08272015 living

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Living • 11

www.crossville-chronicle.com • Wednesday, August 27, 2014

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A workshop for great new ideas for original Christmas cards will be held Saturday, Sept. 6, from 9:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. at the CATS Gallery in the middle of the Crossville Mall. Sponsored by Stamping on the Plateau, this workshop promises three cards, different techniques, door prizes, refreshments and lots of holiday fun. The price for the workshop is $25. Register and pre-pay by calling the CATS Gallery, 931-2105599, on location in the Crossville Mall, or Stamping on the Plateau, 931-456-6648. An identical workshop will be held on Friday, Sept. 12, from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. at Stamping on the Plateau. The workshop is called a “Walkabout” which is designed to give each participant more individual help from the teacher.

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The Art Guild at Fairfield Glade has announced its happenings at the Plateau Creative Arts Center (PCAC) for September. The center’s summer hours (March through Dec. 24) are 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., Monday through Saturday. Open Studio — Every Monday in August. Come enjoy our studio space. Artists using any medium are welcome, including beaders. Visitors are welcome. There is no formal instruction but an informal sharing of ideas and conversation from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Supplies available for most mediums for a small fee. There’s no charge for members but a $5 fee for non-members for studio use. Life Drawing — A live model will be available for artists to sketch during the fourth Monday of the month from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. The cost will be $5 for studio use. Bring your largest sketch pad and camera to capture the pose. Tuesday, Sept. 2 — Smorgasbord of Art featuring Rhumba Earrings with Mary Blackburn from 10 a.m. to noon. Cost is $15, materials included. Friday, Sept. 5 — Art Gallery - Artist of the Month is Kay Wode. Thursday, Sept. 4, 11, 18, and 25 — Watercolor Class for Beginners with Sheryl Reeser from 9 a.m. to noon. Cost is $68 for members $88 non-members. Thursday, Sept. 4, 12, 18, and 25 — Watercolor Class for Intermediate with Sheryl Reeser from 12:30 p.m. to 3:30 p.m. Cost is $68 for members and $88 for non-members. Saturday, Sept. 6, 13, 20, and 27 — Watercolor Class for Advanced with Sheryl Reeser from 9 a.m. to noon. Cost is $68 for members and $88 for non-members. Monday and Tuesday, Sept. 8 and 9 — Dry Point Printing with Karen Shaw from 1:30 p.m. to 3:30 p.m. Cost is $34 for members and $44 non-members plus cost of supplies. Tuesday, Sept. 16 — Monthly membership meeting 9 a.m. with social at 9:30 a.m. Visitors are welcome. Wednesday, Sept. 17 — Critique Your Artwork Session with Barb Rogers from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. This event will be open to everyone and has no charge. Bring your artwork or just observe the session. Wednesday, Sept. 24 — Kumihimo Bracelet Class with Judith Heath from 9:30 a.m. to noon. Cost is $17 for members and $22 non-members plus material cost. Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday, Sept. 29, 30, and Oct. 1 — Watercolor Workshop “Capturing Light in Your Paintings” with Thomas McNickel. CLASS IS SOLD OUT. Directions: From Exit 322 off Interstate 40 (Peavine Rd. Exit), go north on Peavine Rd. for about six miles. Lakeview Drive is on the right. The Art Gallery is at 451 Lakeview Dr. Call 931-7077249; visit www.artguildfairfieldglade.net or check them out on Facebook.

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Aug. 11 Kyle Tanner Boswell, 19, to Kristi Nicole Turner, 19, both of Crossville. Aug. 13 Cody Alexander Craine, 20, to Cheyenne Dawn Carmack, 18, both of Crossville. Aug. 15 Christopher Leon Crockett, 42, to Malena Jean Arms, 44, both of

Crossville. Justin Delano Davenport, 30, to Aleshia Nicole Speck, 30, both of Crab Orchard. David Carl Lawrence, 47, to Issa Veronique Shore, 41, both of Crossville. Robert J. Wenig, 52, to Krystal Dawn McGhee, 30, both of Spring City.

PICNIC

bers were based on zip code. Since 1987, the hospital applies for this number upon the birth of a child. In 2011, the SSA began randomizing numbers in an effort to extend the longevity of the numbering system as well as for security.

• Continued from 9 three numbers identified the state which assigned the number. In 1972, the Social Security Administration began assigning all numbers from the Baltimore area and num-


Living • 9

www.crossville-chronicle.com • Wednesday, August 27, 2014

Fox, Bergvin exchange vows

Photo submitted

The cast of “It Ain’t Nothin’ But the Blues” performed at the 127 Senior Center last Friday.

‘It Ain’t Nothin’ But the Blues’ cast performs for 127 Seniors By Elaine Mumme Chronicle contributor

127 Seniors

On Aug. 22, members of the 127 Senior Center of Cumberland County gathered together to socialize with bingo called by Jan Neitzke, and a “rowdy” bunch of domino players had a good time. A big thank you to M. Stewart Galloway, ophthalmologist, for the bingo prizes. The general meeting was called to order by Vice President Lucy Elmore, with Leroy Hinkson saying the opening prayer and leading the Pledge of Allegiance. Jan Neitzke gave the 127 Corridor Sale results, which was a great success and will certainly help out center. Brochures were handed out for those who want to attend the Senior Day at the Fair, which is today, Aug. 27,

starting at 8:30 a.m. with bingo. Jan Neitzke also advised all who are going on the fall trip to Maine, Vermont and New Hampshire to get their itinerary, luggage tags and gifts from her. Remember, one large luggage and one overnite luggage only. Jan is also collecting the monies that are due for the Bush’s Beans Museum trip on Oct. 10 and the Country Tonight Show on Nov. 5. Contact Jan at 788-3667 with any questions. Sunshine Lady Nancy Fincher reported on all the members who are on the “get well list” — prayers are with them for a speedy recovery. A big welcome back to Carl Brooks. They pray that the Lord will hold the troops in His hands and protect them as they protect

this country. Tom Fincher introduced the wonderful, amazing and talented performers from the Cumberland County Playhouse performing in the fabulous production of “It Ain’t Nothin’ But the Blues.” All the seniors were thrilled to hear the wonderful songs sung by Daniel Black, Charles Lattimore, Anna Baker, Michael Ruff, Illeana Kirven, Whitney Mignon Reed and the talented pianist Brandon Whitaker. Thank you all for the luscious entertainment. After the dinner prayer, a delicious meal of chicken and dumplings was prepared by the center’s great cook, Anna Cox, with her helpers Sandy Gadwell and Gladys Butler. Side dishes and desserts were furnished by the members. Have a blessed week!

NARFE Chapter 1719 hosting annual picnic Members and guests of Cumberland County Chapter 1719 of The National Association of Retired and Active Federal Employees Association (NARFE) are invited to the annual Red, White and Blue Picnic. The event will be held on Tuesday, Sept. 9, at the Fairfield Glade United Methodist Church Pavilion at noon. The club will provide hamburgers, brats and drinks and each family is asked to bring a dish to share and their own table service. Ellie Kellermann (Vice President) and members Gina Grikis and Joyce Shelton have planned

a fun event and ask that attendees wear red, white and blue attire to add to the fun. Reservations should be made by calling 2870321 or emailing joyceshelton35@comcast.net. Alternate contact is 7075636 or email to wkmstar1@gmail.com. Be sure to tell Joyce or Wyonne how many will attend and what category your contribution will be. Needed are desserts, veggies, salads and baked beans. Alzheimer’s Chair, Mary Scudder, will have a display and update on this important national project. All government employ-

ees, active and retired, are invited to attend. NARFE meets on the second Tuesday of the month (except for January and April) and have interesting and informative speakers and programs. Chester Bush, President, can be reached at 484-0331 for more information. Factoid for September: President FDR signed the Social Security Act on Aug. 14, 1935 and the first numbers were issued in November 1936. Social Security numbers were initially assigned from the Northeast (New Hampshire) and moved westward. Originally the first See PICNIC page 11

Reunions Lewis family

The annual Lewis family reunion will be Sept. 7 at the home of Terry and Cathy Lowe at 498 Limerick Dr. All family and friends are invited to attend. Bring a covered dish and enjoy the day. Call 788-2017 with any questions.

CCHS Class of 1969

The Cumberland County High School Class of 1969 will celebrate its 45-year reunion Sept. 13 at 6 p.m. at the Art Circle Public Library, 3 East St. Attire is casual/street. The menu will include barbecue and trimmings. Cost is $15 per person. For questions or comments, email 1969cchs@gmail. com. Send confirmation and payments to Jeanette W. Parsons, 414 Holiday Dr., Crossville, TN 38555. Please respond by Aug. 30.

Calloway Davis family

The Calloway Davis reunion will be Aug. 31 at Hales Chapel on Vande-

ver Rd. Bring a covered dish and visit with family and friends. Lunch will be around 12:30 p.m. Call Margaret at 788-5616 or Karen at 788-3445 with any questions.

McCormick, Maddox, Copeland and Finley families

All relatives and friends are invited to attend the annual McCormick, Maddox, Copeland and Finley homecoming at the Cumberland Mountain State Park in shelter #1 (by the upper tennis courts) on

Sept. 6 from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Bring food and drinks. Utensils will be furnished.

Martin family

The Martin family reunion will be Sept. 20 at 10 a.m. at the home of Billie Martin Swearenger — “The Old Martin Place.” Bring a covered dish and lawn chairs.

Dorton School

The Dorton School fall reunion will Oct. 18 at Oaklawn Baptist Church from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. A potluck lunch will begin at 11:30 a.m. Be sure to mark your calendar.

“We will treat your family like our family.”

Calley Jo Elsea, DMD

Newlyweds Erik and Lauren Bergvin just returned from a summer honeymoon in the Mediterranean after their December wedding. Lauren Elizabeth Fox and Erik James Bergvin were united in marriage on Saturday, Dec. 28, 2013, at Linary Church of Christ. John Griffin, uncle of the bride, officiated the double ring ceremony. The bride is the daughter of Mark and Lillian Fox. She is the granddaughter of Mildred Bailey and the late Hugh E. Bailey, the late Wanda Fox Chaffin and the late Thairum Fox. The groom is the son of Geir and Pam Bergvin. His grandparents are James Carter and the late Rose Carter, the late Gunnar and Herdis Bergvin. Guests were previewed during their entrance by a slideshow and musical program by the Orfeo Orchestra. The auditorium was filled with flowers designed by Denise Griffin and Mitchell White that complimented the bouquets carried by the wedding party. The rings were presented by Michael Sellers, Jade Gallimore and Ashley Herrmann. Guests were asked to say a prayer as the rings passed their pew, while “The Prayer” was sung by Linda Kington. The grandparents, Jan and Michael Sellers and their parents were seated to “Sunrise, Sunset” performed by the orchestra and Kington. A memory candle and two unity candles were lit by Jan Sellers, Pam Bergvin and Lillian Fox. The orchestra played “Canon in D” as the wedding party processional entered. The bridal party comprised Whitney Keck Cole, matron of honor; Katherine Stone, maid of honor; Rachel Walker Wyatt, matron of honor; Sarah Vandergriff; Abby DeBusk; Cady Kington; Kelsey Wilson; Casey Robinson; and Jessica Dowdy Sexton. The bridesmaids wore altering burnt orange and plum floor length satin dresses with matching stoles. The girls each carried hand-tied bouquets of heritage hydrangeas, bridal-white roses, sunset roses, frescia and varied tropical greenery. The bridegroom’s party comprised Paul Bergvin, best man and brother of the groom; Christian Bergvin; Odd Joachim Aschim; Mason Fox, brother of the bride; James Andrew Pratt; David Berk; Will Hooper; Bradford Reasonover; and Kyler Moore. The Ushers were Adam Vandergriff, Alex Walker, Calvin Turner and Grayson Witt. The groomsmen and ushers wore black tuxedos accented with boutonnieres of wax flower, sunset roses and varied greenery. The rings were

Erik and Lauren Bergvin presented by Carter Kramer, cousin of the groom, and Maddi Potter, matchmaker of the bride and groom. The bride was escorted by her father to “The Bridal Party” in a pearl-colored sweetheart A-lined satin Alfred Angelo full length gown with a three-foot train, beaded detailing at the waist line and veil. Lauren carried a hand-tied bouquet of bridal white roses, heritage hydrangeas, stephanotis, dendrobium orchids and pearl calla lilies, which was complimented by the handle wrapped in pearls adorned with a Carter family cameo, Delta Delta Delta sorority pin and Sigma Nu fraternity pin. The couple lit their unity candle to “I’ll Be There” by Steven Curtis Chapman. The couple and bridal party left the ceremony to “The Wedding March.” The reception was held following the ceremony at Fairfield Glade Community Center. The entire wedding party entered to various songs reflecting on stories that reminded the couple of fond memories spent with each of them. The happily married couple, graduates of the University of Tennessee, entered to “Rocky Top.” Lauren added a fox stole that had belonged to Erik’s grandmother from Norway. The evening was spent fellowshipping, cutting cakes and dancing the night away. The couple left the reception for a weekend in Nashville. The groom’s parents started the wedding weekend off with a rehearsal dinner at Forte’s. The commemoration included friends and family from Norway, Tennessee and the USA marking the start of the couple’s life together. The cou-

ple was honored with three events hosted by family and friends. The Linary Church of Christ shower, a friends and family tea at the Art Circle Library and a LMUDCOM bridal brunch were all times of celebration and remembrance. The bridal party enjoyed a bridal luncheon hosted by Susan Vandergriff and Delia Walker at the First National Bank conference room. The groom’s party relished in an afternoon of clay shooting tournaments at the Fairfield Glade Sportsman Club. The bride is a 2007 graduate of Cumberland County High School and a 2011 graduate of the University of Tennessee. She is currently a fourth year medical student at LMU-DCOM. The groom graduated in 2005 from Cumberland County High School after spending the majority of his high school term in Norway. He is a 2009 University of Tennessee graduate and recently received his Masters of Business Administration degree from the Heriott Watts University Edinburgh Business School - Scotland. The two are residing in Crossville, but adventures and schooling will soon take them away for a few years. They are eager to return to Cumberland County, and look forward to being servants for good in all realms, especially family, friends, medicine and business.

Coming Soon...

September 2nd • 12 PM Arts Round-up Luncheon

September 5th • 7 PM Lickity Split In Concert

September 6th • 7 PM Cumberland Jamboree

September 12th • 7 PM “A Taste of Heaven” featuring Melissa Peak

September 13th • 6 PM Miss Cumberland Co. Pageant

September 15th • 6 PM Candidates Debate

September 19th • 7 PM Vance Thompson’s Five plus Six - In Concert

September 23rd • 7 PM The Annie Moses Band

510 Livingston Rd. Crossville, TN 38555

September 29th• 6PM

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12 • Living

www.crossville-chronicle.com • Wednesday, August 27, 2014

Arts & Culture Alliance presents ‘America Divided’ by Chicaiza

Rachel Anita Luna and Gabriel Dalynn Simmons

Luna to wed Simmons Sept. 6 Philip and Vicky Luna of Sparta announce the engagement and forthcoming marriage of their daughter, Rachel Anita Luna, to Gabriel Dalynn Simmons. He is the son of of Dalynn and Jeneane Simmons of Pikeville. The ceremony will be Saturday, Sept. 6, at 2 p.m. on the farm of Tommy and Marcene Yeargan on Dayton Mountain. A reception will follow. The bride-elect is a graduate of Sparta High School and is attending college to get her teaching degree. The prospective groom’s grandparents are Laverne and Otella Simmons of Pikeville and Olene Disman and the late Elvis D. Disman of Adolphus, KY. He is a graduate of Bledsoe County High School and has his own computer business. Invitations will be sent, but all relatives and friends of the couple are invited.

Rib dinner at the Elks Sept. 5

On Sept. 5 from 5 to 7 p.m., enjoy a mouthwatering rib meal at the Elks Lodge. It will include a half rack of ribs, baked beans, coleslaw and dessert for $13 per person. This is a reservation dinner. Please call the lodge at 484-0150 to sign up.

The Arts & Culture Alliance is pleased to present a new exhibition of media entitled “America Divided” by Antuco Chicaiza of Sweetwater. The work in “America Divided” is meant to create a dialog about the division that government and society has created in America today. Several pieces only show a rectangle with eyes on a white canvas. “The rectangle not only shows the part of a person on which we usually focus, but it is also means to represent the hyphen, that separates us as a nation,” says Chicaiza. The exhibition will be displayed in the Balcony gallery of the Emporium Center in downtown Knoxville from Sept. 5–27. A public reception will take place as part of First Friday activities on Friday, Sept. 5, from 5 to 9 p.m. with complimentary hors d’oeuvres provided by The Melting Pot and music by Cat’s Away. The First Friday reception also features a Jazz Jam Session hosted by Vance Thompson and Friends from 7 to 9 p.m. in the Black Box Theatre. Antuco Chicaiza lived in Ecuador from age four until twelve in a small mountain town, immersed in tradition-

documents of travels. Chicaiza’s more recent paintings utilize phrases, symbols, graffiti, and abstracted figures and faces, combining them in dense, interpenetrating compositions. Chicaiza’s subjects include the challenges and rewards of family, cultural heritage, and social and political issues. Antuco Chicaiza has shown his work in solo exhibitions at Casa HoLa in Knoxville, the Clayton Center for the Arts in Maryville, The Rose Center in Morristown, The Nashville International Airport, the Embassy of Ecuador in Washington, DC, and the Photo submitted Latino Arts Center in MilThe work in “America Divided” is meant to create a waukee, WI. dialog about the division that government and society “America Divided” will has created in America today. be on display at the Emporium Center, 100 S. Gay St. al culture as well as exposed za’s early charcoal drawings Gallery hours are Monday to the mistreatment of Indi- and paintings drew upon his through Friday 9 a.m. to 5 ans. A formative experience childhood memories of the p.m. and Saturday 11 a.m. while there also included lives of Indians in Ecuador. to 3 p.m. For more informavisiting the studio of Oswal- These works were represention, please contact the Arts do Guayasamin, a leading tational in style and empha& Culture Alliance at (865) Ecuadoran artist, and view- sized both social injustice 523-7543, or visit the webing his paintings and collec- and the peoples’ strength site at www.knoxalliance. tion of Latin American art. and pride. In 2003, Chicaicom. Chicaiza went on to study at za’s work shifted to a more the International Fine Arts experimental approach College in Miami. He has which focused on his sketch On the move? lived in Sweetwater, Ten- books full of thoughts, orignessee since 1999. Chicai- inal and found images, and

Model train exhibit to be open Labor Day The Crossville Model Railroad Club “Wonderful World of Trains” model railroad exhibit at the Crossville Outlet Center will be open Monday, Labor Day, for special holiday hours. The exhibit will be open from 10:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.

and feature red, white and blue decorations as well as special trains in the red, white and blue holiday colors. The display features 4,500 square feet of operating model railroads in all scales as well as the Upper Cumberland Rail-

road Society Museum. Normal operating hours are Tuesday through Sunday from noon to 5 p.m. and Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. The exhibit is normally closed on Mondays. Admission is always free.

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