Karns HV Shopper-News 020413

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KARNS/HARDIN VALLEY

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VOL. 7 NO. 5

IN THIS ISSUE

Miracle Maker

In 2006, Amy Crawford returned to teaching after a three-year leave. In her new 8th-grade teaching position at West Valley Middle School, she found herself teaching some of the same students she had known as 3rd graders at A.L Lotts Elementary. “Once I got into the classroom and saw how the kids had changed, it was a real eye-opening experience.”

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February 4, 2013

New house of worship

People arrive to celebrate the grand opening of this new worship center at Faith Promise Church off Pellissippi Parkway at 10740 Faith Promise Lane. Story on A-7

See Sara Barrett’s story on A-9

You may not believe this … Some former insider will someday tell a colorful tale of how Tennessee faked out rival recruiters and got away with a high school lad who grew up to be an all-American. Besides the possibility of cheating and lying, football recruiting may include cloakand-dagger stories that are slow to spill out of the closet. That’s how competitive recruiting is – a lot of stuff happens and almost anything goes but don’t talk and don’t get caught.

See Marvin West’s story on A-6 Jason Stubbs, worship leader, leads the singing. Photos by T. Edwards One of the entrances at Faith Promise Church leading to the new worship center.

Elegant dining Scott Bishop and the folks at Westwood Antiques are hosting an Elegant Dining event for the Knoxville Symphony on Saturday, Feb. 9. Holly’s Eventful Catering is preparing the food. Register online at www. knoxvillesymphonyleague. org/.

Open houses Several west area schools will host “Welcome to Our School” open houses for parents and students who have been rezoned to new elementary schools beginning in August 2013. Open houses and school tours will be held at A.L. Lotts, Ball Camp and Cedar Bluff elementary schools, Farragut Primary and Farragut Intermediate at 6:30 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 7, and 1-2 p.m. Monday, Feb. 11. Info or to view the approved elementary rezoning map, visit knoxschools.org.

10512 Lexington Dr., Ste. 500 37932 (865) 218-WEST (9378) NEWS news@ShopperNewsNow.com Sandra Clark | Theresa Edwards ADVERTISING SALES ads@ShopperNewsNow.com Shannon Carey | Patty Fecco Jim Brannon | Tony Cranmore Shopper-News is a member of KNS Media Group, published weekly and distributed to 29,974 homes in Farragut, Karns and Hardin Valley.

First Lions in nation with vision van By Theresa Edwards The Smoky Mountain Lions Charities Inc. will be the first Lions in the nation to have a vision van that makes eyeglasses on the spot for people who could not otherwise afford them. Remote Area Medical donated the fifth wheel trailer – a traveling eyeglass shop – to the Lions who have been working a year fixing it up. The Lions also purchased a small diesel 2-ton flatbed truck to pull the trailer. They should be ready to roll with it in a few months. Larry Harris of Remote Area Medical operated the trailer for about 10 years. “I’m here to get these guys started today,” he said. “You can save time and materials by learning how to use the equipment correctly.” Harris explained and demonstrated how to measure a person for glasses, read an eyeglass prescription, and use the digital lensometer, blocking machine and lens cutter. Fortunately, the Lions Club has an ophthalmologist member who is going to help out, and several local optometrists have begun offering their services. The Lions will need additional volunteers and a larger stock of supplies including new eyeglass frames and lenses. The Lions will begin with a “test run” before traveling around, mostly to areas in Knoxville and Knox County. The vision van will also serve other areas in the Lions District 12-N of East Tennessee.

Larry Harris of Remote Area Medical demonstrates to Lions Club members how to use the digital lensometer.

“My job is to coordinate the vision van,” said Ron Riehn of the West Knox Lions Club. “This includes finding sites to set it up, working with the local Lions clubs, and scheduling the professional optical people volunteering their time. “Several of the major eyeglassproviding facilities in town have agreed to donate a technician’s Lions Ron Riehn, Jim McFarland and Arthur Lewis show off the Smoky time once a month. So we are really Mountain Lions Charities’ vision van equipped to make eyeglasses for excited about this and anxious to get rolling.” those who could not afford them otherwise. Photos by T. Edwards

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A-2 • FEBRUARY 4, 2013 • KARNS/HARDIN VALLEY SHOPPER-NEWS

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KARNS/HARDIN VALLEY SHOPPER-NEWS • FEBRUARY 4, 2013 • A-3

‘Lift Every Voice’ tour by WordPlayers The WordPlayers of Knoxville invite the community to their final dress rehearsal of “Lift Every Voice� 7:30 p.m. Monday, Feb. 4, at Middlebrook Christian Ministries, 1540 Robinson Road. This kicks off their East Tennessee tour during Black History Month.

Theresa Edwards

The 50-minute presentation highlights important events of the Harlem Renaissance through drama, song and dance. It portrays W.E.B. DuBois, James Weldon Johnson and Zora Neale Hurston and their influence on people such as Elvis Presley, Spike Lee, Maya Angelou, Toni Morrison and Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Doug Floyd, a local communication specialist, wrote the production. “He created this for us three years ago when we could not find a published play on the Harlem Re-

naissance,â€? said managing director Jeni Lamm. “We premiered it then and are reproducing it now. It was very popular. “It really is perfect. It gives a lot of information in an entertaining way.â€? The production is available for East Tennessee schools and other venues Feb. 5 to March 1. Their tour schedule is at www. wordplayers.org./ The group will perform 12:45 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 12, at Pellissippi State Community College at Hardin Valley. Info: 5392490 â–

Kerri Grabill gets award

As Karns High School student Kerri Grabill finished her 2012 year as “Miss Knoxville,� she was crowned as 2013 “Miss Mountain Lakes Teen Princess.� The pageant was held near Bristol in January. Kerri will proceed to compete at state in Jackson, Tenn., March 23. Kerri’s new 2013 platform is “Pawsibilities, the Power of Pets.� She will visit seniors at local nurs-

KARNS NOTES

Karns High School student Kerri Grabill is crowned “Miss WordPlayers theater artists Dominic Gillette, Rachel Norman and LaKeta Booker rehearse for Mountain Lakes Teen Prin“Lift Every Voice� touring Feb. 4 to March 1. Photos by T. Edwards of TEPHOTOS.com cess� for 2013. ing homes in February said president Carl Papa. with her own little Jack “It is more centrally located, and we have members Russell terrier, Jessie. who come from all over. ■Inventors “The association is a Association moves great resource for inventors, innovators and entreto Cedar Bluff preneurs.� Tennessee Inventors AsThe group has a variety sociation which formerly of people, from novice inmet at Tech 2020 in Oak ventors to experienced inRidge now meets at the novators, marketing their Cedar Bluff campus of Lin- products successfully. coln Memorial University Other members include a 10 a.m. each third Satur- patent lawyer, engineer, day of the month. golfer, CAD designer and “We feel this will be prototype creator with a more convenient to a 3D printer. greater number of people,� Each month a different

speaker talks on a topic of interest to inventors. Ideas, success stories and marketing tips are shared. The group also helps answer questions. Of special interest to inventors is the new change in the America Invents Act patent law effective March 16, 2013. It will change from a “first-to-invent� system to a “first-inventor-to-file� system. Find out about this and more at the Tennessee Inventor Association meetings. Info www.tninventors.org./

Carl Papa is president of Tennessee Inventors Association and inventor of the “Pin High Pro� for golfers.

Papa Murphy’s boosts Imagination Library

■Council of West Knox County Homeowners meets at 7:15 p.m. each first Tuesday at Peace Lutheran Church, 621 N. Cedar Bluff Road. The February meeting will feature David Massey, who will discuss a March 23 conference for city and county neighborhood groups. The group will have updates on MPC, BZA, County Commission, and the Sheriff’s Office, including news about the recent County Commission vote on billboards. Info: www.cwkch. com/. ■Greater Karns Business Association meets at noon each second Thursday at the Karns Community Club building on Oak Ridge Highway. Info: Alisa Pruett, 603-4273, or www. karnsbusiness.com/. ■Karns Republican Club meets 7 p.m. each first Tuesday at Karns Middle School library. Info: Lorraine Coffey, 660-3677. ■Karns Community Club meets 7:30 p.m. each first Tuesday at Karns Community Center building on Oak Ridge Highway. Info: Don Gordon, 938-1655. ■Karns Lions Club meets 6:30 p.m. each first and third Monday at the Karns Community Club building on Oak Ridge Highway. Info:

www.karnslionsclub.com/. â– West Knox Lions Club meets 6:30 p.m. each first and third Monday at the Silver Spoon restaurant at 210 Lovell. â– Karns History Club meets 2 p.m. each third Tuesday at the Karns Library.

Papa Murphy’s Take-N-Bake Pizza has helped Imagination Library purchase books for the more than 700,000 children enrolled in the program, and also to get more kids signed up for the popular program. The Imagination Library was created by Dolly Parton in 1996, and provides a new, age-appropriate, hardcover book each month to children from birth to

age 5 at no cost to the family. During November, Papa Murphy’s donated $1 from each personal-sized pizza kit sold at its nine area locations. On Dec. 19, Trina McMahan from Papa Murphy’s presented Holly Kiser from Imagination Library a check for more than $600, which is the equivalent of providing books for 50 children for one year.

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government TVA pursues dress code ors of Nashville and Memphis for his opponent, Dave Garrison. The three mayors issued a statement for Garrison. U.S. Rep. Jim Cooper, the senior congressional Democrat from Tennessee, also backed Garrison. Locally, former state Sen. Bill Owen, who serves on both the state and national Democratic committees, disregarded Rogero’s advice and actively supported Herron. In a statement on why he backed Herron, Owen Victor cited Herron’s longtime Ashe public service, his honest image and his work ethic for the party. Owen also mentioned his longtime friendship with Herron from the She has set March 12 Legislature. Owen picked at 4 p.m. at the Howard the winner. Baker Federal Courthouse Given the overwhelming in courtroom 1A to hear the GOP edge in Tennessee and Chris Irwin lawsuit against the low numbers for DemoTVA. Actually, she is hearcrats in the Legislature, ing arguments on whether Herron has almost no way to dismiss the case or not. to go but up in rebuilding The public is welcome. the party. It is amazing TVA is even Herron is a former minisbothering with dress codes ter and author in addition to and spending ratepayer being a state lawmaker since money on defending this 1986. He turns 60 this year lawsuit. Who cares if people and is already drawing a wear makeup at public hear- pension of $24,000 a year ings, face paint or whatever. based on 26 years in the Chris Irwin (whose views Legislature. I do not generally support) Chances of the Demohas a perfect right as a citicrats beating Bill Haslam zen in my view to wear face for governor or Lamar Alexpaint and look as serious or ander for U.S. Senate next silly as he wishes. year are dismal. However, It would seem to me with there may be opportunities the huge cost overruns TVA to win some legislative seats has managed to gather that in 2014. Herron is a witty, the four new board memeffective public speaker conbers might tell the legal sidered more conservative staff to devote their time to than many Democrats at the more worthwhile endeavors national level, but most Tenrather than monitoring the nessee Democrats fit that attire people wear to public description. hearings. Don’t they have ■ Three Tennessee better things to do? governors will gather Feb. But still it should be an 21 at the Baker Center for an interesting hearing where evening panel discussion on you can watch your public civility in politics. Particimoney at work. Unless pating are Gov. Haslam and Judge Campbell dismisses former Govs. Phil Bredethe case (rules for TVA and sen and Don Sundquist. that can be appealed, too) Bredesen and Sundquist ran this is but the beginning of against each other in 1994 the lawsuit. with Sundquist winning. ■ Georgia’s U.S. Sen. The public is invited to atSaxby Chambliss, who tend. The only other living announced his retirement in Tennessee governors are 2014, has strong Knoxville Republicans Winfield Dunn ties having graduated from and Lamar Alexander. UT College of Law in 1968. ■ The oldest living forHis wife taught at Sequoyah mer U.S. Senator is Harry F. Elementary while he was a Byrd Jr. of Virginia who is law student here. Sam and 98 and lives in Winchester, Ann Furrow are good local Va., where he once owned friends of the couple. Cham- the local newspaper. He bliss is the only UT College turns 100 in 2014. He reof Law graduate currently cently gave an interview to serving in the U.S Senate. BBC on his family hosting ■ Former state Sen. Winston Churchill at their Roy Herron was elected home during World War to chair the Tennessee II. Originally a Democrat, Democratic Party on Jan. 26 he became an independent despite the strong support of and was elected as such Mayor Rogero and the may- from Virginia. The lawsuit challenging TVA’s dress code at public meetings has been transferred in federal court from Judge Thomas Phillips (who is retiring this summer) to Judge Tena Campbell, who is on senior status from Utah but has been hearing cases in the Eastern District of Tennessee for the past several months.

A-4 • FEBRUARY 4, 2013 • SHOPPER-NEWS

Leaders ‘make good things happen’ Ossoli Circle observed Leadership Day by inviting two accomplished leaders – UT President Emeritus Joe Johnson and Knoxville Mayor Madeline Rogero – to share their thoughts on the topic.

Wendy Smith

Johnson, who served as UT president from 1991 to 1999 and interim president from 2003 to 2004, said leaders are those who make good things happen. He was mentored by Andy Holt during the early years of his UT career. Holt had never supervised more than five employees before becoming UT president in 1959, Johnson said. “He knew no more about running a university than my black lab dog.” But Johnson learned from Holt to surround himself with capable people. A talented staff should be turned loose – and occasionally supervised, he said. He also shared wisdom from a book written by Jewish grandmothers, like “A meowing cat can’t catch a mouse,” “Go to bed with dogs and wake up with fleas,” and “No answer is an answer,” meaning if you see something amiss, you should speak up. He’s learned from experience that two short sentences help things get accomplished – “Thank you” and “I’m sorry.”

Ossoli Circle president Lexa Hooten, center, poses with UT President Emeritus Joe Johnson and Knoxville Mayor Madeline Rogero during the club’s Leadership Day. Photo by Wendy Smith A sense of humor can also smooth ruffled feathers and make life more fun. “People without it are the most boring people in the world,” he said. Rogero shared the story of her rise to the city’s top leadership position and encouraged members of the women’s club to get involved in politics. Each person has the power to transform the community, she said. She followed the advice “Bloom where you are planted” when she moved to Knoxville 32 years ago. She came for her husband’s career, but the city wasn’t her first choice. She became active in the community when she joined the fight against the development of a travel trailer park near her North Knoxville neighborhood before the 1982 World’s Fair.

In early 1990, Rogero received a call from an elected official encouraging her to run for Knox County Commission. In addition to being a divorced mother of two with an ethnic name, she didn’t feel qualified to take on long-term Republican incumbent Jesse Cawood. But after putting together a list of friends, she decided to throw her hat into the ring. Rogero was patronized for running her campaign by courting voters, rather than elected officials or party bosses. Her opponent once introduced her by saying, “This is Madeline Rogero. Ain’t she purty?” She won by a landslide. “I have to say, nobody was surprised more than me.” She joined veterans Bee

DeSelm and Mary Lou Horner along with Wanda Moody as women on the commission. They were later joined by Diane Jordan and Pat Medley, making six women on the then-19 member body, a record. After losing her 2003 bid for mayor, Rogero took it upon herself to learn everything she could about the city. It paid off when her former opponent, Bill Haslam, appointed her community development director three years later. Since winning the 2011 mayoral race, she’s followed the advice given by Johnson and surrounded herself with good people. Women can get elected, she said, and shouldn’t let fear of criticism keep them from leading. “If you can’t run, encourage others to run.”

Billboard compromise draws criticism, praise The county’s 4-year-old billboard moratorium was set to expire Jan. 31, and outdoor advertising companies could have lined up at the door to pull permits Feb. 1 if Commissioner Richard Briggs had withdrawn his ordinances to ban conventional billboards and electronic message centers. Briggs was sponsoring three ordinances – one dealing with conventional billboards, one with EMCs and one with digital billboards, emu lat ing the city’s Briggs ban, which prohibits new billboards and disallows converting conventional billboards to digital. The weekend before the Jan. 28 meeting, however, Briggs decided that he didn’t have the votes to ban EMCs and “static billboards,” so on Saturday he posted a mes-

Betty Bean sage on the commission’s on-line forum announcing he would withdraw the first two ordinances and only push the digital billboard ban: “I have met with several of the smaller, local companies that are based in Knox County. Most are small family businesses that would be adversely affected by a total ban. ... “The message I receive is ‘let’s regulate, not ban.’ “The owners are not opposed to sitting down with the MPC, environmental groups, homeowner associations, and local government representatives and working on regulations that everyone can live with.” His announcement immediately drew criticism that he had caved to special interests.

“Absolutely false,” Briggs said. “I did nothing until I talked to the whole leadership of (anti-billboard citizens’ group) Scenic Knoxville, making it clear that if we didn’t make a compromise, all three ordinances would fail.” Briggs said he believed that he would lose the votes of Commissioners Ed Shouse and Mike Brown if he dug into an all-or-nothing position. Commissioners Amy Broyles and Sam McKenzie persuaded Briggs to defer the two ordinances for 90 days and send them to the Metropolitan Planning Commission to add use-on-review requirements rather than to withdraw them. McKenzie warned of “opening up a rabbit hole.” Broyles argued that having MPC add use-on-review provisions would be “reasonable, simple, easy and it takes care of it without opening a whole big can of worms.”

The amended ordinances passed by a 6-4 vote with R. Larry Smith, Dave Wright, Brad Anders and Jeff Ownby voting no. Mike Hammond was absent. Joyce Feld and Margot Kline of Scenic Knoxville are standing by Briggs, and say they are pleased with the compromise. “Richard has been an absolutely fabulous partner in this effort,” Feld said. “He has stuck to his word and followed through on everything he told us he would do.” Billboard interests are not happy with the vote, and dropped hints about lawsuits. Briggs said he thinks he did the right thing: “You get down to a point where everybody’s drawn a line in the sand – all or nothing – but we would have had nothing if we hadn’t compromised,” Briggs said. Ordinances must be approved twice, and this one will come up again in February.

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SHOPPER-NEWS • FEBRUARY 4, 2013 • A-5

Wood ducks and warblers NATURE NOTES | Dr. Bob Collier January’s Noah’s Arktype floods had not yet come to the Beaver Creek bottomlands when, on Jan. 5, we put up wood duck boxes in the wetlands along my stretch of the creek. We joined a bright young lady who had crafted some excellent nest boxes as part of a Girl Scout Silver Award project. A family expedition, plus me, to find just the right places for the boxes and to put them up, brought us out on a nice mild January morning. Lest you think that we were overeager, out there all bundled up, putting up bird nest boxes in the dead of winter, let me remind you that as of now, it is only two months until April! The owls are feeding nestlings, the purple martins’ average arrival date is Feb. 12, and the tree swallows will be close behind. It’s time to be cleaning out those bluebird houses and, as we were doing, putting up more housing. There are 85 species of North American birds that prefer or require cavities in which to hatch and raise their young. Before there were any people around, there were plenty of natural cavities, in large old trees with rotten places and holes where dead limbs had broken off. And the woodpeckers were, and still are, prime real estate developers, most of them excavating a new cavity each year for nesting, and often, a second one in the fall, for winter roost-

Susano heads state Court of Appeals Judge Charles D. Susano Jr. has been elected by his peers as presiding judge of the Tennessee Court of Appeals, succeeding Herschel Susano Franks, who retired at the end of 2012. Susano has been a member of the Court of Appeals since March 1994, when he was appointed by former Gov. Ned Ray McWherter. Susano practiced law here prior to 1994. He graduated magna cum laude from the University of Notre Dame and attained his law degree from UT, where he was a member of the Order of the Coif and the Tennessee Law Review. He and his wife, Carolyn, live in west Knoxville and have three children.

ing. Then the cavity nesters lesser-equipped for excavating wood could move into the abandoned woodpecker holes. Now, with a lot of our woods giving way to subdivisions and malls, and overachieving tidy types cutting all the dead trees and snags in yards and parks, nesting cavities have become scarce. That whole situation was greatly compounded with the arrival of the alien, aggressive starlings and house sparrows. They take whichever nesting holes they want from the smaller birds, tossing out the hatchlings and often killing the parents. On the positive side, a considerable number of our native birds have been given a significant boost in their numbers by humans making nest boxes. The most noticeable success has been with our eastern bluebirds. The largest and most enduring housing development for the birds has happened because of all those folks who through the years have tended to their beloved purple martins. But many other birds will take to a human-made home: owls, kestrels, wrens (when they’re not nesting in an old hat in your garage), chickadees, titmice, tree

Wood duck

Prothonotary warbler

swallows. And that brings us back to the wood ducks, and why the swamp people were down in the creek bottom in January. There are actually two species of brightly-colored birds in our area that like to live in nest boxes in lowland watery places. The wood duck and the prothonotary warbler both nest in wateroriented habitats. Both like their homes leaning out over the water, if not actually standing in it. Otherwise the two birds are about as different as any two birds can be. Wood ducks are water birds. They eat stuff that lives in the water, and their babies can care for themselves and find food almost from the moment they hatch. The warblers are regular bug-eating little land birds; they just happen to

like waterfront property. Wood ducks are widespread now across the eastern United States, but by the early 1900s they had been hunted nearly to extinction. Hunting laws were passed just in time, and then many wildlife agencies, as well as lots of private citizens, began setting out wood duck nesting boxes such as the ones we were putting up along Beaver Creek. Fortunately, the wood ducks have rebounded. They may be our most beautiful duck. Check out that male in his breeding plumage in your bird book! Their family life is amazing, too. The females lay 1015 eggs. Then sometimes, other female wood ducks will lay their eggs in there, too, a practice called, appropriately, “dumping.� The first mama duck can end up with

two or three dozen eggs! When the baby ducks all hatch, they climb out of their nest hole or box, and jump, bounce or splash depending on the nest location. If not near the water, mama duck leads them off, across golf course or busy highway, to the nearest water. The fuzzy baby ducks can swim and find their own food immediately. I have often seen a row of fluffy wood duck chicks swimming along Beaver Creek behind mama duck. It’s a really nice scene. Good news for humans: wood ducks exhibit what the ornithologists call strong nest site tenacity. They usually return to the same place to nest, year after year. So we’re hoping our Beaver Creek nest boxes will have tenants this year and next year and on and on. We’ll keep you posted. That other water-oriented, cavity-nesting bird, the prothonotary warbler, also named the golden swamp warbler, is truly golden. They are named after certain Vatican officials who are dressed in splendid golden-yellow robes. The male warbler’s

head, throat and breast light up a gloomy swamp like a ray of sunshine. I saw my first one from a canoe. The bird was making a nest in an old hollow stump by the dark, still waters of the Okefenokee Swamp, one of those instant and brief sights you never forget. Prothonotary warblers live in most of the eastern United States, mainly south of the Ohio River. They especially like willow trees, because they are usually near or in the water and have soft wood that rots quickly to provide good nest holes. I’ve heard of their nesting near the Island Home airport, and around the lake at Kingston. But my favorite place to hear their song in the spring, and usually see them, is Cove Lake State Park. The hollow willow snags standing in the water there make a perfect habitat for the golden swamp warblers. I try to go up and stand on the observation platform there at least once every spring just to get my yearly prothonotary warbler fi x. Prothonotary warblers will use human-made boxes, too. They like boxes about the size of a bluebird box, only with a smaller entrance hole, about 1 Ÿ inches. This lets warblers in and keeps some (but not all) other problems out. They lay an unusually large number of eggs for a warbler, 8-10 or so. But their babies follow a more standard program and stay in the nest until they can fly. And, being out over the water, they have to get it right the first time! Maybe that’s why they lay so many eggs. Birds can really be interesting.

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Republican clubs merge Two Republican clubs have merged, resulting in a new meeting place and date. Michele Carringer, president, says the ofCarringer ficial name is the Fountain City and North Knoxville Republican Club. The club won’t meet in February, but will gather at Louis Restaurant on North Broadway at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday, March 12. Those wanting dinner should arrive at 5:45 p.m. Other officers are Tim Wheeler, vice president; Donna Corbitt, secretary, and Virginia Dunn, treasurer. Info: 247-5756.

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A-6 • FEBRUARY 4, 2013 • SHOPPER-NEWS

There was a great tug of war for Richmond Flowers of Montgomery, Ala. Schools across America wanted him for football and track but the recruiting race came down to Alabama and Tennessee. Paul Bryant promised to hire a track coach and build a track. Tennessee had a track and a track coach, Chuck Rohe, and a bright, young football coach, Doug Dickey. Bryant didn’t dig deep enough to realize he never had a chance. Richmond was fed up with how racial hatred in Alabama politics affected his father. He was going out of state. Richmond also recognized the University of

Tennessee as a bit more sophisticated and cosmopolitan than Alabama, more of a melting pot. Tell your Tide friends it remains so. UT assistant Clifton Stewart was point man in the long, hard recruitment of Stanley Morgan of Easley, S.C. Morgan’s commitment was a big prize for Bill Battle and his staff. Joy soon took a strange turn. Paul Dietzel, then coach at South Carolina, told Battle that the Gamecocks had to sign Morgan or he would be fired. Battle’s first coaching job had been with Dietzel at West Point. This dilemma was heavy. Bill owed a debt of gratitude to Dietzel but worked for Tennessee. A Clemson source, monitoring Morgan, soon told Tennessee that the superstar was going to South

Carolina. Clifton rushed to Easley, to the little frame house with the old Plymouth in the yard. The Morgans were gone. Neighbors said Stanley’s mother had a new job, a new car and a new place to live. Clifton found Mrs. Morgan. She confirmed that her new “opportunities” were related to Stanley’s decision to become a Gamecock. A few days later, she called Tennessee. She had quit her job, given up the new house and given back the new Lincoln. She said her son had not smiled once since she had made him switch sides. She asked if Tennessee would still take him.

a bouquet of yellow roses. For no particular reason, except that recently, he had asked me what my favorite flower was, and he always pays attention. Both of us have been alone for a lot of years (that “solitary place” Isaiah mentioned), but fortunately each of us also had a friend who encouraged us to step out of our comfort zones, and take a chance. I frequently ponder the fragile hinges our lives turn on. What if one of us had not heeded the encouragement of our friend? What if one of us had been too afraid to

meet a stranger in a public place? What if we had not felt like old friends from the very beginning? What if he had not had eyes as blue as my father’s? What if, indeed? But we did heed; we were not afraid; we did feel comfortable; he did have extraordinarily blue eyes; and I did – quite simply – drown in them. I believe that “the wilderness and the solitary place are glad” for us. I believe that our families and friends are glad that we have found one another. I believe that God had a hand in this and

is pleased that we cooperated, and that our lives will be enriched by the joy and contentment we have found. So what lessons have I learned from this unexpected journey? Be patient. (God works in God’s own time.) Pay attention. (You may not see a burning bush, but there will be signs.) Keep your heart strong. (It is a muscle, after all.) Don’t settle. (When it’s right, you’ll know.) And last, but certainly not least, God is good, all the time. (But sometimes, He excels!)

You might not believe this but … Some former insider will someday tell a colorful tale of how Tennessee faked out rival recruiters and got away with a high school lad who grew up to be an all-American. Besides the possibility of cheating and lying, football recruiting may include cloak-and-dagger stories that are slow to spill out of the closet. That’s how competitive recruiting is – a lot of stuff happens and almost anything goes but don’t talk and don’t get caught. Return with me now to yesteryear, 1927. For some strange reason, Bobby Dodd and Paul Hug didn’t really want to be Volunteers. They rode the bus from Kingsport to Nash-

Marvin West

ville with the idea of playing for Vanderbilt. Dodd’s grades were suspect but both signed some kind of papers and were all set to be Commodores. Robert R. Neyland did not like this news. He wanted Hug and would take Bobby to get Paul. Knoxville sporting goods dealer Frank Callaway was appointed to investigate. He drove to Nashville for

what he considered a rescue mission. The rules of that day said a player wasn’t officially in school until he played a game. Callaway went on campus, found the players and explained their mistake. They repented, gathered possessions, squeezed into Callaway’s car and drove east on a sunny September afternoon. Dodd and Hug enrolled at Tennessee the next morning at 10. They were called transfers. That afternoon they played in a freshman game, 45-0 over Murphy Institute. Vanderbilt and others screamed foul. Neyland remained silent but supposedly smiled.

Lovely is the rose

Cross Currents

Lynn Hutton

The wilderness and the solitary place shall be glad for them; and the desert shall rejoice, and blossom as the rose. (Isaiah 35: 1 KJV)

As Lucy (of Peanuts fame) says to Linus, “I have made up a list for you; I call it ‘Things You Might as Well Know.’” And here is what you ing about the Lord’s cho- “might as well know”: as I sen people. have been explaining to my However, today, I smile friends and family, “Well, at this verse of Scripture there is this guy….” Today, “this guy” sent me and take it very personally.

The rainbow comes and goes, And lovely is the rose. Waters on a starry night Are beautiful and fair. (“The Rainbow,” William Wordsworth) Isaiah wrote, “The wilderness and the solitary place shall be glad for them,” and I know (really, I do know) that he was writ-

HEALTH NOTES

UT NOTES ■ The UT College of Business Administration Master of Business Analytics program has been recognized by InformationWeek magazine as one of the nation’s top 20 programs in big data analytics. InformationWeek looked at big data analytics programs within colleges of business, computer science and engineering across North America. The top programs were not individually ranked.

Other recruiting stories are in Marvin West’s first book, Tales of the Tennessee Vols. Signed copies are available by mail from WESTCOM, PO Box 38, Maynardville, TN 37807. The cost is $20.

AARP driver safety classes

■ PK Hope Is Alive Parkinson Support Group of East Tennessee will meet 11:30 a.m. Tuesday, Feb. 19, at Kern UMC Family Life Center, 451 E. Tennessee Ave. in Oak Ridge. The topic of this month’s program will be “Talk to us about LSVT Loud” presented by local speech therapists Melissa Grater, Linda Singleton and Tonya Connell. East Tennessee Personal Care Services and Emeritus of Oak Ridge Assisted Living will provide a light lunch. All are welcome. Info: Karen Sampsell, 482-4867; email pk_hopeisalive@bellsouth. net or visit www.pkhopeisalive.org.

For registration info about these and all other AARP driver safety classes, call Carolyn Rambo, 584-9964. ■ 9 a.m.-1 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday, Feb. 6-7, Oak Ridge Senior Center, 728 Emory Valley Road, Oak Ridge. ■ 9 a.m.-1 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 9, and Saturday, Feb. 16, Our Savior Lutheran Church, 2717 Buffalo Trail, Morristown. ■ 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 14, East Tennessee Medical Group, 266 Joule St., Alcoa. ■ 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 23, Rodgersville Senior Center, 497 Main St., Rodgersville.

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KARNS/HARDIN VALLEY SHOPPER-NEWS • FEBRUARY 4, 2013 • A-7

Faith Promise celebrates new worship center By Theresa Edwards Faith Promise Church completed a two-year building project and celebrated the grand opening of its new worship center at the Pellissippi campus Jan. 26-27 with three worship services. The new worship center has 25,150 square feet with 1,700 seats. It is an extension and renovation of the previous space, expanding with an additional 700 seats. The lobby was also ex- Dr. Chris Stephens, senior paspanded, completing the tor, presents a message at the two-phase construction grand opening church service. project begun in August 2011. The new children’s are needed to provide a building was completed place to meet and worship last August. together. More important than Faith Promise Church the buildings, according had 63 baptisms across all to senior pastor Dr. Chris its campuses and 5,300 in Stephens, is the congrega- attendance. The church will tion. “That’s what makes be dividing $5,000 among up our church, the people,” three local charities. Info: he said. But the buildings www.faithpromise.org./

Magen Paine is baptized Sunday by Brad Ervin, pastor of outreach and missions, wearing the shirt given her that says “No Turning Back.”

Michele Stephens, worship and creative arts leader, sings along with the praise team. Photos by T. Edwards of TEPHOTOS.com

The congregation sings praise songs.

Finding freedom is goal of Infusion ministries By Ashley Baker Dave Park, president of Infusion Ministries, knows how hard it can be to find freedom in Christ. His own journey ran right through forests of doubt. Infusion Ministries is a nonprofit faith-based ministry serving the Knoxville community. Park said that the name Infusion stands for “Christ in you, and you in Christ,” implying both the goal and the purpose of the ministry: to be united with Christ. The ministry offers classes, seminars and conferences designed to help young Christians discover the tools they need to set free their identity. Bible and scripture studies help free participants from such things as fear and addictive behaviors, said Park. Park said his own life was touched by the writings of and Park’s subsequent friendship with Neil T. Anderson in 1992. Park read Anderson’s books, “Victory Over the Darkness” and “The Bondage Breaker.” A motivational speaker, Park was speaking primarily to college

Dr. Dave Park, president of Infusion Ministries, speaks at a conference. Photo submitted and high school students, and he knew Anderson’s message was for them. In searching for youth-based books on the subject, Park found there weren’t any. Anderson had a ministry called Freedom In Christ Ministries, but he had no materials to help Dave spread the word to young people. Within a few months, Park had joined with Anderson’s ministry, determined to find someone to create youth versions of Anderson’s books “Victory Over the Darkness” and “The Bondage Breaker.” In prayer to search for a writer, Anderson got a message that Park didn’t expect: Park should write the books. “Everything in me want-

ed to say, ‘no.’ I knew writing was not in my future. I am dyslectic,” said Park. However, the Holy Spirit, said Park, was pushing for a “yes.” “So I did!” said Park. “I received contracts to write two books, but the miracles did not stop there: James Dobson of ‘Focus on the Family’ got our first book, ‘Stomping Out the Darkness,’ which embodied the youth version of ‘Victory Over the Darkness.’ That book became the topic of his daily radio show.” As a result, 30,000 copies “immediately flew off the shelf,” said Park. “Today, more than 150,000 have sold.” Infusion Ministries branched off in 2002 with Park at the helm to offer training and counseling through seminars, conferences, workshops and resources with an emphasis on equipping pastors and small group leaders. Park said, “We seek to

provide those hurting with a special time where they can receive cleansing and experience life-changing truth.” Infusion Ministries also offers various Bible studies at Park’s local church, Two Rivers. Two other noteworthy parts of Infusion Ministries are The Lord’s Prayer Journey and the Men of the Banner app. The Lord’s Prayer journey is an extended time of one-on-one prayer in which a person can learn to pray using Jesus’ famous prayer found in Matthew 6:9-13 as a guide. Park describes this as “a powerful tool designed to help individuals encounter God, demolish strongholds and resolve personal and spiritual conflicts.” The Men of the Banner app unlocks a Bible study that looks at “life-changing truths,” said Park. In the study, Park and the Infusion staff explain how men can find authentic, lasting free-

dom in Christ. The study includes sessions such as “The Battle for the Mind,” “Forgiving from the Heart,” “Overcoming Anger” and “Overcoming Addictive Behavior.” Men of the Banner

can be purchased from the App store for 99 cents. Infusion Ministries will lead seminars for any size church group. Info: www. infusionnow.org or 9661153.

Knox native promoted at Carson-Newman Dr. Kina Steed Mallard is now executive vice president and provost at CarsonNewman College. She has been vice president Mallard of academic affairs since joining Carson-Newman in 2009. “This promotion is the next logical step in a long, distinguished administrative career for Dr. Mallard,” said college president Randall O’Brien. “She will be well-positioned to move to a college presiden-

cy, if she so desires.” A Fountain City native, Mallard previously served as academic dean at Gordon College in Wenham, Mass. She also served at Union University in Jackson, Tenn., as associate provost for faculty and academic development, as well as chair of the communication arts department. Mallard received her undergraduate degree from Middle Tennessee State University. She continued her education at the University of Tennessee earning both a master’s degree in organizational communications and a doctorate in communication.

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A-8 • FEBRUARY 4, 2013 • SHOPPER-NEWS

‘Unsung Heroes’

Girls League at FMS The Girls League at Farragut Middle School has raised more than $20,000 for the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society in the past seven years. This makes FMS one of the top school contributors in the state. Pictured with boxes to collect donations are FMS students and Girls League members Aaliyah Holmes, Amber Duenkel, Laura Whaley, Samee Medio, Gracie Criss, Sarah Ditchfield, Calista Newsom and Felicia Barrickman. Photo submitted

Spelling bee at A.L. Lotts A.L. Lotts Elementary School held its spelling bee recently with WVLT news anchor Bob Yarbrough serving as the announcer. The finalists were 5th grader Katherine Chen, 4th grader Ainsley Foster and 5th grader Ivan Chan. Photo submitted

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GO! Contemporary Dance Works will perform “Unsung Heroes: Women of World War II” 8 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 9, and 2 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 10, at the Bijou Theatre. The fulllength contemporary ballet, which focuses on women’s roles and their experiences during World War II, will be accompanied by live music performed by the Samuel Williams Quintet. Seven choreographers were commissioned for the production, and elaborate lighting, authentic costumes and set design will be used. More than 40 dancers ages 11-40 will perform. Tickets are $22 in advance and $27 at the door. For tickets, call 684-1200. Info: www.gocontemporarydance.com.

Fundraising for Second Harvest This year’s Jason Jablonski Memorial “Project Heart Cart” peanut butter challenge and food drive will kick off this week. Many schools in Knox County will collect peanut butter and other food and monetary donations for Second Harvest Food Bank. For more information, contact your nearest school or visit www. secondharvesttn.org. The Color Bash 5K will be held 9:30 a.m. Saturday, Feb. 23, also to benefit Second Harvest. A three-mile race will be held at Lakeshore Greenway. Participants will be covered with various colorful dusts by color stations set up throughout the course. Info: www. colorbash5k.com.

Penguin pandemonium at FIS Farragut Intermediate School 3rd graders Ashton Wright, Sydney Elam and Ella Park take a break from a corn hole game during gym class to show off the penguins they’ve earned from selling magazines for the school’s fundraiser. Ashton also earned a mustache when she drew a mustached penguin from the The mustached penguin from mix. Photo by S. Barrett the school’s fundraising flyer

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SHOPPER-NEWS • FEBRUARY 4, 2013 • A-9

Shopper-News Presents Miracle Makers

Reach Them to Teach Them if we build a foundation of a By Sara Barrett mutually positive relationship In 2006, Amy Crawford with a child, that child will do was about to return to teacheverything he or she can to exing after leaving a position at ceed our expectations.” A.L. Lotts Elementary School three years earlier to start a The Reach Them to Teach family. In her new 8th-grade Them annual event, which is teaching position at West Valgiven a different name each ley Middle School, she found year, has grown to fill the herself teaching some of the Tennessee Theatre. Crawford same students she had known shares her story of inspiration, as 3rd graders. and radio talk show host Hal“For me, as an educator, lerin Hill serves as MC for the it was really insightful,” said evening in addition to sharing Crawford. “Once I got into the his own inspirational words. classroom and saw how the Hill has played a big part in kids had changed, it was a real every event since 2006. eye-opening experience. Special guest speakers “Instead of coming in with have included Truett Cathy, shining eyes and leaning forthe founder of Chick-fil-A resward to listen with interest,” taurants and national motivaCrawford said, the students tional speaker Don Bartlette. were now “real dull, apathetMembers of the community ic … they went from being who want to make a difference thirsty (in the 3rd grade) to can sponsor a seat for a teachbeing drenched.” er at the event. Crawford said her students “We don’t want anyone to were still the good kids she had pay to attend,” said Crawford. known before. They did what Dinner is served and each atshe asked them to do, but they tendee receives a special gift to had lost their passion for learnremember the message of the ing. This made her think of a West Valley Middle School 8th grader Brayden White shares a laugh with his teacher, Amy Crawford, evening. quote she had heard from a fel- founder of Reach Them to Teach Them. Photo by S. Barrett Reach Them to Teach Them low educator: continues to gain momentum. Teachlisted on the check was “His purpose.” …” and “I feel …” One student’s work “They come in to the schools as quesers from Kentucky are now traveling struck a chord with her. He had always “My knees gave out when I saw that tion marks, and they leave as periods.” to Knoxville each year to attend the sat quietly and didn’t really show an check. At that moment, I said ‘God, you “They change from ‘show me, tell event. The group is also holding a secinterest in learning. When she read his know me, you know my insecurities, me, who, what, how,’ to ‘it is what it is,’” ond event this year in Chattanooga for poem, it included lines such as “I worry my failures, my faults. If you can use me Crawford said. the first time with Guy Doud as the that my future will be me, myself and knowing how short I fall, you’ve got me.’ After praying about it, Crawford lisspeaker. I,” and “I am the cheese and the world “My life was changed from that day tened to a cassette by the 1986 Nation“There is a national need for this,” is the mouse.” forward. To this day, I still don’t know al Teacher of the Year, Dr. Guy Doud, Crawford said, “if we could do this Crawford knew then that she wantwho the check was from.” which she had received in 1988 when full-time and have some grants or ed to do something, but she wasn’t sure The night before students came she got her first teaching job. She heard grow it in some way. This is definitely where to start. She wondered if she back from summer break, Doud spoke his inspirational stories of what really a faith-based organization, and as long could get Guy Doud to visit Knoxville. to an audience of about 500 at Cedar mattered to his students, and stories of as I’m the president of it, that will not Crawford contacted Doud. She Springs Presbyterian Church. Based the students who asked him to stand change.” knew his speaking fee was $3,500 and on audience feedback, Crawford beup with them on senior night because “Teachers are telling us that they she didn’t have any idea how to raise lieved the event had been a success. their parents weren’t available. need more of this,” said Halcomb. the money. She just knew he had to The Dream Team grew to about 60 “Anytime I got overwhelmed lookCrawford says the sky is the limit. come. people who had become just as exciting at data and thinking about teachShe hopes the organization can begin “I wouldn’t be in education right ed about the event as Crawford. They ing technique, I would lose my joy for holding regular meetings for teachers now if it weren’t for him.” wanted to know where things would teaching and I would listen to that tape to offer moral support, as well as workShe formed a group of teachers and go from there. Reach Them to Teach on my way home,” said Crawford. shops where they can learn more than friends, who now call themselves the Them was born. She listened to Doud’s message statistics and data. Dream Team, to help spread the word “When you attend the (Reach Them and realized the technical part of Businesses including Food City and about the event. to Teach Them) events, you get the type teaching “will always be part of it, Bread Box have helped with fees, alIn her Bible study of support that you don’t get anywhere but not the part of it. The part that though the group is still struggling. class, Crawford was else,” said Karla Halcomb, a Dream matters most i s these Crawford feels blessed to have been asked to think Team member and instructional coach students who of a goal biga part of the experience. with Knox County Schools. “It fi lls a sit in my class ger than herself “There are still days when I think, huge gap. It gives you that deep breath every day, and I that would require ‘Is this real? Am I going to wake up and you need.” can make a difdivine intervention to this will have been a dream?’” “It is our mission to care,” said ference in their make it happen. When The main point she hopes teachers Crawford, referring to the role of a lives.” she told her study group about sched– and anyone else who has a role in a teacher. “We have to care about our Crawford began asking other teachuling Doud to speak, they offered to do child’s life – take away from the events data, we have to care about our numers at West Valley if they were getting whatever needed to be done to make it is to know that the most important bers and our graphs. the same sort of feelings about their happen. thing they can tell that child is, “You “I understand that accountability roles and what they were seeing in their Shortly before the event took place, matter. You are here for a reason.” matters. I understand that we have to students. Their answers were similar. Crawford checked her mailbox at school For more information, visit have a way to measure effectiveness Around this same time, Crawford and found a cashier’s check for $3,000 w w w.re acht hem2te acht hem.or g and we want our students to achieve assigned a writing assignment to her made out to her with the purchaser or email Amy Crawford at amy@ academic standards. But my 20 years class. She asked them to write a poem named as “The Dear Lord.” The reason in the classroom has taught me that by completing sentences such as “I am reachthem2teachthem.org.

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A-10 • FEBRUARY 4, 2013 • KARNS/HARDIN VALLEY SHOPPER-NEWS

Grace Christian defeats Berean Christian in basketball

Trey Stewart from Grace Christian makes a pass to a teammate during a recent home game. Stewart put up 10 points for Grace in their 50-47 win over Berean Christian. Photos by Doug Johnson

Caleb Walker goes up for two and contributed seven points to the Grace Christian team’s 50-47 win over Berean Christian. McKenzie Krebs makes an attempt to steal the ball from a Berean Christian player during a recent home game. Grace Christian defeated Berean, 70-20. Krebs contributed 15 points to the game total.

McKinna Wilson scored 24 points for the Grace Christian Rams during a recent game against Berean Christian.

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KARNS/HARDIN VALLEY SHOPPER-NEWS • FEBRUARY 4, 2013 • A-11

Hardin Valley wins percussion competition By Theresa Edwards The Carolina Indoor Performance Association held the 2013 winter showcase competition at Hardin Valley Academy with percussion band and winter guard performances. Hardin Valley came in first place and Karns High came in second in the regional percussion band competition. In the winter guard National A class competition, Hardin Valley won second place. “Our mission is to give students an additional quality venue for performance and positive critique,” said Alex Rector, assistant band director at HVA. “This is a competition in the sense that units are ranked according to achievement. However, it is important for each individual to feel a

Dylan Krueger and Olivia Jones of Karns High

Nick Cameron and Grayson Kirk of Hardin Valley Academy sense of accomplishment. “For this reason, we want to congratulate every student, instructor, director and parent who has dedicated the time and resources to give what it takes to be a part of this creative activity known

as the ‘Sport of the Arts.’” Schools participated from the greater Knoxville area and from as far away as the tri-cities and Kentucky. Some teams did not make it to the event because of the ice storm the day before. Hardin Valley winter guard member Ashlynn Ransom Jason Morrell of Karns High

Newsome signs with Bryan College Karns resident and Grace Christian Academy senior Chase Newsome signed to play baseball at Bryan College next year. He is a four-year letterman for Grace and played catcher for the Rams. While at Bryan, Newsome plans to study business. He is the son of Lance and Lisa Newsome and brother to Kayla Cooper. Photo by Ruth White

Hardin Valley winter guard member Lizzy Goodlin

Photos by T.

Alicia Fishbeck and Ashley Day of Hardin Valley Academy

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Dead End BBQ: Knoxville’s neighborhood barbecue The Dead End BBQ owners and staff gather for a photo during a preseason game in Atlanta. They are: Duayne Huddleston, Rachel Ryan, Michelle Green, Leah Harville, owner George Ewart, owner Robert Nutt and Daniel Bryant. Dead End BBQ offers competition style and quality barbecue in a restaurant setting. They feature the best barbecue in East Tennessee and a whole lot more, including salads, sandwiches, desserts and drink specials. Visit them online at www.deadendbbq.com or better yet, stop by 3621 Sutherland Avenue across from the new UT RecSports complex and smell the delicious aroma for yourself. Hours are 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. Sunday through Thursday and 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. on Friday and Saturday. For take-out orders: 212-5655.

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A-12 • FEBRUARY 4, 2013 • SHOPPER-NEWS

Creating quality at VG’s Bakery The sacks of flour and sugar stacked in the shop tell the tale of VG’s Bakery.

Sherri Gardner Howell

Well, that, and a taste of anything in the display case. Spend a morning with David and Vanessa Gwin, and you will have a tasty morning. VG’s Bakery opened at 11552 Kingston Pike in the shopping center with Kohl’s in November 1999. It has never moved; yet every day someone “discovers” VG’s, says David Gwin. Vanessa is quiet, preferring to show her mastery and creativity each time a customer takes a bite of one of her cookies, cakes, pies,

pastries or breads. David never met a stranger, and he tells the story of VG’s, punctuating its history with anecdotes and family timelines: “Then Katie was born …” “When Riley came along …” VG’s Bakery is the story of a woman who loves to cook, and a family willing to commit to the dream. Vanessa is a trained chef who decided not to work for a year after her first child, Katie, was born in 1986. So, instead of working, she baked for friends, and then for businesses. Soon she had a busy business out of her home. “We didn’t know any better,” says David, with a laugh. “People would want something – pastries for The Orangery, breads for a local bed and breakfast – and Vanessa would make them.” A job offer as an executive chef soon came, so Vanessa rejoined the “real” work

world. When son Riley was born in 1992, Vanessa went to work at the school where Katie attended, still baking for specialty stores around town. When a local store’s request for 10 dozen rugelach grew the next week to an order for 60 dozen pastries, plans for the “hobby” to become a bakery got serious. VG’s Bakery opened on Nov. 2, 1999. Not being particularly media savvy, a child’s conversation with a reporter at Katie’s school became a story in a local paper, much to the Gwins’ surprise. “It came out two days before Thanksgiving,” says David. “By 9 a.m., we were sold out of everything.” Retail is tough, but David jumped into the business to help, and now Katie and Riley are essential partners as well. “We have two components to the business now,” says David. “We sell at nine farmers’ markets each week, and we have the shop. We have developed loyal followings at the markets and at the shop, and I’m not sure we could make it without both. Together, it is a great combination.” Katie, who is engaged to Mason Gonzalez, works in the store and goes to the markets with her father, and Riley is gaining cooking

Statistically speaking:

UT’s twin goals of academic and athletic success are attainable By Sherri Gardner Howell With two subjects that ignite passion from their fans – athletics and academics – Dr. Donald Bruce suggests simply letting the data do the talking when discussing the possibility of a happy union. Bruce, professor in the Center for Business and Economic Research and UT’s faculty athletics representative, spoke at the Rotary Club of Farragut on Jan. 30.

Bringing a research model to UT’s goals of excelling in athletics and becoming a Top 25 public research university shows that the two goals are not mutually exclusive, Bruce said. “Those who say we must sacrifice football, for example, to be a Top 25 public research university don’t know their data,” said Bruce. “When sports teams don’t do as well as the average fan would like, the fan

looks for something to blame. The university’s drive to be in the Top 25 academically has been cited as a reason. What a silly notion, and one that won’t stand up to the facts.” Bruce showed current and past lists of the U.S. News and World Report’s Top 25 Public Universities and discussed comparisons with colleges that rank in the top in the Bowl Championship Series (BCS). “Every Division

In the kitchen at VG’s Bakery are Riley, Vanessa and David Gwin. Photos by S. Gardner Howell

The Gwins: David, Riley, Katie and Vanessa.

skills in the kitchen with his mother. Vanessa insists that everything at VG’s Bakery is made from scratch with no shortcut mixes. The markets have taught them the value of buying everything they can locally, says David, so he picks blueberries, strawberries and peaches in season,

and other fresh ingredients from local farms find their way into the baked goods. They don’t do wedding cakes (“too stressful”) and haven’t jumped on the gigantic cupcake trend (“We make normal-sized cupcakes with sensible icing.”) Biggest sellers at the farmers’ markets are breads, with cookies tak-

ing first place in the shop. Her specialty, says Vanessa, is “quality.” Her husband adds, “creativity,” and the master baker doesn’t disagree. “That is what I love,” she says, “looking for new ways to make something taste even better, to fix what’s wrong and to be creative in baking something new.”

I school on the Top 25 (a c a d e m i c list) with the exception of the University of California at Berkeley has Donald Bruce been in the Top 25 BCS rankings,” he said. Bruce said progress is being made toward UT’s goal of hitting the Top 25 public universities list. “We were No. 50 last year and are at No. 46 this year. Over the years, we have been as good

as 37 (2006) and as low as 52 (2010).” As to what it will take to get to the Top 25, Bruce told the Rotarians that the university has to continue to do better in improving undergraduates’ ACT scores, in retention and in improving the six-year graduation rate. “We are making progress in all three – some steady and some slow – but progress,” he said. “We also have to continue to improve in the areas of graduate degrees, research expenditures, faculty salaries and infrastructure and resources, but I believe

our main benchmark is in how well our undergraduates do.” Bruce said that in his role as athletics representative, he always has things he can point to with pride in meetings with faculty from the other 12 SEC schools. “I believe we now have a firm commitment from the top in our athletic programs to set high academic expectations for the student athletes,” Bruce said. “And I can always wear my (UT women’s basketball) shirt. The women show everyone that it can be done.”

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SHOPPER-NEWS • FEBRUARY 4, 2013 • A-13

NEWS FROM GRACE CHRISTIAN ACADEMY OF KNOXVILLE

‘Tearing Down the Walls’ By Shannon Morris Each year, Grace Christian Academy hosts Spiritual Emphasis Week for the middle school and high school students. This year’s event, which was held Jan. 28 through Feb. 1, was called “Tear Down the Walls, Break Free, Twenty Thirteen,” and proved to be yet another powerful time of spiritual refreshment and renewal for the students and faculty. The guest speaker, the Rev. Paul Woods, challenged students in the areas of breaking down any walls or barriers that separate us from being what Christ wants them to be. For students, those walls often are comprised of the typical negative temptations like drugs and alcohol. However, even some things we might not think of as evil, such as social media, video games, movies and television, can distract us from our spiritual development. Students were challenged to recognize and prevent such things from becoming walls that divide and distract them as they seek to follow God.

Woods is the youth pastor at Trinity Baptist Church in Jacksonville, Fla. He is the Professor of Youth Ministry at Trinity Baptist College. Serving in youth ministry for 18 years, Woods has a unique understanding of students in a Christian school environment, as he also assists at Trinity Christian School in Jacksonville. Woods was used by God in a mighty way during this critical week at Grace, and our campus has experienced a fresh excitement about living for Christ in all areas of life.

Chase Reynolds and Heath Hatmaker

Rachael Asher, Chase Reynolds, Tyler King and Heath Hatmaker lead students in worship during Grace Christian Academy’s Spiritual Emphasis Week. Photo by Randy Down

Meeya Lowery, Kaycee Hendricks, Courtney Clift and Matthew Montgomery enjoy a day at Grace Christian Academy. Photo by Kara McKamey

Jaylen Haluska (kneeling) Abigail Seal, Sarah Hawk, Jonathan Seal are the Pevensie children in the Grace Christian Academy production of “The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe.” Photos byJulie Bass

Katie Borden is the White Witch and Sean Sloas is Aslan in the Grace Christian Academy production of “The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe.”

Narnia comes to Grace By Shannon Morris The Grace Christian Academy drama department cordially invites you to enjoy the upcoming presentation of “The Lion, Witch and the Wardrobe,” based on the book by C.S. Lewis. The high school drama department is proud to present this amazing story, which features a cast of 33 students (15 cast members and 19 extras). The production tells the story

of three children who discover a wardrobe closet that, upon entering, opens the door to adventure and discovery. The beautiful costumes for the production were designed by Dewayne and Sandy Clift, and the incredible set was created by Jeff Delaney, who is noted for his work on the Nativity Pageant of Knoxville, along with the design skills of Karyn Sloas and Teresa McNelly.

This is a true dramatic presentation, as the show will have no music or choreography. The students, under the direction of GCA drama teacher Tonya Wilson, have been working very hard to create a top-quality show that both the school family and the public will be sure to enjoy. Join us at 1 p.m. or 7 p.m. Feb. 12, in the Grace Baptist Church Worship Center. Admission is free.

Open house Feb. 10 By Shannon Morris Have you ever wished you could find out more about Grace Christian Academy? If so, attending an Open House is the perfect way to get your questions answered. Our next Open House is scheduled for 3 p.m. Sunday, Feb.10th. Here, you can meet some of our amazing teachers and staff members, tour the classrooms and facilities, and collect the important information that you will need as you consider Grace for your child’s education. Par-

ents and their children are invited, as are grandparents and anyone else who desires to get an inside look at the school. Beyond just seeing the physical location, you can also get a glimpse at the heartbeat of Grace, which is to lead, build and equip students to succeed, all in the name of Jesus. Please make your plans now to be a part of this terrific event, and allow us to help in any way that we can as you prayerfully consider your child’s educational opportunities.


A-14 • FEBRUARY 4, 2013 • SHOPPER-NEWS

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HEALTH & LIFESTYLES NEWS FROM PARKWEST, WEST KNOXVILLE’S HEALTHCARE LEADER • TREATEDWELL.COM • 374-PARK

Crisis management Law enforcement officers learn to diffuse crisis situations

It was one of those calls Officer Matthew Gentry says “could’ve ended really, really badly” but didn’t. A distraught man armed with a butcher knife stood in the middle of the street, slicing away at his arms in an attempt to commit suicide. “Long story short, I was able to talk him into putting the knife down and actually convinced him to comply with my commands to sit on the ground,” Gentry recounted. “I was then able to handcuff him and place him in the ambulance. I had every opportunity in the world to Taser him but didn’t because he was complying with the orders I was giving him. Since then, I’ve dealt with him two or three other times, and we’re on a first-name basis now.” Gentry, an officer with the Knoxville Police Department, tells the story to make a point – Crisis Intervention Team training is helping law enforcement officers diffuse potentially deadly encounters with the mentally ill. First launched by the Memphis Police Department in 1988 after a tragic shooting in which a police officer killed a mentally disturbed man, the CIT program was developed by the MPD in collaboration with the local chapter of the National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI) and mental health providers to improve police training and procedures in response to mental illness crisis. Today, the “Memphis Model,” as it has become known, has been adopted in more than 35 states and hundreds of communities. It’s what drew almost 50 officers from law enforcement agencies in Anderson, Blount, Hamilton, Knox and Roane counties to Peninsula Hospital in Louisville on two occasions recently to get a first-hand look at the mental health community, its patients, medical providers and the families affected by mental illness. The Peninsula “field trip” is but a part of a 40-hour training course that delves far deeper into mental health issues than does a staterequired course. Similar visits are made to Knox Area Rescue Ministries, the Psycho-Social Rehab Center and Mobile Crisis. The CIT classes, which take place at Ridgeview Psychiatric Hospital or the Law Enforcement Innovation Center in Oak Ridge, provide instruction in de-escalation techniques, suicide risk assessment, involuntary commitment laws and procedures, street encounters, dual diagnoses and mental illness in children, adolescents and the elderly. “It’s not reinventing the wheel – it’s basically showing that person that you care, that you are there for them, to allow them to talk and show them that you are listening to them and there to help resolve that situation,” said Gentry, who has now become a certified CIT trainer. “It’s more empathetic than sympathetic because, going through this more advanced training, you have a better understanding that they may be mentally ill but they’re still a person. They’re not always

Knox County law enforcement officers listen as Sheryl McCormick, coordinator of Peninsula’s peer support and recovery training, tells of her own battle with mental illness.

Liz Clary, director of patient care services at Peninsula, talks with officers during recent Crisis Intervention Team training.

Officer Matthew Gentry of the Knoxville Police Department has undergone training to become a certified CIT trainer.

Knoxville Police Department officers attended a CIT training last month at Peninsula. Left to right, they are: Front Row -- Sam Henard, Amy Boyd, Caryn Heitz, Terri Moore, Susan Coker and Matthew Gentry; Back Row -- Peninsula’s Director of Patient Services Liz Clary, Peninsula nurse manager Ann Cooper, Matt Peters, Michael Rupe, David Gerlach, Jason Artymovich, Brad Cox, Alan Meisheid, Peninsula Clinical Manager Dr. Charlotte Frye and Peninsula nurse manager Amy Spangler.

Knox County Sheriff’s Office officers attending the recent Crisis Intervention Team training at Peninsula are, from left: Front Row – Andy Collins, Jon Underwood, Jason Moyers, Bobby Law, Jeremy McCord and Tim Sellers; Back Row – Peninsula nurse managers Ann Cooper and Amy Spangler, Sgt. Mark Belliveau, Billy Douglas, Cas Clark, Benji Gresham, Charles Kuykendall, Greg Stanley and Peninsula Clinical Manager Dr. Charlotte Frye.

like this. It’s when they’re off their medication or if they’re having an episode, that’s why they are showing these symptoms and that’s why they’re acting that way.” Randy Myers, an officer with the Oak Ridge Police Department, echoed a similar sentiment after touring Peninsula. “It’s very helpful because it lets us see the other side and get their perspective on things and understand that they are going through a real crisis,” he said. “… it helps us understand, and try to relate from that perspective, especially if we’re the ones being attacked or whatever. It’s not us they’re attacking, they’re just acting out.” Not surprisingly, Liz Clary, Peninsula’s director of patient services, says the majority of its patients – 90 to 95 percent – don’t come to the facility of their own free will, but in handcuffs and in the back of a patrol car. “The state is trying to change that and has worked with emer-

It’s more empathetic than sympathetic because, going through this more advanced training, you have a better understanding that they may be mentally ill but they’re still a person. – Officer Matthew Gentry gency room physicians, but there are liability and safety issues to be considered,” she said. “There are patients who absolutely need to be contained when they are being brought to us. But a lot of these patients don’t – they should be brought in by family members. It’s very traumatic to be hand-cuffed, shackled, put into the back of a police car and brought here. There’s nothing therapeutic about that.” Furthermore, Clary said, the Peninsula staff is trained to avoid physically restraining patients whenever possible. Every incident

in which a patient is restrained is captured on the many video cameras throughout the facility and studied. “We look at every seclusion and every restraint and we ask, ‘What can we learn from this? What could have been done differently? What could we have done to prevent it?’ The law says that you do it if they are a danger to themselves or to others, but with the kids, you’ve got to think about what kind of damage your doing by putting them in restraints. You don’t want to do it. Our goal

in the restraint is to make sure we are providing a safe environment, and when you use seclusion and restraint that’s what we look at as treatment failure. We did something wrong. Even though you sometimes think that’s the only way possible, when you look back it, there really are some things you could do.” Even after 38 years in law enforcement, Gary Johns, an officer with the Anderson County Sheriff’s Office, says he came away with some valuable lessons. “I’ve been a policeman a long time, and there are a couple of things that I never thought about until this,” said Johns. “Especially if you’ve been doing this a long time, you get that hardcore attitude about a lot of things and this kind of brings everything back to earth.” For more information, visit TreatedWell.com or call 373-PARK.

Recovery is a Journey #-(-24+ ɥ #!.5#18ɥ "4! 3(.-ɥ #-3#1 has a strong history of helping people with serious mental illness and substance abuse move their lives forward into recovery. Dozens of classes provide support on the journey. See the complete class catalog at www.peninsulabehavioralhealth.com, or call ǒƘƖƕǓɥƙƗƎLjƙƘƎƎ for more information.


B-2 • FEBRUARY 4, 2013 • SHOPPER-NEWS

The woodhouse held kindling and wood to supply the house for heat. The barn was built in 1932 and the corn crib was added in 1940. Photos by K. Woycik

Visiting the Fain farm

Carter Scott whoops it up on Callie the Pallie Photo by Stephanie L. Boyd

Horse opera John Niceley, who raises grain-fed beef and teaches horsemanship at his family’s Strong Stock Farm on Rutledge Pike, never expected to be invaded by opera singers.

Carol Zinavage

Carol’s Critter Corner His daughter Carrie is a soprano with The UT Opera Theater, but this is something else altogether. Niceley is providing horses and rider training for Knoxville Opera’s current production of Giacomo Puccini’s “The Girl of the Golden West.” It’s set during the California Gold Rush of the late 1800s. The story centers around a reformed criminal, the woman who believes in him and the sheriff who wants him dead. And it’s all in Italian. Talk about a Spaghetti Western. Several of the characters will ride onto the stage of the Tennessee Theatre on real horses this weekend when the opera is performed. Niceley has been teaching the stars of the show how to look as if they’ve been riding all their lives and how to manage their horses in close quarters. “They are the nicest folks, and they’re all doing so well,” says Niceley. “The way they’ve improved since day one is just astonishing.”

Soprano Carter Scott has enjoyed her experiences at Strong Stock Farm. Practicing a difficult maneuver with her horse, Callie the Pallie, she eventually succeeded. “John Niceley told me to go off by myself and think about it for a minute, to let it sink in,” she says. “It’s a lot like singing. Sometimes you practice something the wrong way over and over. And when you finally get it right, you need to stop and think about it for a while.” Scott is, however, concerned that Niceley’s little black Pekingese dog, Pepper, isn’t really clear on one important detail. “She got between me and my horse and just demanded to be petted. It’s obvious that she thinks she’s the diva.” The singers and their horses must maneuver in tight spaces while they’re onstage. For that reason, all riders will mount and dismount from the right side, which is not standard. “There’s a window in the way,” laughs bass Ricardo Rivera, referring to the stage set. Though Rivera himself is young, he is playing a much older man. Niceley has been working with him to slow his movements while in the saddle. Stay tuned for next week’s second installment, when you’ll learn how performance week went for the equine stars and their riders, as well as the answer to the question on everyone’s minds: will the shows be “accident-free”? Send your interesting animal stories to news@ShopperNewsNow.com

On a beautiful country road in Hardin Valley is a barn more than 100 years old. The road is named Buttermilk Road, an appropriate name for a family farm. The Fain family purchased 67 acres in 1910 for $200, which was a large sum of money at the time.

Barnyard Tales Kathryn Woycik George and Barsha Fain had 15 children, raising 12 of them on this property. They lived in an old twostory farmhouse with no electricity or plumbing. The home was heated by wood. Two lanterns lit their way in the night. Snow blew through the cracks in the walls in winter. Life was hard but fulfilling. The children were all musicians who played the piano, banjo, fiddles or guitars. In 1932, the barn and garage were built. Both have remained there for 83 years. In 1940 the corn crib, smokehouse, woodhouse, blacksmith shop and twoseater were added. A twoseater, you ask? It isn’t a wagon or carriage, as I first thought, but an outhouse. And, yes, it had two seats side by side!

Have a Brownie

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Brownie is Young-Williams Animal Center’s spotlight animal of the week. She is an 8-year-old chocolate Labrador retriever mix whose adoption fee has been sponsored through the Furry Friends program. You can meet Brownie and her adoptable friends at Young-Williams’ Division Street location noon to 6 p.m. daily. See all of the center’s adoptable animals online at www.young-williams.org.

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The smokehouse and blacksmith shop were built about 1940.

Each of the children had their own chores. They helped raise horses, cows, chickens and hogs. The meat was stored in the smokehouse. Corn, peanuts and other crops were grown. A stream provided water, and a team of horses hauled water to the house in buckets. A two-room schoolhouse was originally located on the corner of Graybeal and Buttermilk roads. Many of the Fain children received their education from one teacher, who taught eight grades. Both George and Barsha had died by 1943. Three sons and a daughter remained on the farm. In 1967, they tore the farmhouse down, kicked

the chickens out of their coop and moved in for four months while rebuilding the home. Last week, I met Glenn Fain, George’s grandson. Glenn grew up on A two-seater was the family Middlebrook Pike outhouse having seating for two! and spent two weeks each summer helping his grandpa. His job and barn once were and, was to shell corn for the in 2000, built his retirechickens. He recalled the ment home among the other times when he would stick buildings. Even the original three chicken feathers in walkway and hedges rethe end of a corn cob and main. Glenn and his wife, throw it like a football. He Wanda, are proud of their called a “whirligig.” heritage and the memories Glenn has lived and they hold dear. worked in Chattanoga and Anyone wanting to share Morristown. He obtained the age, history, or story of the original piece of land their barn, email woycikK@ where the family house ShopperNewsNow.com.

‘Back when’ in Farragut By Sara Barrett Dick and Ellen Tisdale have lived in the same house in Farragut, just off Grigsby Chapel Road, since July 1978. They built one of the first houses in the Woodchase subdivision and have enjoyed watching the area around them grow. But they may have enjoyed watching the families in their neighborhood grow and flourish even more. The Tisdales moved to Woodchase from the Gulf Park neighborhood in Cedar Bluff “because that area was so built up, we wanted to move further west,” said Ellen. “We never expected we would have a Turkey Creek, but we love it.” “We knew it would grow,” said Dick, “but I can’t say that we anticipated what we have now.” Dick is retired from selling waterproof footwear and Ellen is retired from her job as a teaching assistant at Farragut Intermediate School. Their daughter, Lisa, attended Farragut schools. Dick and Ellen now regularly visit Lisa, her husband, John, and their two children, 8-year-old Jack and 10-year-old Julia, at their home in Alabama. Although the Tisdales love spending time with

Farragut residents Dick and Ellen Tisdale have enjoyed watching the area grow over the last 30 years. Photo by S. Barrett

their own grandchildren, they find themselves substituting as grandparents for others quite frequently. “We have reared many families,” said Dick, as he and Ellen talk about visiting the Farragut schools with their neighbors’ children for Grandparents Day. They estimate that over the last 30 years they’ve watched four or five families come and go from one house alone. Dick remembers shopping at the A&P on Kingston Pike where Walgreens and the new Costco now sit. At the time, it was the only grocery in town.

The Frontier House was the only restaurant in the area, and it was further up Kingston Pike. The building is no longer standing, but it was located across from what is now Volunteer Pharmacy. “Folks would bring their brown bags in at dinner,” Dick said, since alcohol could not yet be sold legally in the area. The Tisdales enjoy the occasional trip away, with a trip to two to Europe under their belt. But they are most happy with the life they’ve built in Farragut near their extended family in the homes around them.


SHOPPER-NEWS • FEBRUARY 4, 2013 • B-3

Shopper s t n e V e NEWS

Send items to news@ShopperNewsNow.com

FARRAGUT LIBRARY Storytimes and events at the Farragut Library, 417 N. Campbell Station Road. A parent or guardian must accompany each child, except for Older Preschool. For more info, call 865-777-1750. ■ Monday, Feb. 4, 10:30 a.m. – Preschool Storytime for ages 3-5. ■ Tuesday, Feb. 5, 10:30 a.m. – Older Preschool Storytime for ages 4-6. ■ Wednesday, Feb. 6, 10:30 a.m. – Baby Bookworms for infants to age 2. ■ Thursday, Feb. 7, 10:30 a.m. – Toddler Storytime for ages 2-3. ■ Friday, Feb. 9, 10:30 a.m. – Preschool Storytime for ages 3-5. ■ Saturday, Feb. 9. 10:30 a.m. – Discovering Birds. Paula Schneeberg of the Knoxville Chapter of the Tennessee Ornithological Society will help people get started in birding. After the program, weather permitting, a bird-watching walk through trails in Campbell Station Park will be held (some binoculars provided).

THROUGH FRIDAY, MARCH 15 Father-daughter dance tickets Tickets are on sale for the eighth annual Shamrock Ball – A Father-Daughter Dance, scheduled for 7-9 p.m. Saturday, March 16, at the Commons Area of Farragut High School, 11237 Kingston Pike. Tickets are $15 per couple and $5 for each additional person in advance and $20 per couple and $8 for each additional person at the door. Tickets will be available through noon on Friday, March 15, at: www.townoffarragut.org (nominal convenience fee assessed); Farragut Town Hall (open 8 a.m.-5 p.m. weekdays), 11408 Municipal Center Drive; and at the Farragut/West Knox Chamber of Commerce, 11826 Kingston Pike, Suite 110. Presented by the Town of Farragut and Kiwanis Club of Farragut, the Shamrock Ball will feature an evening of music and dancing provided by Gann’s Entertainment, light refreshments and a craft. Event staff will take a photo of each couple or family, and photos will be available for purchase online after the event. Fathers and daughters of all ages, as well as all family members, are welcome and encouraged to attend. Event proceeds will benefit East Tennessee Children’s Hospital, The Leukemia Society and Young-Williams Animal Center. For more info, visit www.townoffarragut. org or contact Lauren Cox, lauren.cox@townoffarragut.org or 865-966-7057.

THROUGH FRIDAY, MARCH 29 The Farragut Arts Council is seeking local authors of

13 Investment Prop-Sale 61 Duplexes

LOST: LARGE ANIMAL CLAW FROM NECKLACE. Lost on Alcoa Hwy between Pilot Vol Animal Hosp. 865-724-7911

Adoption

63 Houses - Unfurnished 74

ADOPT -- TEACHER & LAWYER COUPLE looking for a baby to love & give them everything. Call Rachel & Barry 1-866-304-6670

FARRAGUT. 1534 Bailey Park Lane, 2000 SF, 3 BR, 2 1/2 BA, lrg bonus, close to YMCA, marinas, & restaurants. $1600 mo. 865-384-7823

*ADOPT. Together we will provide a loving, secure, happy home with a bright future for your baby. Expenses paid. Christine & Bobby 1-888-571-5558.

WEST, Exec. home, 743 Fox Landing, 3BR + bonus w/closet, 2 1/2 BA, 2 car gar., fenced yard, AL Lotts Elem. & Farragut HS. $1450 mo., refs. req. 865-414-0392. ***Web ID# 201480***

Homes

40

WEST, Single Family Home, $1000 + $500 dep. 3/2.5, WD hookup, fenced. Call 423-312-6464.

CHEAP Houses For Sale Up to 60% OFF 865-309-5222 www.CheapHousesTN.com

North

40n

3BR, 2BA in Ftn. City. www.2822prudendrive. webs.com. 865-256-3613

Condo Rentals

13.5 ACRES- ESTATE CLOSE OUT- Can divide. Corner of Millertown Pk. & Rosewood Rd. Call 865-679-8105.

^

Comm. Prop. - Rent 66

CA$H for your House! Cash Offer in 24 Hours 865-365-8888 www.TNHouseRelief.com 2 PLOTS, Highland Memorial Cemetery, Sutherland Ave. Apts - Unfurnished 71 $3,000. 865-966-4533

Cemetery Lots

49

BR TOWNHOUSES Real Estate Wanted 50 121/2 BA, Powell area, WE BUY HOUSES

76

2BR, 2.5BA, FTN CITY off Broadway near 640. Priv. patio, one car gar., $850/mo. $50/mo. HOA. Call 865-679-8105.

Acreage- Tracts 46

new carpet, paint, appliances, no pets, washer / dryer Connections $650-$700

Education exhibit The special exhibit “Approaching 100 Years of Education” will be on display through Friday, May 10, at the Farragut Folklife Museum in the Town Hall, 11408 Municipal Center Drive. The exhibit highlighting Farragut schools will include lettermen sweaters; band, cheerleading and football uniforms; annuals; and photos. Featured items will include photos from the Farragut High School 1959 Dedication Ceremony during which then-senior Frank Galbraith – now a retired Farragut Middle School history teacher – helped to place a time capsule within the walls of the school. Also on display will be photos and the autobiography of Bill Bates, former University of Tennessee and Dallas Cowboys football player, who played on the most-winning team in Farragut High’s history in 1978. Museum hours are 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. weekdays. Admission is free. For more info, visit www.townoffarragut. org or contact museum coordinator Julia Jones-Barham, julia.jones@townoffarragut.org or 865-966-7057.

THROUGH FRIDAY, MAY 31 The Town of Farragut is requesting donations for its 29th annual Bob Watt Youth Fishing Rodeo, which will be held Saturday, June 8, at Anchor Park. Youth ages 13 and under participate in a morning of fishing and competing for prizes. The Town is seeking youth and adult spincast (push button) rod and reel combos in good working condition, as well as other fishing supplies including line, hooks, bobbers and sinkers. Farragut businesses are also encouraged to consider donating fishing-related items to be used as prizes for participants. Donations can be dropped off at the front desk of the Farragut Town Hall, 11408 Municipal Center Drive. For more info or to coordinate a specific donation drop-off time, contact Athletic and Park Coordinator Jay Smelser, jay. smelser@townoffarragut.org or 865-966-7057.

MONDAY, FEB. 4

NEW CONDO. 2 BR, 2BA, 1 car garage, no pets. $750/mo. $700 dep. Doyle 254-9552 WEST, NEW CONDO 2BR, 2BA, 2 car garage, $850/mo. $800 dep. No Pets. Doyle 254-9552

Manf’d Homes - Sale 85 I BUY OLDER MOBILE HOMES. 1990 up, any size OK. 865-384-5643

141 Boats Motors

PUPPY NURSERY

Ed Cloud 680-7955

WE BUY HOUSES

Musical

116

232 Trucks

Bennington Pontoon 2009, 27 ft, trailer, 90 HP Yamaha, 45 hrs, like new. $29k. 865-202-0177

Many different breeds Maltese, Yorkies, Malti-Poos, Poodles, Closing business Yorki-Poos, Shih-Poos, Call for details Shih Tzu, $175/up. shots & wormed. We do 865-406-6404 Campers 235 ***Web ID# 203227*** layaways. Health guar. Div. of Animal Welfare 2005 Travel Star 18', State of TN great cond., all of Health. Dogs 141 LicDept. opts., $5800 obo. 865# COB0000000015. 556-5897 423-566-3647 AUSTRALIAN Dingo, ***Web ID# 201028*** Wolf, Huskey, Shepherd Mix pups, Free Pets 145 Motor Homes 237 born Dec. 15. $75. 865-767-3036 ***Web ID# 203151*** ADOPT! 33' DOLPHIN motor Looking for an addihome w/slide out, Boxer Puppies, AKC, tion to the family? new tires / batteries / 8 wks old. 6 fawn, 1 white. transmission / brakes. Vet ck, shots, wormed. Visit Young-Williams Animal Center, the Ready to go. $375. 865-659-3166 official shelter for $19,500. 865-693-8534 ***Web ID# 201493*** Knoxville & Knox County. CHIHUAHUA Pups, 7 wks, 238 very small, different Call 215-6599 Motorcycles colors, shots, wormed or visit 865-932-2333. AMERICAN ***Web ID# 202605*** IRONHORSE 2007 knoxpets.org JUDGE CUSTOM, CHIHUAHUAS, 8 Price reduce to $16,000, weeks old, Male & gar. kept, immaculate Machinery-Equip. 193 Female, $125. cond., only 5,175 mi., Phone 865-577-1876 custom purple lights BOBCAT, BRUSHCAT, & front end with English Bulldog puppies, 72" BUSHHOG inverted fork, new reg. with 3 gen. New, $5500. Phone tires, $15,000 worth pedigree, 4F, 2M, 865-250-1480 of custom upgrades, $1500. 423-802-4127 $45K bike now only ***Web ID# 203370*** Bucket Forks & $16K, won't last long! sweeper for CaterPlease call ENGLISH BULLDOG pillar IT Machine. 865-776-9594 or email PUP, UGA4 & CH. Phone 865-250-1480 tkerr@southlandgrp.com bldlnes, 1M, born ***Web ID# 198019*** ***Web ID# 198065*** 11/4/12, $1,350. 423-2982999 bresbullies.com ***Web ID# 203060*** Music Instruments 198 FRENCH BULLDOG Pups, AKC full reg., Taylor GC7 6-String Blue sire, $1500 up. Grand Concert Guitar. hlth cert. 865-654-0710 Western Red Cedar ***Web ID# 203449*** top, Indian Rosewood back/sides. American Mahogany neck. Fretboard Inlay Abalone dots. Rosette Abalone soundhole. Gloss finish. Taylor slot-head tuners. Expressions electronics. Taylor Deluxe case. New May 2011. $1,600. 931-287-3629

German Shepherd pup- Household Furn. 204 pies AKC, ch. bldln, born 12/8/12. $500. MATTRESS SET. Larry 931-863-7520 WE BUY HOUSES ST. MARK UMC seeks Queen Pillow Top Any Reason, Any Condition a musician for their ***Web ID# 198795*** $150, new - in 865-548-8267 11:00 A.M. blended GOLDEN Retriever Like New brick townhouse, plastic, call or text www.ttrei.com traditional worship 2 BR, 1 1/2 BA, Turkey Puppies, AKC, 865-804-4410 svc. Exp in piano, Creek area. No Pets. dark red, $600 & up. organ & elec keybd Credit ck. $350 dep. $635 423-248-5267 QUEEN SIZE pref. Includes Wed ***Web ID# 202285*** mo. 1 yr lease. 865-986-0905 Fast Cash. Quick PILLOW TOP eve choir rehears***Web ID# 201417*** friendly service. MATTRESS SET als & occasional GREAT DANE PUPS Flexible to fit your $150. Brand new in special svcs. Send AKC, half euro. $800. needs. 865-257-3338 plastic. 865-805-3058. to: St. www.Lckennels.com Apts - Furnished 72 resume Mark UMC, Attn. 270-566-4167 Petty, Chair, ***Web ID# 201840*** Real Estate Service 53 WALBROOK STUDIOS Dave Boats Motors 232 Staff-Parish Rela25 1-3 60 7 tions Committee, KEESHOND Puppies Prevent Foreclosure $140 weekly. Discount 7001 Northshore CKC reg., vet chkd A GOOD Alum. Croppie Free Help avail. Util, TV, Ph, Drive, Knoxville, & shots. $500. Call or Bass boat, 16'4", 865-268-3888 or text 865-254-7510. Stv, Refrig, Basic TN 37919 or 60 HP motor, $2995. www.PreventForeclosureKnoxville.com Cable. No Lse. stmark1@bellsouth.net ***Web ID# 201704*** 865-982-1805; 456-7749

Any condition. Quick closing. 865-712-7045

MONDAY AND THURSDAY, FEB. 4 AND 7 College funding session The Town of Farragut will hold a free session on “9 New Ways To Beat the High Cost of College” from 6 to 9 p.m. on both Monday, Feb. 4, and Thursday, Feb. 7, at the Town Hall, 11408 Municipal Center Drive. The program is designed for families who want to double or triple their eligibility for college funding. Participants will receive info on how to locate and apply for every need-based scholarship, grant and low-interest loan for which the student will be eligible, how to pick the colleges that offer the best overall package, why private colleges are sometimes less expensive than state public schools, and how to properly complete the FAFSA. Tennessee College Funding Advisors are sponsoring the session with the Town of Farragut. Space is limited. To register, call 888-242-6063. For more info, contact Lauren Cox, lauren.cox@ townoffarragut.org or 865-966-7057.

MONDAYS, FEB. 4-MARCH 11 Zumba classes The Town of Farragut is offering a six-week series of Zumba classes on Mondays, Feb. 4-March 11, in the Community Room of the Town Hall, 11408 Municipal Center Drive. Zumba is a cardio-based workout designed to tone the entire body. Using primarily Latin-influenced music, the routines feature interval sessions where fast and slow rhythms are combined to tone and sculpt the body while burning fat. Karen McKinney is the instructor. Cost is $45. Registration deadline was Friday, Feb. 1. For more info, call 865-966-7057.

TUESDAY, FEB. 5 The Caregiver Support Group will meet from 10 to 11:30 a.m. Tuesday, Feb. 5, in Room 293 at Concord United Methodist Church, 11020 Roane Drive. Concord UMC is the home of CADES (Concord Adult Day Enrichment Services). The guest speaker will be Kelly Guyton-Frere, certified elder law attorney with Guyton & Frere. GuytonFrere will address legal issues of caregivers and answer questions. Refreshments will be provided by Elmcroft of West Knoxville. The support group, affiliated with Alzheimer’s Tennessee Inc., meets at 10 a.m. on the first Tuesday of each month. Anyone in the community who gives care to an elderly individual is welcome to attend. For more info, call 865-674-2835.

THURSDAY, FEB. 7 WEE Preschool registration

The Job Resources Group will meet from 8:30 to 10:30 a.m. Monday, Feb. 4, at Concord United Methodist Church, 11020 Roane Drive.

Office Furniture Computers & Check Cashing Equip.

The group provides assistance in preparing for interviews, revising resumes and finding employment.

Caregiver Support Group

Fishing rodeo donations sought

73 Business Equipment 133 Dogs

CENTRAL FLORIDA, FARRAGUT AREA fishing lodge & mobile 2BR, 1BA, laundry room, home park. RVs & family neighborhood , cabins & marina. 31 acres. $1,100,000, possible $680 mo, $250 dep, 1 yr lse. 216-5736 or 694-8414. fin. 352-303-7170

21 Wanted To Buy

THROUGH FRIDAY, MAY 10

Job Resources Group

Book Fest call for authors

Lost & Found

children’s books to participate in the sixth annual Farragut Book Fest for Children. Book Fest, hosted by the council in conjunction with the Town of Farragut and the Knox County Public Library Farragut Branch, will be held from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday, April 13, at Campbell Station Park. Authors will be accepted until spaces are full; first come, first served. The fest will include storytelling, book signings, music and art activities. Reading and learning are the primary objectives. Children will have the opportunity for one-onone interaction with participating authors, discovering their books and characters while offering the authors the chance to promote and sell their books. Authors will be provided a tent, table and chairs to use; there is no charge to participate. They will supply their books, decorations and signage. Interested authors should contact Farragut Arts Council member Sandra Dean, deansk@tds.net or 865-966-8356, or Lauren Cox, lauren.cox@townoffarragut.org or 865966-7057, for more info and to request an application.

Registration for WEE Preschool at First Baptist Concord for 2013-14 will take place 9 to 10:30 a.m. Thursday, Feb. 7, at the preschool, 11704 Kingston Pike. Registration packets are available at the Preschool Desk. For more info, call 865-966-6853 or email kkirby@fbconcord.org.

257 Sport Utility

261 Sports

238a

352

4 Wheel Drive 258 CHEVY SILVERADO 2500 HD 2007 Z-71 4X4, ext cab, SB, 4 dr., 126K mi., tool box, LineX bed liner, trailer brake contr., $16,200. 865-307-6367 ***Web ID# 200087*** Dodge Laramie pkg 2006 Mega Cab, 4x4, 5.7 Hemi, AT, 83K mi, cosmetic dmg left side. Bought new $12,000 obo. 865-250-1480 ***Web ID# 198040*** DODGE RAM 1500 SLT Quad Cab, 4x4, 2010, 52K mi, exc cond, fully loaded w/extras. Estate. $29,500. 865-776-2654 ***Web ID# 202607*** Ford Excursion 2005, Eddie Bauer, 60k mi, front end dmg, $10,000/bo. 865-250-1480 ***Web ID# 198038***

Cadillac 2011 CTS Coupe, performance pkg, 20K mi, fact. warr., sell $30,500. Window sticker $44,425. Will trade for older Cadillac. 865-680-2656 JAGUAR 2000 S-type, ***Web ID# 198487*** 125K mi, silver & black, $3500 obo. CHRYSLER 300C 2011, 865-250-1480 every option, anti ***Web ID# 200935*** collision, tungsten/ black, show room Lexus SC430 2005, Coupe, fresh, 7600 mi., hdtop/conv., black $32,500. 865-458-6554. on tan, only 48K mi. ***Web ID# 201788*** New tires, exc cond., loaded w/navigation, leather. Priv. owner. Cement / Concrete 315 $26,400. 865-805-8595 ***Web ID# 203157*** STEVE HAMNER MAZDA 6 2006, Auto, CONCRETE & BLOCK 3.0 V6, Bose 6 disc 25+ yrs exp. DriveCD, sunrf., 139,??? ways, sidewalks, all mi. $6500. 865-705-1016 types pours, Versa***Web ID# 200543*** lock walls, excavating. Call 363-3054. MERCEDES 560SL, 1988 Roadster, both ^ tops, runs great, all Flooring 330 around great shape $10,300. 865-380-5628 CERAMIC TILE installation. Floors/ MERCEDES BENZ walls/ repairs. 33 S550 2010, new cond. yrs exp, exc work! hard to find black John 938-3328 on black. Equipped w/4MATIC! AMG BODY TRIM & WHEELS, PANORAMA Guttering 333 ROOF, PREMIUM 2 PKG, Navigation, HAROLD'S GUTTER front seat comfort SERVICE. Will clean pkg., drive dynamic front & back $20 & up. multicontour front Quality work, guaranseats, driver assistance teed. Call 288-0556. pkg., rear parking monitor, Xenon headlights & much Lawn Care 339 Lawn Care more. 18K mi. Service B just completed. Like New. $67,900. Priv. owner. Orig. list $108,000+. 865-805-8595 ***Web ID# 203161*** BMW 330cic conv. 2005, 75K mi, dark blue, immac cond., $15,000. 865-680-2656 ***Web ID# 198488***

HONDA RIDGELINE 2006, 106K mi., 1 owner, white, roof rack, towing pkg., 2004 Kawasaki Prairie very good cond., 360, 4WD, winch, low never off the road, mi, great shape, $14,500. 865-963-1418 $2800 obo. 865-556-5897 JEEP WRANGLER ***Web ID# 200886*** Sport 2006, blk, AT, 2 tops, mint, 69K mi., Autos Wanted 253 $16,000. 865-604-4657. ***Web ID# 198497*** A BETTER CASH OFFER for junk cars, trucks, vans, running Comm Trucks Buses 259 or not. 865-456-3500 THERMO KING REEFER 2001, 53' $6200 obo. Auto Accessories 254 Nissan Altima GXE Call 865-250-1480 1999, AT, loaded incl NEW & used truck beds, ***Web ID# 198036*** sunroof, 30+ mpg, tail gates, fr./rear $2,995. 865-397-7918 bumpers, many ***Web ID# 201657*** Antiques Classics 260 makes. 865-250-1480 SAAB 9-3, 2003, Arc, Remote Starter, Mercedes CHEVY TRUCK, exc. cond. Great gas Benz 2005-2013. 1946, 37k original mileage. Loaded. Works w/Mercedez miles. 1 ton. Phone $5500. 865-933-4102 key bob. 865-250-1480 865-250-1480 ***Web ID# 200283*** ***Web ID# 198024*** ***Web ID# 198018*** VW 2002 JETTA TDI, mi, AT, hail Utility Trailers 255 Sport Utility 261 125K damage, $4500 obo. 865-250-1480 UTILITY TRAILERS FORD EDGE SEL ***Web ID# 200937*** All Sizes Available AWD, 2007, pewter 865-986-5626 metallic, stone lthr, VW 2005 Beetle TDI, 5 smokeymountaintrailers.com 96K mi., new spd, 145K mi, light rubber, serviced, hail damage, $4500 obo. 865-250-1480 etc. Carfax. $13,500. 865-806-3648 ***Web ID# 200936***

ATV’s

264 Roofing / Siding

FORD F-150 XL, 1996, GMC YUKON Denali Corvette 1998 coupe, AT, 8 cyl, 225K mi., 2003, AWD, low mi, 87K mi, white on runs great, $1,000. fully loaded, exc. black, exc cond, 865-936-4825 cond. $16,000. 865$16,500. 865-966-5122 933-4102 ***Web ID# 199240*** MAZDA B2300, 1997, ***Web ID# 200279*** 4 cyl, 5 sp, AC, tow hitch, $2,299. Poss. Domestic 265 trade. 865-951-4992 Imports 262

339

BURTON, MARK 197579MASTER Ad Size 2 x 2 4c W <ec> AT YOUR SERVICE!

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B-4 • FEBRUARY 4, 2013 • SHOPPER-NEWS

MYNATTS FURNITURE

" <0

/ 2 / ! "2 0 Â?$ OUR BIGGEST SALE EVER!

OVER $500,000 OF INVENTORY

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ar l u c a t c e p S pt. e D y r e v E Savings In pm -7 m a 0 1 I R MON-F - 6pm m a 0 1 T SA - 5pm SUN 1pm

Listed Below Are A Few Items! See These And More! Recliners...$188 • Lamps...$18 • Oak Deacon Bench...$222 • 4pc. Bedroom Suite...$298 • TV Stand...$198 • Curios...from $239 • Double Dresser...$299 • Wood Glider Rocker...$299 • Cedar Chest...$188 • Child’s Recliner...$69 • Bean Bags...$49 • Queen Visco Foam Mattress...$388 • Leather Recliner...$399 • Double Reclining Sofa...$788 • Double Reclining Loveseat...$688 • Queen Orthopedic Mattress...$188 • Corner Sectional...$688 • Wood Master Bedroom Suite...$1998 • Sofa and Loveseat...from $598 • King Orthopedic Mattress...$288 • Lift Chairs...$688 • Wood Bunkbeds...$98 • I-Heaters...$189 • Dinette Sets...$288

TWIN...$58

EA. PC

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Maynardville Hwy.

I-75

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865.922.7557 First Come, First Sold! EASY CREDIT TERMS •


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