SOUTH KNOX VOL. 32 NO. 61
IN THIS ISSUE
Turning those blues green
People and plants chilled out together at the fifth annual Beat the Winter Blues Wine & Cheese Party, a benefit for Ronald McDonald House held last Friday at Stanley’s Greenhouse.
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Giffin School still ‘in limbo’
See Betsy Pickle’s story on page 3
Level playing field for students? Unexpected barriers awaited the Austin-East Robotics Team when they applied to participate in the FIRST Robotics Competition, an international program that challenges talented high schoolers to solve high-tech science and engineering problems.
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See Bill Dockery’s story on page 4
No ice buckets needed here It all started with the ice bucket challenge. As the country was in the grips of that trend, Bonny Kate Elementary School fourth-grader Nolan Brang read an article that shared other types of charity challenges and became interested in boosting the YoungWilliams Animal Center. He and two friends started a successful campaign to collect donations for the animal shelter
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See Betsy Pickle’s story on page 8
Wine 101 Nancy Whittaker meets Jim Maples, owner of Southland Spirits and Wine. Customer service is tops for Maples at the recently remodeled store. He says Southland can offer customer service that grocery stores can’t.
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See Nancy’s story on page 9
Meet the toreador Bass-baritone Ryan Kuster thinks that most people can relate to George Bizet’s opera “Carmen,” which is being performed by the Knoxville Opera Company this weekend. “For one thing, people will recognize the music. Most people know a lot more of ‘Carmen’ than they think they do. And the story is compelling. There’s no real hero. It’s very human – there’s not a clear moment where you say, ‘Oh, this is the person that I root for.’”
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February July 29, 11, 2015 2013
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See Carol Shane’s story on page 7
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The old Giffin School on Beech Street has a lot of fans but so far no developer. Photo by Betsy Pickle
By Betsy Pickle The Giffin School building in South Haven has a long history, but its future remains a question. “It is historic, and it is in limbo, and we need somebody to get in there and save it, especially since it’s in good condition now,” says Kim Trent, executive director of Knox Heritage. “We don’t want it
to sit long or else it could deteriorate pretty quickly. Once a building isn’t occupied, it deteriorates more quickly than it does when you’ve got somebody there looking after it every day.” Hugh Holt, Knox County’s director of purchasing, says, “We have done our dead-level best to secure” the building, but trespass-
ers have broken in and left trash behind. The county Purchasing Department would like to find a buyer soon, he says. “We are looking at what our next steps are with the building,” says Holt, who attended Giffin as a youth. The building at 1834 Beech St.
has been unoccupied since Remote Area Medical, the nonprofit healthservices provider founded by Stan Brock, moved out and set up new headquarters in Rockford last May. Knox County, which owns the property, quickly issued a request for proposals, hoping to find a deTo page 3
One sculpture to go; hold the second By Bill B Bil illl Dockery D k The city’s Public Art Committee voted on Thursday not to buy a $36,000 sculpture on State Street and postponed consideration of another sculpture that has been offered as a gift for Mary Vestal Park in South Knoxville. The stainless-steel sculpture is by Isaac Duncan of Chattanooga and sits in front of the State Street Garage. It is part of the yearly Art in Public Places program that Dogwood Arts has The Public Art Committee took under advise- sponsored for eight years. Dogwood Arts execument the offer of a marble and steel sculpture done by Bruce Bennett. The gift, if accepted, tive director Lisa Duncan would replace an earlier sculpture at Mary Vestal (no relation) said that the piece is for sale for Park that deteriorated in the weather.
$36,000 or can b be removed $ 6 d when the Art in Public Places program makes its selections for the upcoming Dogwood Arts Festival. Duncan noted that for $35,000 the committee could place seven sculptures around town in the Art in Public Places program. The committee discussed whether to spend its budget on purchasing the Isaac Duncan piece or to have the space empty and commission a sculpture specifically designed for the State Street location. The voice vote not to buy the sculpture appeared unanimous. The sculpture under con-
The Public Art Committee has turned down the opportunity to buy a stainless-steel sculpture that stands in front of the State Street Garage. Titled “Threaded,” the piece by Chattanooga artist Isaac Duncan was offered at a price of $36,000. It is part of the Dogwood Arts yearly To page 3 program, Art in Public Places.
Love, love me do
By Sherri Gardner Howell
I have bad news for greeting card companies, restaurants and florists. When it comes to filling hearts with love on Valentine’s Day, you have some heavy competition that you will never beat. Elementary schools. My sweet husband, who groans like all men when February rolls around, has presented me with some very lovely cards, beautiful flowers and delicious dinners for Valentine’s Days through the years. Nothing can compare, however, to the Popsicle sticks picture frame with crayon red hearts on all sides and a second-grade photo of our younger son grinning from ear to ear. The scrawled “I love you Mommy” on the back completes the heart-tug. And then there is the plaster of Paris handprint from our firstborn
when he was 5 with a teacher-assisted poem on the back: “Here’s my hand on Valentine’s Day; Hold me close as I grow and play.” Even now, in the midst of trying to declutter, I can’t part with the schoolmade Valentine’s Day cards. I have been away from elementary schools so long that I don’t even know what’s “allowed” anymore as far as giving Valentines to classmates. I remember my own Valentine’s Days at school, however. Who knew so much could be read into the size and sentiment on silly “tear on the dotted line” Valentines? Yes, class lists were sent home with proper admonishments for every child to provide a card for every other child and that no additional “gifts” could be brought to school, unless there was one for everyone. And, yes, we followed all the
rules in my small town in the 1960s. But that doesn’t mean each chipper “Barbie says: You’re the grooviest” or Yogi Bear’s “I can’t BEAR to be without you” we received wasn’t analyzed, dissected and conclusions drawn. I knew Greg Hart loved me after Valentine’s Day in fourth grade. Greg and I both bought The Beatles Valentine’s pack to pass out in our classroom that year. We both gave each other the same card: the largest one in the pack with all FOUR Beatles on it and the sentiment: “Love, Love Me Do. Happy Valentine’s Day.” I knew it was true love. I, personally, had spent almost an hour deciding between that card and the “All You Need Is Love” smaller card for Greg. It was destiny. (Destiny took an ugly turn the next year when Greg threw me
over after I won Miss Lexington Junior First Princess. He immediately declared his love for Teresa Smith, who won queen. He moved out of town shortly thereafter, but I had nothing to do with that.) Unfortunately for adult men and women today, all this competition from elementary school crushes and children’s handprints doesn’t take the pressure off for Valentine’s Day. We all love to be loved, and we love to be reminded that we are loved. The point, of course, is to look inside the heart of whoever it is you love. You’ll find the right “gift” in whatever brings that smile to his or her face. And if you just can’t figure it out, call an elementary school teacher.
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