community College will recognize American Indian Heritage Month with a celebration from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m., Monday, Nov. 3, in the Goins Building College Center. For more information, call 865694-6400.

meeting at 9:45 a.m., Monday, Nov. 3. For more information, call Charlotte Miller, 865-2075170.

Nov. 3 Ossoli Circle will hold its meeting at 9:45 a.m., Monday, Nov. 3. For more information, call Charlotte Miller, 865-2075170.

Nov. 4 Tennessee Valley Machine Knitters Club will hold its monthly meeting at 10 a.m., Tuesday, Nov. 4, at Alcoa First United Methodist Church. For more information, call Marie Hickson, 865-457-0960.

Nov. 6 Farragut Beautification Committee will sponsor a free holiday decorating class beginning at 6:30 p.m., Thursday, Nov. 6, at Farragut Town Hall. The event is free. For more information, call 865-966-7057.

Farragut High School Drama Club will present “Dracula,” starting at 7:30 p.m., Thursday, Friday and Saturday, Nov. 13-15, and 3:30 p.m., Sunday, Nov. 16, in Ferguson Theatre. Cost is $8 per person. For more information, call 865-671-7167.

Nov. 13-16

Nov. 14

Knox County Health Department will start the second phase of its School-located Influenza Vaccination Clinics Thursday, Nov. 6, to provide the recommended second dose to vaccine nave students. Children 8 years old or younger who have not had at least two influenza vaccinations since July 2010 are considered vaccine nave and should have two doses separated by at least 28 days. Phase two vaccination clinics will take place in Knox County elementary schools and some Head Starts, private elementary schools and child care centers. For more information, visit knoxcounty.org/health/flumist/

AARP will host a Smart Driving Program for participants 55 years of age or older to complete an 8-hour class from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Friday, Nov. 14, in the community room at Farragut Town Hall. Cost is $15 for AARP members and $20 for non-members. For more information, call 888-687-2277.

Nov. 15-16 Harvey Broome Group will backpack Middle Prong Wilderness, Pisgah National Forest, N.C., Saturday and Sunday, Nov. 15-16. For more information, call Rob Davis, 865202-6661.

Dec. 8 Nov. 6 King University will host an open house from 4 to 7 p.m., Thursday, Nov. 6, at The Village at Hardin Valley. For more information, call 800-362-0014. Knox County Master Gardener will host “By Golly its Holly!” from 3:15 to 4:30 p.m., Friday, Nov. 7, at Humana Guidance Center. The program is free and open to the public. For more information, call 865-329-8892.

Ossoli Circle will hold its

Nov. 13-16

Nov. 6

University Bariatric Center will present “Tailgate for Men’s health,” featuring former UT Vol and seven-year NFL veteran Antone Davis beginning at 5:30 p.m., Monday, Nov. 3, at UT Medical Center’s Heart Hospital Conference Room. For more information, call Susan Wyatt, 865-305-6845.

Nov. 3

UT Arboretum Society will hold its annual dinner at 6 p.m., Tuesday, Nov. 11, at Elks Club. Cost is $25 per person and is open to the public. For more information, call Lynda Haynes, 865-483-0525.

Pellissippi State Community College will host its Instrumental Concert at 7 p.m., Tuesday, Nov. 6, at Clayton Performing Arts Center. For more information, call 865-694-6400 or visit pstcc.edu/arts/

Nov. 6

Nov. 7

Stan Brock, founder and president of Remote Area Medical, will speak beginning at 7:30 p.m., Monday, Nov. 3, at Maryville College in Clayton Center for the Arts. For more information, call 865-981-8209.

Nov. 11

Maryville College Theatre Department will present “Macbeth is the New Black,” beginning at 8 p.m., Thursday through Saturday, Nov. 13-15, and 2 p.m., Sunday, Nov. 16, in Clayton Center for the Arts. Tickets are $10 for adults and $7 for seniors. For more information, call 865-981-8590.

Nov. 3

Nov. 3

changes to Affordable Care Act and TennCare beginning at 6 p.m., Monday, Nov. 10, in College’s Lawson Auditorium. For more information, call 865-981-8298.

Nov. 9 Harvey Broome Group will take a day hike through Greenbrier Gap and Laurel Falls Trails, Great Smoky Mountain National Park, Sunday, Nov. 9. For more information, call Will Skelton, 865-523-2272.

Nov. 10 Maryville College will host an informational public event about upcoming opportunities and

East Tennessee Technology Access Center will hold a holiday party from 4 to 6:30 p.m., Monday, Dec. 8 for children who cannot use their hands. For more information, call Junior League of Knoxville, 865-2190130.

worship Oct. 31 Farragut Lions Club and Concord United Methodist Church will hold line dancing from 7:30 to 10:30 p.m., Friday, Oct. 31, at CUMC. Cost is $5 and snacks are provided. For more information, call Gerri, 865-789-6392.

Nov. 8 Holy Cross Anglican Church will host an Italian Fest from 4 to 8 p.m., Saturday, Nov. 8. Cost is $10 for adults and $5 for children 5 and up. You may bring your own wine. For more information, call 865-675-6406.

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4B • FARRAGUTPRESS THURSDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2014

Churches From page 2B

“We do Trunk or Treat, which is like a fall festival,” Kim Mink, director of family ministries with Concord United Methodist Church, said. “We will have carnival games, a hot dog dinner and the trunk-or-treat.” She said most of the families come to the Trunk or Treat instead of going out on Halloween, but the church tries to keep the event separate from trick or treating. “It offers a safe place for children to go instead of going through a neighborhood at night,” Mink said. “I think safety is a big factor. What we provide here is a safe place to trick or treat at the church, where the families feel comfortable.” CUMC’s event was Sunday, Oct. 26, on the front grounds of the church, 11020 Roane Drive. “It’s our version of Halloween at the church,” Mink said. “It’s just a nice community event.” Another church hosting Trunk or Treat was First Farragut United Methodist Church, which held its event Wednesday, Oct. 29, at the church, 12733 Kingston Pike. Paige Morgan, director of children and family ministries, at First Farragut United Methodist, said this was the first year for her church to offer this event. “We’ve had fall festivals, but we haven’t done anything like this,” Morgan said. “We will have games, prizes and a hot dog fundraiser for the youth.” She said the intent was to offer a safe place for families to come and have fun and fellowship together and to have candy. “I think some families can use it as an alternative [to trick or treating],” Morgan said, adding the festival area would be blocked off and safe. “It is offered a different night from Halloween so families can still go trick-or-treating if they wish,” she said. “If they don’t want to go trick or treating to strangers, they can come here and dress up.” Morgan said she and the church’s staff have seen a growing trend of families attending Trunk or Treat events in lieu of door-todoor trick or treating. Saint John Neumann Catholic Church offered a haunted hayride, as well as Trunk or Treat. Its event for parishioners took place Saturday, Oct. 25, at the church,

645 St. John Court, Mary Hearnsberger, church secretary, said. “We don’t want to interfere with Halloween trick or treating, so we always have it the Saturday before Halloween,” Hearnsberger said. “The church will give prizes to the best decorated car,” she added. “We just try to have fun things for the kids to do, and we are offering the crafts to get adults involved,” she said. “Our pastor likes to do a lot of events for the families.” Along the same line, two churches, Faith Lutheran and First Presbyterian, situated next door to one another, partnered to host a Trunk or Friday, Oct. 24, at First Presbyterian Church fellowship hall parking lot, 209 Jamestowne Blvd. The Trunk or Treat is not the church’s alternative to Halloween, however, Mary Boring, office manager with Faith Lutheran, said. She said the church’s event was on a different night from Halloween so families could still go trick-or-treating. Boring said the church’s event is mostly for the smaller children because it would be less scary for them. There were activities, such as corn hole, a small hayride and marshmallow roasting. Another church, Westside Unitarian Universalist, had a “Day of the Dead” Halloween party for its members Friday, Oct. 24, at the church, 616 Fretz Road. Brad Kurtz, the church’s office administrator, said the event was held Oct. 24 so as not to interfere with Halloween trick-or-treating. Families could roast s’mores over a bonfire, bob for apples, walk through a haunted house, go trickor-treating and play games. “The Sunday before Halloween, we will have a sermon on how different cultures observe the Day of the Dead,” Kurtz said. On another note, Union Cumberland Presbyterian Church, 400 Everett Road, will offer a concert with Bethel University instead. The concert will take place starting at 7 p.m., Saturday, Nov. 1 at the church and feature the group, “Renaissance,” which will perform gospel, bluegrass and contemporary Christian music. For a different take on Halloween, Virtue Cumberland United Methodist Church, which only has a few children attending, plans to take those children to a pumpkin patch.

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Lackey ‘Fair Lady’ Farragut High School junior Briana Lackey competed in Tennessee Valley Fair Fairest of the Fair Pageant Sept. 6 and placed in the top 10, winning the Fairgoer's Fair Lady award. She has competed in the Junior Fairest of the Fair the past two years and won the same award both years. She also competed in the Miss Knoxville Outstanding Teen pageant the weekend of Sept. 1314 at Holston Middle School. Photo submitted

TOWN OF FARRAGUT Fall 2014 Classes, Workshops and Events Holiday Decorating Ideas When: Thursday, Nov. 6, 6:30 p.m. What: Cranberry Hollow – a unique gift store located in Farragut – will share holiday decorating ideas for you to use at home. This class is sponsored by the Farragut Beautification Committee!

ATTORNEYS & COUNSELORS AT LAW

ESTATE PLANNING & BUSINESS LAW Addressing your needs and achieving results in a prompt, cost-effective manner.

• Wills, Trusts & Estate Planning • Probate and Settling Estates • Business Law and Contracts

www.CarpenterLewis.Com

Veteran’s Day Reception (Farragut Folklife Museum) When: Tuesday, Nov. 11, 2:30 – 4:30 p.m. What: Local veterans are invited to attend this special reception to view the “Honoring Our Veterans” exhibit and enjoy light refreshments.

10413 KINGSTON PIKE SUITE 200 KNOXVILLE, TENNESSEE 37922

• Corporations and LLCs

690-4997

Let us help you.

educational resources Call Sandra at 218-8882 to place your ad in the farragutpress Educational Resources Directory.

145 Fox Road • 865-539-0033

AARP Smart Driving Program When: Friday, Nov. 14: 9 a.m. – 5 p.m. What: Participants must be 55 years of age or older and complete 8 hours of class time to be eligible for a discount (up to 10%) on their auto insurance. Cost: $15 for AARP members; $20 for non-AARP members. Bring cash or check payment to class. Registration deadline: Monday, Nov. 10

Dec. 7, 1941 – A Day of Infamy When: Monday, Dec. 1: 7 p.m. What: This free presentation, led by Frank Galbraith, will cover the history of events leading up to WWII.

“Where Your Child Is Always a Top Fox”

Enrolling Ages 3 - 5 • Safe, secure and clean environment • Positive experiences relevant to your child’s needs • Stimulating, carefully planned activites to encourage your child to learn while having fun! We are a State Licensed Facility

Register NOW!

ACT SAT PSAT Individual tutoring and group classes at reasonable prices.

“Hearth and Home: Through the Years” Exhibit (Farragut Folklife Museum) When: Monday, Dec. 1 – Friday, May 29, 2015. Museum open Monday through Friday, 10 AM – 4:30 PM and by special appointment (call 966-7057). What: This special exhibit will feature a variety of everyday household items spanning numerous decades. A vignette will display a bedroom featuring items from the 1890s to early 1900s. All fall classes, workshops and events will be held at the Farragut Town Hall community or assembly room, 11408 Municipal Center Drive, unless otherwise stated. Hurry - classes fill up fast! Call 966-7057 to register (if required). Payment is due at the time of registration; credit card payments are taken over the phone. No refunds are given after the registration and payment deadline. The Town of Farragut is not responsible for costs associated with the purchase of supplies when a class is canceled.

Call Dr. Michael K. Smith at 865-694-4108 In Knoxville since 1983. Convenient location at 308 South Peters Rd.

Call 966-7057 to register


FARRAGUTPRESS THURSDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2014 • 5B

Kids grow quarterly, it’s time to declutter their rooms Now that the kids are back in school, it’s a great time to streamline their rooms. Children are much more likely to keep them neat if they don’t have drawers and closets constipated with too many outgrown clothes and too many unused toys and books they’ve quit enjoying. Parents have to be the laxative h e r e , because kids can’t do it alone. You may or may not Pam have read my quarter- Young ly warning: Make it KIDS GRFun! OW QUARTERLY. It needs to be a bumper sticker to remind parents that most often the reason their kids’ rooms are a mess is because they haven’t been culling quarterly. (I like to think that God made seasons as a sign for parents to go through their children’s clothes every three months.) As we embark on a new calendar quarter that should mean as much to parents of growing children as it does to Boeing Inc. I received an email from a very shocked mom telling me about being at her wit’s end with her eight-year-old son. She said she and her husband had HAD it and they made a drastic move! They thought it would be a punishment! While he was at school, they gutted his room (including the closet and dresser drawers) of everything but the clothes that

were currently in the laundry (in other words the clothes the child was actually wearing on a regular basis), every toy except for a collection of small Army men the child played with regularly and every book except for one his father was currently reading to him each evening before bed. They left just a bed, a table with a lamp on it, an empty bookshelf and a dresser with the clean laundry in it. (It sounded like the description of a prison room to me.) They took the twenty garbage bags of belongings to the attic. They expected this event would be a punishment, but to their surprise, the child was happy and relieved! Here’s the deal; let’s say you have a five-year-old and here it is, say, October 17 the gateway to fall. That adorable, sleeveless white dress with the pink piping trim and embroidery done by hand, still fits her as do her fashionable bathing suit that Grandma bought her when she was in Cancun, the shorts, tank tops and sandals in every color and the silky nighties. They probably would still fit the child well into winter although they’d start to hurt and the child

would tend to be cold running around in the snow in shorts, tank tops and sandals. HELLO! It’s fall now and ALL the summer clothing is out of season and by next summer when it’s back in, your five-year-old will be six and into a bigger size. So buck up and have the courage to face that cute baby porpoise on the bathing suit and say, “Goodbye, it’s been fun, but it’s time for you to move on.” Relief is just a trip to Goodwill away. Bag up every shirt, sock, shoe, coat, pair of jeans, underpants, pajamas, slippers, bathrobe, swim suit (see even this sentence is getting cluttered) that don’t fit, from your kids’ drawers and closet. Also take everything that is out of season and head out to Goodwill. Goodwill will thank you and so will your kids. I believe clutter is the number one destroyer of peace and happiness. Just think how peaceful it’ll be not hounding your kids to clean up their rooms! To see what Pam’s got up her cyber-sleeve, check out www.cluborganized.com. Want to get organized? Join the club!

like us on facebook www.facebook.com/farragutpress

New Year's Eve event will again be at Gettysvue.

We will start at 8 pm and go to 1230. Hors d'oeuvres all evening, champagne toast, live stream from New York to watch the ball drop and much more will be included.

At Gettysvue Country Club

TICKET PRICES: $120 single $225 1 couple $400 4 seats $550 6 seats $675 8 seats There will be extra drink tickets for donations $1 per non-perishable food item, (up to $25 per person) for donation to the Food Harvest.

9317 Linksvue Dr., Knoxville, TN 37922 For more info and to purchase tickets, please visit: www.chivaux.com or call (865) 936-1238

Sunday Bible Class 9:30 AM Sunday Worship 10:30 AM Nursery & Children’s Worship Provided

Wednesday Bible Study 7:00 PM Weekday Preschool - Monday-Thursday 225 Jamestowne Blvd. Farragut 966-9626

SUNDAY WORSHIP 9 a.m. & 11:11 a.m.

www.faithloves.org

136 Smith Rd. • 865-966-5025 • farragutchurch.org

Christian Church of Loudon County Sunday: 10:00 AM....Bible Study 11:00 AM....Worship Service 6:00 PM....Youth Group

Wednesday: 7:00 PM...Home Bible Studies

Rick Keck, Minister 12210 Martel Road • 986-7050 www.cclctn.com

Christian Friends of Israel P.O. Box 1813 Jerusalem, 91015 Israel

Rev. Steve Graham eve1ts@hotmail.com

9:30 am . . . . . .Refreshments & Fellowship 10:00 am . . . . . .Sunday School (all ages) 11:00 am . . . . . .Sunday Morning Worship 6:15 pm . . . . . .Sunday Evening Worship

725 Virtue Road • Farragut, TN 37934

966-1491

Farragut Christian Church Sunday School Sunday Worship

9:30 a.m. 10:30 a.m.

138 Admiral Road 966-5224

Gen 12:3 www.cfijerusalem.org

Jason Warden, Senior Minister

Westside Unitarian Universalist Church

Sunday Services 11 a.m.

All are welcome here!

Cornerstone Church of God Sunday Morning Prayer …… 8:30 am Sunday School* ……………9:30 am Sunday Worship* …………10:30 am Sunday Evening Worship* … 6:00 pm Wednesday Bible Study …… 7:00 pm Pastor Steve McCullar

*Nursery Available 12813 Kingston Pike • 966-2300

616 Fretz Road (Corner of Grigsby Chapel)

777-WUUC (9882)

FARRAGUT PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH A Stephen Ministry Church Sunday Morning Worship 8:30 and 11:00 Sunday School 9:45 Nursery Provided Rev. Matthew R. Nieman 209 Jamestowne Blvd. Located behind Village Green Shopping Ctr.

(865)966-9547 • fpctn.org Service times are changing on September 1, 2014

Nobody...

100% Satisfaction Guarantee

Absolutely Nobody... Outcleans The Maids.®

Call us within 24 hours after your clean. If we didn't clean something to your satisfaction, we will reclean it – free of charge.

Here’s what you can expect every visit. Our 22-Step Healthy Touch® Deep Cleaning System. Kitchen

All Rooms

• • • • • • • •

• Pick up and straighten • Dust sills, ledges, wall hangings • Remove cobwebs • Dust/vacuum furniture • Vacuum floors, carpets • Vacuum stairs • Vacuum under beds • Change linens, make beds • Empty trash

Clean sink Clean appliance exteriors Clean inside microwave Clean range top Damp wipe cabinet doors Clean counters Hand wash floor Load dishwasher

Bathrooms

Windows

• Clean sinks, counters; change towels • Clean, disinfect toilets, tubs, showers • Hand wash, disinfect floors

• Clean entry window & one set of patio door windows • Clean window over kitchen sink

Here’s what you probably didn’t expect. • Our patented Back Pack Vacs can capture up to 99% of all dust and allergens • We clean places you don’t even see, like the tops of refrigerators, ceiling fans and under beds • We remove fingerprints & disinfect light switch plates • We clean and disinfect all telephone receivers • We use a grout brush to remove mold, mildew and soap residue in bathrooms • We brush-clean the toilet seat hinges every visit

Sunday Morning Services Traditional and Contemporary 8:45 & 11:00 a.m. 11020 Roane Drive 966-6728 www.concordumc.com Nursery Provided for All Services

Call today for a

FREE, no obligation estimate right over the phone. www.maids.com

NEW COVENANT BAPTIST CHURCH Fredrick E. Brabson, Sr.- Senior Pastor Winning Souls and Changing Lives for Jesus Christ is a “Total Family Ministry” WEEKLY SERVICE Sunday

9:30 AM Family Bible Hour 11:00 AM Worship Service and Kid’s Praise Wednesday 6:45 PM Evening Bible Study

Nursery Care provided for all services

Advertise your Worship services in farragutpress. Call 865-675-6397.

RELEVANT WORD TELEVISION MINISTRY

TBN Ch. 40 Comcast Sundays at 10:00 AM CTN/WVLR Channel 48 Sundays at 4:30 PM Worship Complex 10319 Starkey Lane Knoxville, TN 37932

Mailing Address P.O. Box 22847 Knoxville, TN 37933

Phone: (865) 671-3370 Website: www.newcovenantbc.com A church inviting you to make a life changing decision for Christ.

Worship Times

9:30 am and

670-0025 Nobody Outcleans The Maids. ®

10:50 am

12915 Kingston Pike Knoxville, TN 37934

For more information go to

671-1885

www.christcov.org

Korean Sarang Church of Knoxville Worship 1 PM • www.sarangknox.org


6B • FARRAGUTPRESS THURSDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2014

Free Day of Putt-Putt

birthnotices Parkwest Medical Center announces:

Tammy Cheek

Eric Higgins of Farragut enjoys using his putter during the Free Day of Putt-Putt, sponsored by the town of Farragut and PuttPutt Golf and Games, Monday, Sept. 15.

• Dustyn Williams and Patience Bowlin, Knoxville, a girl, Halle Theodora • Dane Jackson and Karen Stanish, Knoxville, a boy, Cooper Clark Dane • Paul Evans and Stephanie Turner, Knoxville, a girl, Zaviah Grace • Matthew and Hannah Speights, Mascot, a girl, Ansley Harper • John and Shannon Rollins, Knox-ville, a girl, Lillian Ruth Harrell • Tony and Charlotte Valentino, Knoxville, a girl, Vivian Everly • Anthony and Charity Fazzini, Knoxville, a boy, Liam Zechariah • Anthony and Caitlin Whitehead, Maryville, a boy, Gideon Reid • Eric and Jamia Stokes, Knoxville, a boy, Evan Michael • Michael and Tiffany Collins, Talbott, a boy, Kolton Michael Ryan • Brandon and Nicole Merrifield, Knoxville, a girl, Madison Grace • Jared and Priscila Maness, Knoxville, a girl, Elizabeth Anne • Matthew and Ashley Clark, Knoxville, a girl, Josie Cora • Scott and Hailey Amick, Knoxville, a girl, Elise Noelle • Colton Byrn and McKinley Garrett, Knoxville, a boy, Christopher William Garrett • Kenny Taylor and Elisabeth Bonilla, Dandridge, a girl, Layla Isabelle • Justin and Tasha Hoque, Knoxville, a boy, Walker Tiberius • John and Kendal Moore, Knoxville, a girl, Caroline Jane

• Heath and Melissa Hodges, Knoxville, a girl, Harper Carsan • William and Krystal Burkhart, Kno-xville, a girl, Tenley Rae • Joey and Kelly West, Knoxville, a boy, Wyatt William • Brandon and Amber Brooks, Strawberry Plains, a girl, Hadley Kendall • Walter Miles and Linda Shelton,

Knoxville, a girl, Roxanna Haylen Turkey Creek Medical Center announces: • No births were reported this week

deathnotices

• No deaths were reported this week

like us on facebook www.facebook.com/farragutpress

With compassion and comfort, we have been proudly serving the families of this community since 1884. Broadway Chapel 1421 N. Broadway 523-2121

Mann Heritage Chapel 6200 Kingston Pike 588-8578

www.rosemortuary.com Robert Starkey, Kent Marcum, Frank Davis, Keith Richards, William Martin, A.H. Pickle

A LOCALLY OWNED FAMILY BUSINESS

service directory lawn&landscaping

Our focus on the optimum health and beauty of your landscape will save your trees, save you money and protect our environment!

Call Sandra at 218-8882 to place your ad in the farragutpress Service Directory.

FOR EXPERT TREE AND SHRUB CARE CONTACT:

CURTIS CASCIANO

All Types of Tree Care & Stump Removal Will beat ALL written estimates with comparable credentials Fully Insured • Free Estimates

CERTIFIED ARBORIST

(865) 789-7642 www.knoxvilletreedoctor.com

924-7536

blankstreework@comcast.net

Aeration and Over Seeding Leaf Removal Mulching Flower Beds Shrub Pruning

Call for details and free estimate.

300-0996

(865) 850-7000 • gkofknox@gmail.com

Mowing - Mulching - Shrub Pruning - Leaf Removal - Pressure Washing -BobCat

COMMERCIAL AND RESIDENTIAL

SERVICE DIRECTORY DEADLINES Display Ads Space & Copy Monday, 11:00 a.m.

SERVICE DIRECTORY RATES 1 Block 2 Block 3 Block 4 Block 6 Block

. . . . .$105/mo. . . . . .$165/mo. . . . . .$235/mo. . . . . .$300/mo. . . . . .$435/mo.

PAYMENTS

These Cards Gladly Accepted

Payments may be made by cash, check or credit card. Prepayment is required on all classified advertising.

“Goal is to please customer beyond expectations.”

Affordable Lawn Care

Aeration & Fall Clean-Up Specials! Est. 1996 Licensed & Insured

Blank’s Tree Work

Tom Farr’s Detailed Yard Work & Landscaping Also specializing in Decorative Stone ... • Mowing • Retaining Walls • Weeding • Flower Gardens • Mulching • Stone & Pea Gravel Walk Ways • Shrub Trimming • Clearing & Brush Hauling • Bush Hogging • Tree Removal • Licensed & Insured West Side Services • Call Tom at 368-2013 Free Estimates • Insured • License #0268188

miscellaneousservices FIREWOOD Seasoned Oak & Hickory

Have a unique business or service? Advertise in the

• Site Work • Grading • Clearing • Demolition • Bobcat Work • Driveways • Drainage Repairs

1 Room $59.00 – 2 Rooms $79.00 – 3 Rooms $99.00

• Sifted Top Soil • Mulch • Fill Dirt Delivered Bobcat Work Available

Free / Written Estimates

Additional Rooms only $29.00 – Steps $2.00 – Hallways FREE

23 Years of Experience

classifieds

Call Ron at

Call

OCTOBER SPECIALS!

Licensed / Insured / Local

Roger Heldreth, Owner/Operator

Tom 865-474-0016 • tom@vcsgllc.com

(865) 604-0087

roger@knoxdrycarpetcleaning.com • KnoxDryCarpetCleaning.com

(865) 256-1692

farragutpress

675-6397

homerepair&improvement PJohnRECISION PAINTING Carver, Owner since 1990

PATCH MASTERS

Residential Specialist - Over 1,000 Satisfied Customers!

WE CAN FIX IT!!

• Interior/Exterior • References • Wallpaper Removed

Hang • Finish Texture • Paint/In & Out Call Gary Whitworth

• Written Contracts • Licensed and Insured • Wood Repair • Drywall Repairs • Popcorn Ceilings Removed

Some of the fine communities we serve - Avalon, Montgomery Cove, Gettysvue, Mallard Bay, Fox Run...

“We never subcontract, we DO the work.”

865.680.1237

If it’s sheetrock...

865-776-2616 Office 865-776-0925 Cell

CONTRACTORS

368-2869 Residential & Commercial Interior • Exterior • Decks Quality • Commitment • Customer Ser vice Licensed & Insured

Serving Knoxville and surrounding areas

Gary and Debbie Hicks, Owners

“No job too big or too small!”

Licensed General Contractor

Carpentry • Electrical • Painting Plumbing • Roofing • Remodeling

865-986-9650

Licensed & Insured, References available Residential & Commercial

30 yrs. experience

Performing All Phases of Remodeling & New Construction Carpentry Electrical Kitchen Remodeling Carports Garages Screened Porches Textured Ceilings Hardwood Flooring Pergo Flooring Bathrooms

• • • • • • • • • •

Basements Finished New Additions Pressure Cleaning Driveways Sealed Carpet Installed Linoleum Installed Painting Plumbing Vinyl Siding Decks

• • • • • • • • • •

Nominated in City View Magazine "Best of the Best 2013 & 2014"

Parker House Doctors

Hicks Painting & Home Maintenance, Inc.

• • • • • • • • • •

HomeTek PAINTING

Pergolas/Arbors Sidewalks Ceramic Tile Sheetrock Insulation Patios Replacement Windows Sun Rooms Storage Buildings Footers/Concrete Work

FREE ESTIMATES • FULLY INSURED “Rely on the professionals for all your home improvement needs.”

Senior Citizen & Military Discounts

Cell: 772.341.0980 Office: 865.288.3841

WE MAKE HOUSE CALLS

• Painting • Pressure Washing

• Decks • Plumbing • Electrical

• Tile • Bob Cat Service

“Voted Hometown Favorite for 12 Consecutive Years”

SERVING THE KNOXVILLE AREA!

Member of the Loudon County Chamber of Commerce

24 Hour Emergency Service • Licensed and Insured

Call John Benedetto 865-313-6615

Commercial & Residential 20 Years Experience Interior/Exterior Painting Pressure Washing Staining Drywall & Carpentry

FREE ESTIMATES

865-291-8434 www.pilgrimpainting.net Licensed, Bonded & Insured


FARRAGUTPRESS THURSDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2014 • 7B

classifieds CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES Line Ads Private Party . .15 words $42/4 weeks Commercial . .25 words $53/4 weeks Each additional word .25¢ per week Display Ads . .$11.20 per column inch These Cards Gladly Accepted:

000 LEGALS PUBLIC HEARING The Board of Mayor and Aldermen of the Town of Farragut will hold a public hearing on December 11, 2014 at 7:00 PM, at the Farragut Town Hall, 11408 Municipal Center Drive, to hear citizen's comments on the following ordinance: An ordinance to annex a certain territory north of the current corporate boundaries and include parcel 108, tax map 130, and to incorporate same within the corporate boundaries of the town of Farragut, Tennessee. The plan of service, which is attached to the ordinance, is available for public inspection until December 11, 2014, at the following locations: 1. Farragut Town Hall, 11408 Municipal Center Drive, Farragut, TN 37934, from the hours of 8:00am-5:00pm. 2. Farragut Branch Library, 417 N. Campbell Station Road, Farragut, TN 3734, during normal business hours listed athttp://www.knoxlib. org/about/hours-and-locations/ farragut-branch-library. 3. McFee Park kiosk near the Small Pavilion, 917 McFee Road, Farragut, TN 37934, during park hours. Please contact the Town of Farragut’s Community Develop-ment Department at 865-966-7057 with any questions. STAFF / DEVELOPER AGENDA Tuesday, November 4, 2014 Conference Room A, Farragut Town Hall, November 20, 2014 FMPC Items 9:00 a.m. Discussion and public hearing on a concept plan for the Farragut Apartments, Parcels 108 and 109, Tax Map 130, 820 N. Campbell Station Road, 31.94

100 ANNOUNCEMENTS

CLASSIFIED DEADLINES Line Ads Mondays, 11:00 am Display Ads Space & Copy...Mondays, 11:00 am

PAYMENTS Payments may be made by cash, check or credit card. Prepayment is required on all classified advertising.

Acres (GBS Engineering, Applicant) 10:00 a.m. Discussion and public hearing on a site plan for outdoor seating at the Big Daddy’s Burger Bar, 11683 Parkside Drive (GBS Engineering/Mark Bialik, Applicant) 10:30 a.m. Discussion and public hearing on a site plan for the Honest-1 Auto Care Center, 150 N. Campbell Station Road, .62 Acres (Randolph Architecture, Applicant) 11:00 a.m. Discussion and public hearing on a request to rezone Parcels 115.01 and 116.01, Tax Map 130 and Parcels 96 and 96.01, Tax Map 142 from R-2 and R-4 to R-6 (TDK Construction Company, Inc., c/o Ross Bradley, Applicant) 11:30 a.m. Discussion and public hearing on a recommendation for the Board of Mayor and Aldermen to adopt, by ordinance, the area identified as Mixed Use Town Center, as shown on the future land use map in the Comprehensive Land Use Plan ORDER IN THE MUNICIPAL COURT FOR THE TOWN OF FARRAGUT, TENNESSEE, Pursuant to Title 3, Chapter 1, Section 3-101 of the Code of Ordinances for Farragut, Tennessee, it is ORDERED that the Town of Farragut Municipal Court will convene on the second Monday of every Month beginning at 6:00 PM in the Board Room of Farragut Town Hall for the purpose of conducting hearings on any citations issued for Automated Traffic Enforcement and Code violations. This will be the regularly scheduled monthly court date for the Town of Farragut beginning August 9, 2010.

Karlyn Reedy at 865-604-3950

507 LANDSCAPE & LAWNCARE

501 CLEANING

511 PAINTING

LET ME CLEAN FOR YOU

PRECISION PAINTING Interior / Exterior, Pressure Washing. Licensed and Insured. 20 yrs. experience. Call John Carver 865-680-1237 See service directory listing.

Call Christine 661-0289

ONE WOMAN AND A CLEANING BUCKET Time is Precious. Don’t spend it Cleaning!

• WEEKLY • BI-WEEKLY • MONTHLY • Honest

• Excellent Rates

• Dependable

• Great References

Offering 8 opportunities to move in before the New Year!

Farragut - Maintenance Free - Rancher with 3 BDRM/3 BA w/Bonus and Gourmet Kitchen.

DETAILED YARD WORK - Lawn mowing service, weeding, clearing jobs, tree removal, landscaping of any kind, mulching, shrub trimming, brush hauling. Free estimates. Firewood for sale, delivered & stacked $90.00 / rick. Serving West Knox area. Call Tom Farr, 865-368-2013.

Honest, dependable with excellent references

Come let us show you our deals!

Bradley Priced at $429,900

CNA OR CARE GIVER will care for elderly or disabled person in their home or place of residence. Also, 24 hour care available in my home for single or couple, flat monthly rate. Over 30 years experience with references. Serving Knoxville and surrounding areas. 865-405-1825; 865673-5992.

Saturdays are available

End of year incentive for move in ready homes.

BALDWIN PARK

The complete bid packet can be picked up at the Town Hall Building 11408 Municipal Center Drive Farragut, TN 37934 865-966-7057 or online at www.townoffarragut.org. A mandatory pre-bid meeting will be held at 10:00 AM Thursday, November 6, 2014. The proposals are due on or before 10:00 AM Monday, November 24, 2014.

Farragut Woman has years of Cleaning Experience

It’s a Great Time to BUY A HOUSE!

100 ANNOUNCEMENTS

The Town of Farragut is requesting proposals from qualified Audio Visual (A/V) vendors to upgrade the Board Chamber’s Audio/Video systems.

201 HEALTH CARE SERVICE

Equal Housing Opportunity Statement: All real estate advertised herein is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act and the Tennessee Human Rights Act, which make it illegal to advertise “any preference, limitation, or discrimination because of race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, or national origin, or intention to make any such preference, limitation, or discrimination.” We will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis.”

516 REMODELING LICENSED CONTRACTORRemodeling, custom home building, additions, sunrooms, garages, decks, restoration, kitchens, bathrooms. Residential & Commercial. Free estimates. 865-922-8804. Herman Love.

THE COVE AT TURKEY CREEK

BATTERY AT BERKELEY PARK Cleveland Priced at $424,900 Fabulous Open Layout, Spacious Master AND Office on Main Level, Screened Porch on Private Wooded Lot in Desirable Farragut.

Carla Fishback at 865-223-2261

KENWOOD

Lakeland Priced at $481,900

Princeton Priced at $259,900

Heart of Farragut, Maintenance Free Neighborhood, Attractive 3 BDRM/3 BA Ranch w/Gourmet Kitchen, Bonus and Walk in Storage.

Move in Ready, New Generation Open Floor Plan, 3BDRM/2.5 BA Huge Bonus, Great Family Neighborhood.

Karlyn Reedy at

Carla Fishback at

865-604-3950

865-223-2261

D L O S

CHAPEL GROVE

BATTERY AT BERKELEY PARK

Bristol Priced at $445,900

Wildwood Priced at $438,900

Maintenance Free - Farragut – One level living w/3 BDRM/3 BA, Designer Kitchen, Bonus Room and Screened Porch.

Stunning New Open Floor Plan, Large Great Room featuring 7 feet windows, Over-sized Kitchen Island, Dramatic Arched Entryways.

Karlyn Reedy at 865-604-3950

Call Megan at

Carla Fishback at 865-223-2261

816-0234

employment zone COOL SPRINGS

SHEFFIELD

Wildwood Priced at $431,900

Baxter Priced at $443,900

Stunning Open Floor Plan, Spacious Great Room, Fabulous Kitchen/Great Room, Large Level Backyard.

Mountain View! Spacious Kitchen/Breakfast/Family Room Combination, Main Level Master, 4 BDRMS plus a Loft.

Carla Fishback at

Tina Buckles at

865-223-2261

865-414-6408

Open House Sat. & Sun. 2-5 pm The farragutpress is not responsible for errors in an advertisement if not corrected by the first week after the ad appears. This newspaper is not responsible or liable whatsoever for any claim made by an ad or for any of the services, products or opportunities offered by our advertisers. We do not endorse or promote the purchase or sale of any product, service, company or individual that chooses to advertise in this newspaper, and we reserve the right to refuse any/all advertising we deem inappropriate or unacceptable by our company standards.

Tutoring: 1 Hour/Day, 3 Days/Week Seeking experienced tutor 3 days per week for 13 yr. old 7th grader. Lesson hours flexible; choose suitable time between 8am and 6pm for 60 minutes/day. Subjects: Mathematics, English, Sciences & History. $

00

50 per hour

Send résumé/application via email to realarmstrong71@gmail.com.

(865)966-8700 www.SaddlebrookProperties.com


8B • FARRAGUTPRESS THURSDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2014

Bobby and Kim Sanford join Coldwell Banker Wallace & Wallace, REALTORS® Bobby and Kim Sanford have recently joined Coldwell Banker Wallace & Wallace, REALTORS®. The Sanfords will be working out of the Farragut Coldwell Banker Wallace & Wallace, REALTORS® office. The Sanfords are natives of the Knoxville area, having lived in Halls, Powell, Karns and West Knoxville. They bring more than 35 years of sales and customer service experience, and have more than 10 years of real estate

experience. They serve all of Knox County and surrounding counties including Anderson, Blount and Loudon Counties. They celebrate the fact that, between them, they have four children and four grandchildren. They enjoy boating, traveling, and spending time with family and friends, and are core members of the Pellissippi Campus of Faith Promise Church. Bobby and Kim Sanford can be reached by phone at 865-966-

1111. Bobby’s direct number is 865-216-9888, his email is Bobby@BobbyAndKimHomes.com. Kim’s direct number is 865-6043681, her email is Kim@ BobbyandKimHomes.com. You can visit them on the web at www.BobbyAndKimHomes.com.

To place your Real Estate ad in farragutpress call Kathy Hartman 218-8877 or email khartman@farragutpress.com

Tim Hathaway

Here for you whether Buying or Selling!

ABR Multi-Million Dollar Producer

Ron Parkinson

Cell: 643-3232 Office: 693-3232

ABR®, e-PRO®, GRI®

OPEN HOUSE • SUNDAY • 2-4PM 709 Landing Lane-Concord Landing Large unit w/master on main & loft area upstairs. Sunroom sq. ft not included in total sq. footage. Replaced windows, roof, HVAC, appliances. French door SS fridge & SS washer/dryer remain. 3 living areas including sunroom. Walk to Anchor Park & Greenway trail. MLS 900832 $179,000

Cell: 865-300-1731

HOLLY JANNEY

Dir: 865-539-3331

www.timhathaway.com E-mail: tim@timhathaway.com

(865) 360-5109 | (865) 244-3609 fax

Office: 865-693-3232

Realty Executives: 10255 Kingston Pike • 865-693-3232

ron.e.parkinson@gmail.com

GAEL LOTT

dori pavlovsky

gael@gaellott.com

www.houselady.com

865-300-8677

865-300-8234

SANDI BOWLUS 865-936-1591

sandi.bowlus@coldwellbanker.com

DANA MOSER 865-387-0628

www.danamoser.com

PATTI ETTIEN

BONNIE HOOD

www.pettien.cbww.com

blhealey@aol.com

865-207-7371

865-582-5253

SUGARWOOD

FOX RUN

301 FRUITWOOD LANE - LOCATION! FARRAGUT SCHOOLS! CUL-DE-SAC! Brick 2 story w/finished walk-out basement. 4 BR 4.5 BA, Bonus rm & walkup attic. Granite counter tops in kitchen w/Center Island & eat-in. Lg family rm, Dining rm & Office/Living rm on main w/hrdwd floors. Large closets in BRs. Laundry Rm on 2nd floor. Over-sized two car garage. Workshop in Basement w/H&A. 2nd Family Rm & Game Rm in finished basement. Screened Porch & deck. MLS 897957 $395,000

12420 SPARTA LANE - Brick ranch w/finished bsmt. Open floor plan w/hrdwd floors. 4 BR on main & 4 full BA. Gourmet kitchen w/cherry cabinets, granite, & Thermador Gas Stove. Separate in-law living quarters in bsmt. Great house for entertaining w/formal dining rm & large eat-in kitchen. Split BR plan. Lower level has office, exercise rm, media rm, kitchen, family rm & possible 5th BR w/private BA, game rm & finished storage. MLS 889829 $549,700

WANDA CARDER

"Putting All The Pieces Together"

865-384-7704 | Office 865-966-1111

Farragut 966-1111 • Bearden 584-4000 West Town 693-1111 • Oak Ridge 483-4303 Blount 982-1111 • North 687-1111


FARRAGUTPRESS THURSDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2014 • 9B

Coldwell Banker Wallace & Wallace, Realtors name top agents for August Coldwell Banker Wallace & Wallace have announced their top Agents for the month of August. • At the West Town office: Listings - Cissy Mayo Closing- Shannon Foster Boline and Jennifer Montgomery • In Bearden Listings - Vick Dyer and Joyce Tapscott Closing - Adam Brown • At their Blount Office Listings- Tied – Sylvia Collins

and Anne Freeman Closing- Nola Collins • The North location Listings and Closing- Vickie Bailey • And in Farragut Listings- Wanda Carder Closing- Dana Moser For more information, contact one of the Five local offices including the Farragut office, at 10815 Kingston Pike, 865.966.1111.

OPEN HOUSE • SUNDAY • 2-4PM 508 LOST TREE LANE Gorgeous Fox Den condo w/open floor plan, 2 story ceilings, amazing private courtyard, tons of natural light & updated throughout. This kitchen is designed to allow family & friends to gather & have the flow of a large home. So many custom designs make this gorgeous condo unique & very attractive. 2bds on the main level & a sprawling master suite up a few short stairs. Take all this & sit it on the golf course fairway & you will be impressed. One of a kind, gorgeous & great location. MLS 904184 $324,000

Joanne JONES

Cell: 865-776-7173 • Email: joanne.jones@crye-leike.com eFax: 423-847-4097 • website: http://joannejones.crye-leike.com/

731 Campbell Station – Knoxville, TN 37934 – 865-671-3333

6729 Pleasant Ridge Rd., Knoxville, TN 37921 • (865) 938-3403 TN F735

SEQUOYAH HILLS AREA Real Estate Auction

Saturday November 1 2014 at 2:00 p.m. 4115 Forest Glen Drive Knoxville, TN 37919

OPEN HOUSE: Wednesday October 22 & Monday October 27 from 4-7PM 3 BR & 2.5 BA Approx 2140 SF Old Country Charm and Style TERMS: 10% Earnest Money Deposit of Total Sales Price Due Day of Sale. 10% Buyer's Premium added to High Bid to Establish Total Sales Price. Balance to Be Paid in Full with 30 Days. DIRECTIONS: I-40E to Exit 386B toward the Airport. Take the Kingston Pike Exit. Right on Kingston Pike to Right onto Forest Glen Drive. Home will be on the Right.

SeeRidge www.powellauction.com for more details 6729 Pleasant Rd Knoxville, TN 37921 www.powellauction.com 938-3403 TN F735

SUGARWOOD w Ne ice Pr

205 NUTWOOD CIRCLE - New Kitchen, New Master Bath, New Price=Happy Owners! 4 BR, 2.5 BA w/lg Finished Bonus in popular Farragut S/D. Major Renovations include Doors, Windows, Roof, Hrdwd on Main, Smooth Ceilings on Main, Extended Deck w/Screen Porch, Custom Cabinets, Granite & SS in Kitchen. Walk in Dble Shower w/Marbled Floors & Glass Tiles in Master. Princess Balcony over Main Entrance. MLS 898899 $350,000

GAIL FINLEY

TRACYE JAHN

865-567-8208

"Your Agent in Red"

www.GailFinley.com

865-776-8518 www.youragentinred.com

TERESA GUY 865-591-6095

www.TeresaGuy.com

LOVELY COUNTRY HOME

3411 LONG HOLLOW RD - Country Home in Quiet & peaceful area, home sits back off road. Only 6 miles from interstate & minutes from shopping. Large open floor plan 4 BR 3 BA on over an acre w/full fenced back for kids & pets. Tons of updates includes new roof & hvac, new kitchen, new bathroom counter, new paint too. Full basement w/bath, fireplace & extra bedroom. No restrictions or HOA. 100% financing available. MLS 893084 $198,999

ROBIN AGGERS REALTOR®, RRES, GRI, ABR

CATHERINE TRAVER

865-322-SOLD 7653 Office 865-966-1111 robin.aggers@coldwellbanker.com Professional “Service with a Smile”

865-256-3779

cttraver@aol.com

THE SUMMIT AT CHOTO

WATERFRONT

WESTLAND MEADOWS

RARE FIND! These lots are some of the largest on the market in the Choto Area. Superb lake and mountain views that you will fall in love with and be proud to call this your home! This gated community will Wow your guest. Boat storage right next door!!! Builder offering: Build to Suit...Cost plus 10%. 16 Lots available. See 3115 Choto Highlands Way MLS 857094 $159,000

JACKSON BEND DRIVE - LOUISVILLE Waterfront! Acreage! In Jackson Bend Subdivision. Priced To Sell! Dock Approved with Beautiful Views. Corner Lot on a Cul-DeSac. Horses are welcome on this property. Architecturally Restricted. Come On Out And Enjoy Jackson Bend! Dreams Are Coming True Out Here! MLS 884546 $289,900

824 BAYLOR CIRCLE - You'll love the way the light dances around in this home and drenches the patio area. The 3 bedrooms all hang together possibly making a family feel secure. The 2 1/2 baths gleam with tile & bonus room screams ''Lots of room to play!'' A great price for this 2 story, 3 car garage and level back yard home. MLS 889383 $235,000

TAMMY BARDING 865-603-2818 | listwithtammy@gmail.com | www.ListOrBuyWithTammy.com


10B • FARRAGUTPRESS THURSDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2014


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