powell/norwood shopper-news 031014
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IN THIS ISSUE
Noweta is 55Powell’s Noweta Garden
Club celebrated its 55th an-niversary and Shopper-News reporter Cindy Taylor was there, along with at least one club founder.
➤ Read Cindy’s report on page A-3
SHOPPER ONLINEShopperNewsNow.com
POWELL/NORWOODVOL. 53 NO. 10 March 10, 2014www.ShopperNewsNow.com | www.facebook.com/ShopperNewsNow
7049 Maynardville Pike 37918(865) 922-4136
NEWS
news@ShopperNewsNow.comSandra Clark | Cindy Taylor
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By Cindy TaylorThe Powell Playhouse production of “Ev-
erybody Loves Opal” played to sold-out au-diences at every performance. Some patrons came to honor playhouse founder Nita Buell Black, who passed away Feb. 27 – opening day. Others who attended didn’t know Black but had heard of the comedy and brilliant acting and were excited to see the play. No one was disappointed.
“We will always miss Nita,” said stage manager Carly Johnson. “But this is not our last performance. The Powell Playhouse will go on in her memory.”
The cast and crew dedicated the play to Black. A single white slip-covered chair sat stage left during performances in memory of the one who had touched the lives of so many, including the performers in the last play s he cast.
Sol (Grant McMahan) gets a talking-to from Offi cer Joe (Bri-
an Murphy) just before the curtain goes up.
Elizabeth Eaker preps backstage for her role as
Gloria. Eaker took on the role of director as well
when Nita Buell Black became too ill to continue.
Everybody loves Nita
A lone chair sits stage left in memory
of Nita Buell Black during the Powell
Playhouse performances of “Every-
body Loves Opal.” Photos by Cindy Taylor
By Sandra ClarkShannondale farmer James
McMillan has documented storm-water violations at the Shannon-dale School construction site, and he’s asking offi cials to correct them.
Superintendent Dr. Jim Mc-Intyre said he is reviewing McMil-lan’s concerns with contractors and “will take appropriate action.”
Mayor Madeline Rogero said she would ask staff to review his complaints and respond.
Knox County Schools is adding
This view shows raw land by the con-
struction road at the Shannondale
School construction site.
McMillan alleges violationsat school construction site
22 classrooms and renovating the school. Designed by McCarty Hol-saple McCarty, K and F Construc-tion is the contractor for the $2.6 million project.
McMillan said the project vio-lates “decades-old laws” while setting a “horrible example” for children. He’s asking Rogero and state water-quality inspectors to enforce appropriate regulations. Specifi c complaints include:
■ Sediment from the site tracked a half-mile away
■ Bare areas not stabilized be-
low the construction road (violates the city’s 15-day stabilization rule, McMillan says)
■ Silt fence not installed cor-rectly, joints not rolled and wrapped together to form solid barrier
■ Silt fence installed without atoe behind it (fl at area to let mud-dy water pool up allowing time for sediment to settle out)
■ Silt fence not installed levelwith the slope, allowing stormwa-
To page A-3
Walking for technologySt. Joseph School teachers Amelia Glavas, Rita Cook and Christine
Rhodes participate in a 23-mile relay to raise money for a library/
technology center at the school. The event raised more than $9,300
which will be matched by a donor. With $40,000 required to begin
building, donations may be made directly to the school at 689-3424 or
1910 Howard Drive in Fountain City. Photo submitted
Crossroads gets new pastorThe Rev. Timothy Roller passes the torch to the Rev. Danny Dixon
during a special ceremony at Crossroads Baptist Church. Roller
founded the church and has decided to retire after 23 years.
Friends and family gathered to celebrate the event and remem-
ber the service Roller has given to his church family. Photo by Ruth White
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Weston or Chuck?Shopper-News publisher
Sandra Clark looks at the Con-gressional race from District 3 and tells tales from the Lincoln Day Dinner in Union County. Go online and click on Clark.
NEIGHBORHOOD BUZZ
Candidates galoreShopper-News’ own Jake
Mabe will moderate a can-didates forum hosted by the Heiskell Seniors at 11 a.m. Thursday, March 13, at the former Heiskell School on Heiskell Road.
Richard Pickens gets a surprise
I’ll say this in a soft voice: There isn’t enough happiness in Richard Pickens’ life.
The Ol’ Vol has an assort-ment of problems. Some, estrangement from family, for example, he brought on him-self. Some descended on him like a dark cloud.
➤ Read Marvin West on page A-5
Meet car guy Claude Reeder
He earned a law degree, played a large role in building the framework for the Ten-nessee Valley Fair, might have helped found the Great Smoky Mountains National Park and became a local household name selling cars, once taking a cow as partial payment for a Studebaker.
➤ Read Jim Tumblin on page A-5
Stuff -A-Bag aheadThe Halls Crossroads
Women’s League will hold its semiannual Stuff-A-Bag sale at The Closet, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday, March 15. Each shopper can buy a brown bag for $5. The bag can be stuffed with good, used clothing, and additional bags can be pur-chased.
The Closet is at the corner of Maynardville Highway and Cunningham Road.
A-2 • MARCH 10, 2014 • POWELL Shopper news
NEWS FROM PARKWEST, WEST KNOXVILLE’S HEALTHCARE LEADER • TREATEDWELL.COM • 374-PARK
health & lifestyles
Just a breath of air and fewer headaches. That’s all Mae Jacks wanted.
But when the Heiskell grand-mother broke her nose in a fall last September, she had no idea that the injury would lead to a chain of events that would not only give her back the ability to breathe freely, but also eliminate her mi-graines, stop her snoring, and re-turn the sense of smell and taste she thought was gone for good.
“I wasn’t looking for a miracle, but it looks like I got one,” said Jacks less than a month after Dr. Mark Overholt performed a sep-toplasty and balloon sinuplasty under general anesthesia at Park-west Medical Center.
It took about a half hour for Overholt to perform the operation in which he not only straightened Jacks’ deviated septum, but also used a catheter to deploy a nonla-tex balloon into her sinus passage to open up her nasal airway.
Her breathing improved almost immediately.
And within a week of the sur-gery, Jacks said, her long-forgot-ten sense of smell returned. “I knew this had to be sinus-related because I used to have a great sense of smell,” she said. “But it had gotten to where I couldn’t smell at all. Now I look forward
to things like when someone says, ‘Let’s have a big dinner.’ Before, I would go, ‘Yeah, yeah’ because I liked to cook. But now, my joy is back because I can smell the food again. I teased Dr. Overholt that now I have to watch what and how much I eat now because every-thing tastes so good!”
Of course, the restored sense of smell also means that she can again detect those less-than-
pleasant odors her husband brings into the house from his workshop.
“If I’m in the living room and he comes in through the garage, he can’t even get into the house be-fore I’ll be telling him, ‘You smell like gasoline!’ ” Jacks laughed. “He’s fascinated that I can smell things again. He got away with it for years.”
While the restored sense of taste and smell were unexpected gifts, Jacks is elated that she can now breathe easily and has not had a migraine headache since the surgery. She had battled the head-aches for years, but they had be-come worse over the last fi ve.
The headaches, usually cen-tered on the right side of her head and accompanied by nausea, were so bad that she would retreat to bed. “I would just ice it, just freeze it,” she said. “It was the only way I could fall asleep. My husband would ask, ‘Is there anything I can do for you?’ And I would say, ‘No, it’s just got to run its course.’ And I probably took too many antibi-otics because of it and that’s not good for you either.”
In fact, Jacks says the years-long search for an answer to her re-curring sinus infections and head-aches was an exasperating journey fi lled with decongestants, antihis-tamines, phenegren and over-the-
counter migraine medicine.Most often she found herself in
an allergist’s offi ce. “I took allergy shots for many years, and they would give me medicine for my si-nuses and stuff. They would try to change my medicine, and a couple of times they would do a CT scan,” she said. “But they always said, ‘Your sinuses look fi ne.’ Of course, they were not fi ne.”
She even quit wearing her CPAP machine because she felt that it was contributing to her sinus in-fections. Of course, now that she’s had the surgery, she feels she no longer needs it, particularly since her snoring is gone.
Ironically, it took a fall and a broken nose for her to fi nd relief. Overholt says it will take about six weeks for Jacks to fully recover from her surgery because the sep-toplasty requires follow-up offi ce visits to keep the nasal passages clear of scabbing. Had she only re-quired balloon sinuplasty, Jacks’ recovery would only have been about two days.
Regardless, she’s happy with the outcome.
“I got a lot more out of this procedure than I ever thought possible,” she says with a laugh. “I thought I was going to have to endure these headaches the rest of my life.”
Mark Overholt, M.D. reports
that balloon sinus dilation is an
increasingly preferred choice among
patients searching for a minimally-
invasive choice with a fast recovery. Much like angioplasty opens coronary
arteries, balloon sinuplasty utilizes a
nonlatex balloon to open the sinuses.
Once the balloon is defl ated and
removed, the sinus is clear to drain. Illustration courtesy of Entellus.
On the noseBalloon sinuplasty a breath of air for sinus suff erers
Nasal steroids. Nasal antihist-maines. Decongestants and anti-biotics.
If all these things are in your medicine cabinet and you’re still battling recurring sinusitis, Dr. Mark Overholt says you may want to consider balloon sinuplasty.
Much like angioplasty opens coronary arteries, balloon sinu-plasty utilizes a nonlatex balloon to open the sinuses. First approved by the Food and Drug Administra-tion in 2005, the balloon is deliv-ered via a small catheter up the nasal passageway where it is gently infl ated to widen sinuses closed by swelling and infl ammation. Once the balloon is defl ated and re-moved, the sinus is clear to drain.
“It’s a neat procedure. I was dubious when I fi rst started,” said Overholt, an otolaryngologist with Parkwest Medical Center. “I said I would have to see the data and fi nd out whether this is real or not.”
That data, collected via a three-year randomized, controlled trial sponsored by Entellus Medical, was overwhelmingly convincing. Looking at placebo, traditional endoscopic sinus surgery and balloon sinuplasty at six-month, one-year and three-year intervals, the study concluded that balloon sinuplasty not only works in most cases, but also lessens the risk of recurrence.
“The way to look at balloon sinuplasty is that it’s another tool,” said Overholt. “It forces us to look at our sinus patients in a little dif-ferent manner. There is a patient population that, in the past, may have been under-treated in an at-tempt to not be overly aggressive.
Mae Jacks describes balloon
sinuplasty as “a miracle.” An
unexpected side eff ect of the
surgery for Jacks is that her sense of
smell returned.
Heiskell woman breathes easy after balloon sinuplasty Sinusitis symptomsSinusitis – also known as
rhinosinusitis – is an infl am-mation of the tissue lining of the sinuses that affl icts mil-lions of people each year.
Common symptoms ■ Facial congestion/fullness ■ Nasal obstruction/blockage ■ Nasal discharge ■ Fever ■ Headaches ■ Fatigue ■ Dental pain ■ Bad breathNormally, sinuses are fi lled
with air, but when sinuses be-come blocked and fi lled with fl uid, pathogens (bacteria, viruses and fungi) can grow and cause an infection. Struc-tural issues such as narrowed drainage anatomy are often associated with sinusitis.
Aff ected sinusesThere are four types of si-
nuses – maxillary (behind the cheek bones), ethmoid (between the eyes), frontal (in the forehead) and sphenoid (behind the eyes). All of these sinuses can be affected by si-nusitis. The majority of cases involve the maxillary and eth-moid sinuses.
Source: EntellusMedical.com
Now, we have another tool in our toolbox to help treat those people.”
Overholt says many are pre-scribed steroids, antihistamines, decongestants and antibiotics by primary care physicians hesitant to steer patients to a surgical solution.
“In many of those cases, I would imagine that the balloon proce-dures would eliminate their ill-nesses – put them back in the nor-mal population,” said Overholt.
While the success rate of sinu-plasty vs. traditional sinus surgery is virtually identical, the sinu-plasty patients recover 70 percent faster, require little debridement or removal of cut or damaged tis-sue (8 percent vs. 74 percent) and
feel better faster (59 percent vs. 38 percent).
Perhaps even more telling is that balloon sinuplasty can some-times be performed in the doc-tor’s offi ce under local anesthesia.
“In the past, when we’ve done sinus operations, we had to take patients to the operating room to do them. But one of the nice things about this new balloon procedure is that it opens up potential for us to do offi ce procedures for people in some circumstances,” said Overholt. “We still do a fair number of these in the op-erating room, some of which is because they are paired with other proce-dures which require general anesthesia. But this is some-thing that will offer a patient an opportunity to do some offi ce-based procedures as well. It’s nice because it’s minimally invasive. From a patient’s perspective, re-covery is super quick. When you do the balloon procedure, you are just dilating up the natural drain-age pathway, or ostium, that God put there to allow the sinuses to ventilate.”
Another major benefi t of the balloon sinuplasty, Overholt said, is the lack of recurring infections.
“By dilating that area, you are
not subject to recurring infections like you were before because when you got an allergy attack or a cold or fl u in the past, if you had a real-ly narrow neck that was ventilat-ing the sinus cavity, just a little bit of swelling would close it off and leave the potential for a second-ary infection,” he explained. “But now, if you balloon dilate it, there is a much more of a safety mar-
gin. So if you get a cold or an allergy attack or something, you are open enough that you probably won’t obstruct that area with just normal swelling so you don’t have that secondary risk of developing a sinus infection as frequently as you did before.”
That’s not to say, however, that the bal-loon sinuplasty
is the end-all answer for all sinus sufferers. In fact, certain sinus conditions disqualify a patient from balloon sinuplasty.
“It’s not for everybody,” said Overholt, adding that patients who have chronic infections of the ethmoid sinuses between the eyes and patients with polyps are not eligible for the balloon procedure.
“The ethmoid sinus is just out-side the path of normal surgery,” he explained, showing a diagram of how the ethmoid sinus is ana-
tomically inaccessible. “If you havechronic sinus infection up here, di-lating this area doesn’t do anything for that … that requires a tradition-al operation to clean out the littlehoneycombed air cells in the eth-moid cavity that lead to recurringor chronic infection in people.”
Polyps, Overholt said, actually form because of recurring infec-tions which infl ame the sinuses and cause swelling. “We used to think that was probably allergy-driven but most people who havepolyps just have a very hyperac-tive immune system,” he said. “They have an inability to regulateinfl ammation in the sinus cavity.As a result, as their immune sys-tem runs amok trying to fi ght off invaders, it creates super swelling in the sinus tissue and these little sac-like clusters of swelling that we call polyps, and those polyps endup being physical obstructions of the sinus cavity. They will hold in-fectious material back in the sinus cavity and prevent you from clear-ing. And balloon sinuplasty simply doesn’t get rid of the polyps.”
POWELL Shopper news • MARCH 10, 2014 • A-3
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The Noweta Garden Club celebrated its 55th year March 4 during the club’s annual spring luncheon at the Orangery.
Cindy Taylor
Noweta celebrates 55
Noweta founder and charter member JoAnne Hoffmeister was present. Wilma Shular was voted by peers as the Outstanding Member of the Year.
The club will participate in the 21st annual Knox County Council of Garden Clubs Spring Garden Festi-val 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Satur-day, April 26, at The Shops
Dot Fraser displays
a colorful snow quilt
during the Bits n’
Pieces library sale. Photos submitted
Loretta Painter shows her latest creation.
Pat Melcher demonstrates the
process of making a candle/
candy dish for all seasons.
Noweta Garden Club members at the 2014 spring luncheon are (front) Regena Richardson, Margaret Trammell, Wilma Shular,
Wilma Pratt, JoAnne Hoff meister, Lana McMullen; (back) Marjorie Gardner, Carole Whited, Judy Eubanks, Suzanne Sweat, June
Jennings, Debbie Johnson and Carolyn Keck. Photos by Cindy Taylor
at Franklin Square. Spring plants will be for sale at
great prices. Items in-clude gar-den art, bonsai, cer-tifi ed natu-rally grown plants, an-nuals and perennials. There will
be crafts and activities for children. The public is in-vited.
The Noweta Garden Club meets at 10 a.m. each fi rst Tuesday. Info: ccwhited@aol.com.
■ Bits n’ PiecesBits n’ Pieces Quilt Guild
members took time at the February meeting to admire works created by members. Show-and-tell included
instructions for making a candle/candy dish for all seasons and quilted micro-wave bowls.
Members browsed the guild library and took home used craft and quilt books at huge savings. Funds raised go toward the purchase of batting and quilting expens-es for future projects.
Bits n’ Pieces Quilt Guild meets at 1 p.m. each fourth Wednesday at the Norris Community Center. Info: cherrm1760@aol.com.
■ Carnival time!Almost everything is in
place for the Knox North Li-ons Club Community Spring Carnival.
Gold Medal Shows will arrive at the Yow property on the corner of Emory Road and Blueberry Lane next to Hardee’s April 30 and will be in place with
Wilma Shular
Sixth District school board hopeful Tamara Shepherd greets
school board member Kim Severance (District 7) at the Knox
North Lions Club meeting. Photo by Cindy Taylor
McMillan alleges From page A-1
ter to fl ow in concentrated fl ow across silt fence and overwhelm and undercut it at the lowest point
■ No repair of silt fence where it was undercut, al-lowing untreated and non-fi ltered stormwater to es-cape under it
■ Not maintaining con-struction entrance to pre-vent sediment being tracked off-site on public roads.
McMillan says each of-fense is serious and leaves the school system open to fi nes per day, per offense
as high as $5,000 from the city or county, $10,000 from TDEC and over $30,000 from EPA.
He asked Rogero why the city’s stormwater depart-ment had not found and corrected these problems long ago. He suggested that instead of fi nes, the school system arrange fi eld trips to the site to show students proper ways to manage stormwater so that “some-thing good and positive could come out of this.”
On Friday, Brent John-
son, the city’s engineeringplanning chief, chastisedMcMillan for not report-ing the potential violationssooner. “Based on youremail, it appeared that youknew about this conditionfor at least a month beforecontacting us,” he wrote. “Ifyou would have contactedus then, we could have be-gun the process of correct-ing this issue much earlier.”
Johnson also said KnoxCounty is not required toget city permits for con-struction projects.
rides for all ages, foods and fun until May 4.
“If this goes well we may make it an annual event at this location,” said club president Rick Long. “(Claude) Yow has already offered to let us use the same space next year.”
Knox County school board hopeful Tamara Shepherd was special guest speaker for the March 5 meeting. Shepherd brought data on Knox County Schools including capacity, number of students in each school and number of por-table buildings.
“I have a long-standing interest in the school sys-
tem,” she said. “I am com-pelled to run now as the parent of a high school se-nior and parent of a teacher in Knox County schools. I am also concerned about the teacher evaluation mod-els.”
Knox North Lions Club meets at 1 p.m. each fi rst and third Wednesday at Puleo’s on Cedar Lane.
■ Seeking artistsPowell High School is
beautifying its hallways. The school is seeking art-ists who have an interest in building their portfolio by creating art on walls in the school. Madeline Ferguson
will interview artists.“We want to transform
many of the white brick walls into colorful expres-sions that celebrate ethnic diversity, encourage learn-ing and inspire dreams,” said principal Nathan Lan-glois. “Our students de-serve an environment that inspires.”
Interviews are underway. Interested artists can con-tact Ferguson at 938-2171, ext. 209 to set up a meeting to showcase their work and propose an image. Those selected will be free to paint at the school any afternoon from 3:45 to 7 p.m.Reach Cindy Taylor at ctaylorsn@gmail.
com.
Longtime resident, Edmundson, passes
Mary Evelyn Shearl Ed-mundson, 90, mother of Brenda Edmundson, passed away March 4. She was a longtime member of Third Creek Baptist and later Wallace Memorial Baptist churches.
She was the last surviv-
ing child of Walter A. and Lula Bell Mills Shearl. Mary was a 1943 graduate of Cen-tral High School who had lived in Knoxville for 80 years. Since May 2004 she had resided at Life Care Center in Athens, Tenn.
Other survivors include son and daughter-in-law, Johnny and Frances Ed-mundson of Athens; grand-
sons, Stephen Ray Maples of North Carolina and William Edmundson of South Caro-lina.
Stevens Mortuary han-dled arrangements with burial at Lynnhurst Cem-etery. Memorials may be made to the Alzheiner’s Foundation of America c/o Johnny Edmondson, P.O. Box 565, Athens, TN 37371.
A-4 • MARCH 10, 2014 • POWELL Shopper newsgovernment
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Former City Council member Chris Woodhull has moved to the Chatta-nooga area, where he lives in Lookout Mountain, Ga., although he maintains his domicile here in Knoxville.
Over coffee recently, Woodhull, 54, told this writer that he continues to host “Improvisations” on Friday nights for WUOT; he started doing it before he left council in December 2011. “I grew up with jazz,” he says. He comes to Knox-ville weekly to tape the show on the UT campus.
He also does consult-ing work with Richmont Graduate University, which has sites in both Atlanta and Chattanooga. He is the director of Build Me a World, which can be found at www.buildmeaworld.com and is in a partnership with Fancy Rhino productions.
He’s glad he served on City Council as an at-large member for eight years but calls his performance “underwhelming.”
“I could have been better prepared for the life of a politician. Meetings often seemed artifi cial.”
He described colleagues Mark Brown and Bob Beck-er as “good friends.” He said he would not have run for a third term even if the City Charter had permitted it, but after eight years on council he thinks the mayor should be allowed to seek a third term because it is dif-fi cult to accomplish much in only eight years.
Woodhull said he was “glad to have been the deciding vote in choosing Knoxville’s fi rst African-American mayor (Daniel Brown).” The other four were Marilyn Roddy, Dan-iel Brown, Becker and Joe Bailey. Each was the decid-ing vote on a 5-4 vote on a
nine-member council. ■ The “Ed and Bob
Show,” which used to be on WNOX, may appear on Knox County Commis-sion starting Sept. 1 if Bob Thomas and Ed Brantley are elected to the commis-sion’s two at-large seats. Brantley is opposed by Michelle Carringer, and Thomas is unopposed.
Brantley says he and Thomas did not always agree on the “Ed and Bob Show.” Thomas is seen as a person (one of several) who may run for county mayor in 2018 when Tim Burchett’s second and fi nal term ends.
■ The contest be-tween Ed Shouse and Craig Leuthold for the GOP nom-ination for county trustee will be hard fought. It revives memories of Black Wednesday, when County Commission disgraced itself with backroom deals naming each other and family members to various county positions.
Leuthold named his father, Frank, to his own seat. He also voted to install Fred Sisk as county trustee. Sisk then turned around a few weeks later and increased Leuthold’s salary by 44 percent (ac-cording to NS editor Jack McElroy’s column), making it an expensive thank-you for county taxpayers.
■ Events in Ukraine change daily, and the ulti-mate outcome is uncertain. Having lived in Poland from 2004 to 2009, I had a front-row seat observing how Ukraine freed itself from the former Soviet Union and moved haltingly toward democracy and economic vitality.
The Putin-inspired occu-pation of Crimea is another major setback to Ukraine. Poland, rightfully, remains deeply concerned about developments there and wonders how steadfast the United States will be over the long term in restor-ing Ukraine’s territorial integrity.
VictorAshe
By Sara BarrettWhen Rep. John J. Dun-
can Jr. stepped off a plane in Knoxville from Washing-ton, D.C., he went straight to Barnes Barbershop in East Knoxville for impor-tant business. His grand-son, Zane Jr., was getting his fi rst haircut.
“You can solve the prob-lems of this country better here than in Congress,” said Duncan of the barbershop on Martin Luther King Jr. Avenue. He took off his suit jacket before settling down in the barber chair with Zane Jr. on his lap.
“The tradition of Barnes Barbershop has been go-
ing on for a long time in our family,” said Duncan.
A young Jimmy Duncan was taken there by his dad, the late John Duncan Sr., in the late 1940s for his first haircut. He became a regular and took his son Zane there for his first trim. Barnes opened in the 1920s and is still operated by the same family.
Barber Debbie Barnes kept the shop’s basket of lollipops handy as she snipped the split ends from Zane Jr.’s mane. The hair-cut lasted about seven min-utes and his mom, Hallie, saved some locks in an en-velope as a souvenir.
Carringer
little information to be gleaned about him online. His wife is his campaign treasurer and several peo-ple who signed his qualify-ing petition share his last name.
Absher was an early member of the Tea Party but says she is no longer involved with that group. She was elected to the Re-publican State Executive Committee in 2010 and is not seeking re-election. She is critical of Common Core State Standards and says she would not have voted to extend McIntyre’s contract.
She has a degree in ge-ology and is a technical writer. Her husband, Steve, teaches chemistry at Halls High School, and she has been a regular at school board meetings in recent months, wearing red and sitting with the teachers, many of whom strongly support her candidacy.
Her Facebook campaign page describes her as “… an issues-oriented individual
Fourth District incum-bent Lynne Fugate is one of schools superintendent James McIntyre’s strongest allies. She is in her second year as school board chair and is seeking to be elected to a second term.
Fugate is sitting pretty, money-wise, reporting a balance-on-hand of nearly $18,000 at the end of the last reporting period, on Jan. 31. Her list of fi nan-cial supporters is long and impressive, studded with the names of some of Knox-ville’s most powerful citi-zens. She raised much of her war chest at a January fun-draiser at the home of Ann Haslam Bailey, including a $1,000 contribution from James Haslam II, also a strong McIntyre supporter.
This is not a staggering
sum by national standards but is enormous compared with opponents Sally Ab-sher and Jeffrey Scott Clark, who were exempt from fi ling detailed fi nancial disclo-sures because they received and spent less than $1,000.
Fugate is local market executive for SmartBank and served as executive director of Nine Counties, One Vision, a regional planning initiative launched in January 2000. Her two sons attended West High School, and she has served as president of the West High School Foundation.
When teachers showed up to air their complaints about McIntyre’s methods at the January County Com-mission meeting, clad in red for solidarity, Fugate chose a seat between McIntyre and his chief of staff, Russ Oaks. She did not wear red.
Clark is a fi rst-time can-didate and a political un-known – at least to this re-porter. He has not returned phone calls, and there is
Betty Bean
Sally Absher Lynne Fugate
Will money buy love?
Catching up with Chris Woodhull
The Knox County Board of Zoning Appeals meeting last month was a baptism by fi re for a reporter learning a new beat.
Lesson No. 1: Eat be-fore the meeting.
I’m only half joking. The meeting ran four-plus hours. The big daddy was neighbors’ appeal of devel-oper John Huber’s proposed Westland Cove marina and 312-unit, four-story apart-ment buildings near Sink-ing Creek.
After roughly eight hours of discussion over two meetings, the board voted. And that’s when the trouble began. Motions to deny an appeal are a reverse nega-tive – like trying to read the cereal box in a mirror.
The fi rst motion, by real
JakeMabe
Lessons learned at BZARobert’s Rules of Order.
King and Huber swamped Wayne Kline, particularly at the January meeting, with facts. Kline rebounded during the second show-down, but his voice shook at times with emotion. King remained composed, even when audience members started shouting at him.
A majority of BZA com-missioners set out to reject John Huber’s development; instead, it was affi rmed. (Huber said later he’s likely to appeal to Chancery Court to reinstate the marina, but it’s full speed ahead on the apartments.) Fatigue had to factor in the confusion, as did the “no means yes” quirks in the motion.
Oh, by the way. BZA com-missioners don’t get paid.
Lesson No. 3: No good deed goes unpunished. “Pull Up A Chair” with Jake Mabe at jake-
mabe.blogspot.com
Debbie Barnes waits as
Jimmy Duncan gives a
lollipop to his grand-
son, Zane Jr., as Zane
Sr. is refl ected in the
mirror. Barbershop
owners Ernie and Hel-
en Barnes are at right. Photos by S. Barrett
Barnes Barbershop is Duncan family tradition
who admits she does not have all the answers, but is willing to ask the diffi cult questions.”
“She does not blindly ac-cept the talking points from either side of an issue, but does her own research and backs up her opinions with facts and documentation.
“Honesty, integrity and transparency are of utmost importance.
“She has researched edu-cation reform policies from the early 1900s to present in depth, and will use her skills and knowledge to rep-resent the best interests of students, teachers, parents, and taxpayers.”
Her campaign treasurer, Kathy Robinson, taught at Sequoyah Elementary School before her retirement.
estate guy Scott Smith, was to deny the appeal for the marina. It failed 3-5.
Up jumped lawyer John King, representing Huber.
“The motion has failed. In order for the appellant to be successful, you must produce fi ve positive votes.” Deputy Law Director Daniel Sanders agreed.
Kevin Murphy moved to overrule MPC and kill the marina. His motion passed, 5-3. (Murphy, Car-son Dailey, Bill Sewell,
Frank Rimshaw and chair John Schoonmaker voted yes. Smith, Markus Chady and Cynthia Stancil voted no. Cindy Buttry, who had missed the January meet-ing, recused herself.)
Murphy wanted to amend the 20 conditions MPC had attached to the apartments’ approval but said he couldn’t do it on the spot. He moved to overturn MPC’s use on review. This motion failed 3-5, which meant MPC’s approval of the apartments was upheld.
It seems a “no” vote ac-tually meant “yes,” even if most people in the room ex-pected further debate. Com-missioners sat in stunned silence while Huber and King packed up and left.
Lesson No. 2: Know
Carringer’s March 13 event hosted by GOP leadersA reception will be held 5-7 p.m. Thursday, March 13, at
Calhoun’s on the River for Michele Carringer, a Republican running for at-large seat 11 for Knox County Commission. She served on the commission from District 7 in 2009-10. The reception is hosted by former county GOP chairs including Irene McCrary (the candi-date’s mother), Sue Methvin, Mike Prince, Phyllis Severance and Gerald Turner. The rally and fundraiser are open to the public.
Carringer graduated from Central High School and attended UT. Ed Brantley is
also seeking the nomination.
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I’ll say this in a soft voice: There isn’t enough happi-ness in Richard Pickens’ life.
The Ol’ Vol has an assort-ment of problems. Some, estrangement from family, for example, he brought on himself. Some descended on him like a dark cloud.
Since retiring as a rail-road executive, he’s been in the fourth quarter for what seems like a long time. It could be he is in overtime. He has supposedly been di-agnosed with “amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and second-ary frontal temporal demen-tia with pseudobulbar palsy.”
Since my medical exper-tise is in bruises and abra-sions, this is out of my pay grade. Some old teammates are convinced the affl iction goes back to too many hits with the helmet, too many concussions treated with smelling salts.
Pickens was a Tennessee fullback in 1966-68, part battering ram, part bowling ball, leading rusher in the Southeastern Conference as
Marvin West
Pickens is a Vol for life
Several fans embrace the idea. Alas, their lasting com-mitments sometimes fl uctu-ate, depending on Saturday scores.
With former players, it tends to be real. Ol’ Vols hang in there. There is a genuine bond. Former tackle Jerry Holloway has a mailing list of hundreds who share the ups and downs, fi shing tales, obituaries, anniversaries, accomplishments by chil-dren and grandchildren, news of knee replacements, and other hard-earned aches and pains.
They remain bound to-gether by fellowship, loyalty and the color orange.
Pickens was the focal point of such love last week. Distinguished artist Alex-ander Dumas initiated it.
As the story goes, Pickens commissioned a painting 15 or 20 years ago of a favor-ite play. When he came to claim the fi nished product, it wouldn’t fi t inside his Volk-swagen.
“Later” was somehow forgotten and Dumas fi led his handiwork in a stack of other treasures. He found it
in time for the current art exhibition at Clarity Pointe. Of course it was a delightful surprise for Pickens.
Ol’ Vols and several others shared in the celebration. A fun time was had by all.
Blessings on the good man Dumas, an unexpected ray of sunshine in Richard Pickens’ life.
Full disclosure: Alexan-der Dumas once gave me a print of his very best snow leopard. I thought it was Smithsonian quality.Marvin West invites reader reaction. His address is westwest6@netzero.com.
He earned a law degree, played a large role in build-ing the framework for the Tennessee Valley Fair, might have helped found the Great Smoky Mountains National Park and became a local household name selling cars, once taking a cow as partial payment for a Studebaker.
Meet Claude S. Reeder, who was born on July 14, 1886, in Knoxville, the son of Columbus Alexander and Adelia Hodges Reeder. Co-lumbus Reeder was a prom-inent Knox County farmer and held several political offi ces in the county, includ-ing sheriff from 1876 to ’80.
Claude graduated from old Girls High School, the predecessor of Knoxville High School, and enrolled at UT, where he played half-back on the football team and also lettered in basket-ball and track. He received his bachelor’s degree in elec-trical engineering in 1908 and promptly enrolled in the College of Law. Although he never practiced, he felt the knowledge enhanced his skills in business.
On June 10, 1909, Claude married Ella McKee Dur-ham (1886-1982). They had four children: Claude S. Jr., John Alexander, Richard Durham and Betty McKee (Houston).
Col. Reeder fi rst worked as a clerk in the Knox Coun-ty Tax Assessor’s offi ce but
later resigned to found the Cherokee Motor Co., the lo-cal seller of Studebakers.
He earned his nickname “Tradin’ Claude” when he advertised, “We trade for anything but a rattlesnake.” His photograph with the cow taken as partial pay-ment made the local papers and was picked up by the national NEA news service.
A promoter of the Ap-palachian Exposition in 1910 – the forerunner of the Tennessee Valley Agricul-tural and Industrial Fair – Reeder remained interested in the fair throughout his life. There were many good years and some very lean ones, but eventually that fair became the “father” of the Tennessee Valley Fair.
An apocryphal story, to which many lend credence, credits Reeder for infl uenc-ing Gov. Austin Peay to take an interest in efforts to es-tablish the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. As the two sat on the porch of Reeder’s summer home in Kinzel Springs, Claude said, “Governor, these mountains would make the fi nest sce-nic park in the world. Why don’t you ask the legislature to acquire the land?”
Coincidence or not, in 1925 the legislature enacted the Little River Lumber Co. Purchase Act, one of the fi rst moves toward estab-lishing the park.
HISTORY AND MYSTERIES | Dr. Jim Tumblin
Lynnhurst-Resthaven Cemetery was estab-lished in 1922, but Col. Claude S. Reeder (left)became president in 1929 and expanded it. Photos courtesy of the C.M. McClung Historical Collection
Tradin’ Claude’s remarkable life
Late in life, Reeder cal-culated that he had served on 47 corporate boards over the years including: chair of Reeder Chevrolet Co.; chair of Cherokee Oil Co., which he founded in 1928; direc-tor of White Star Bus Lines; chair of several Seven-Up bottling companies (Wash-ington, D.C., Rochester, N.Y., Richmond, Va., and Winston-Salem, Asheville and Charlotte, N.C.); presi-dent of Morris Plan Bank; president of the East Ten-nessee Fair Association; and president of Lynnhurst-Resthaven Cemetery Co.
Lynnhurst Cemetery had been established in 1922, when its fi rst presi-dent, James Lyle Humphrey (1870-1925), bought the initial acreage west of First Creek near Greenway. Soon, the property north of Adair Drive was purchased from the Sanders estate, heirs to a portion of the original Adair land grant. Later, with Claude Reeder as president, the corporation bought the old mill property near the cemetery entrance from O.W. Sweat. Reeder presided over the corporation from 1929 until 1938, when he was succeeded by W.B. Hatcher.
Reeder also owned Park Amusement Company, which operated rides and concessions at Chilhowee Park. His real-estate hold-ings included several U.S.
Post Offi ce buildings, which he leased to the government.
In addition, he served in many civic and fraternal or-ganizations: the Knoxville Kiwanis Club, Elks Lodge (life member), the Masons (32nd Degree), Kerbela Tem-ple, Chamber of Commerce (director), the Wonderland Park Club and Cherokee Country Club. He and Ella were also active at Church Street Methodist Church.
He loved the outdoors and particularly enjoyed hunting and fi shing with his friend W.R. Kennerly. They often went to South Dakota for pheasant and to Canada for moose and deer hunting and muskellunge fi shing. In ad-dition to the summer home in Kinzel Springs, where the community considered him the honorary mayor, the Reeders later enjoyed a win-ter home in Fort Myers, Fla. When Norris Dam was built and the lake impounded,
R e e d e r built a lodge on the lake-shore, where his personal friend, Army Gen. Mark Clark, was a guest.
But, most of all, he en-joyed his old family home place, 316 W. Hill Ave., currently the site of the City County Building. The picture window in his den overlooked the Tennes-see River (Fort Loudoun Lake). A mounted buffalo head hung over the great stone fi replace, while other trophies of pheasant, elk, Rocky Mountain sheep and game fi sh were hung around the room.
Col. Reeder suffered a fatal heart attack while at-tending a reception in hon-or of Sen. Herbert S. “Hub” Walters in Morristown on Oct. 17, 1964. Knoxville Mayor John Duncan had asked him to read a procla-
mation and present the keys to the city of Knoxville to Walters.
After services at Mann’s Mortuary, he was interred in the Reeder Mausoleum in Lynnhurst Cemetery. He was survived by his wife, Ella Durham Reeder; a daughter Betty (Jack) Hous-ton; two sons, Claude Jr. and Richard D.; four sisters, Wanda C. (Roy) Roth, Fay T. (James) Dempster, Mary J. (Roscoe) Word and Elma P. (Howard E.) McClellan; brothers Columbus A. “Lum” Reeder and Ross Reeder; 10 grandchildren; and fi ve great-grandchildren.
Author’s note: Thanks to Ted Baehr Jr., Jeff Berry, Robert McGinnis and the McClung Historical Collec-tion for assistance with the text and photographs.
a senior, 736 tough yards, then the most by a Vol since Hank Lauricella in 1951.
Going back to Young High School, Pick was never a tip-toe runner. He was nimble and quick but did not rely on fancy moves. He butted peo-ple who got in his way, broke many tackles and probably created some running lanes with intimidation.
Pickens still “plays” foot-ball with his wonderful col-lection of friends who (oc-casionally) stop by his home at Clarity Pointe in Farragut. Sometimes they just talk about big plays, magic mo-ments, precious memories that need to be refreshed. Sometimes they watch old games on Vol Network DVDs. Sometimes they and Richard
go places, to lunch or to see things, and talk some more, going and coming.
Mike Miller, Mike March-ant, Larry Brown, Randy Webb, Van Fillingim, Sam Venable and Bobby Wag-goner have been part of this support system.
Dick Williams, Charlie Rosenfelder and Dewey Warren are in the informal group. There may be a doz-en others. Jim McDonald, a teammate at Young High and UT, is a mainstay. He manages Pickens’ pensions and fi nancial matters.
McDonald and Pickens go back to the beginning. Their competition to see which was best probably made both better. That their rela-tionship has lasted so long provides a peek into some-thing called “Vol for Life.”
That smart term was created as a recruiting tool to help convince prep pros-pects that Tennessee play-ers are all in this together, once a Vol always a Vol, for-ever and ever, amen.
Pictured with Richard Pickens (seated) at last week’s event are: Mike Miller, Jim Smelcher, Jim McDonald, Dewey Warren, Dick Williams and Jimmy Weatherford. Photo by Sara Barrett
A-6 • MARCH 10, 2014 • POWELL Shopper news
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FTN CITY – 3BR/2BA Cape Cod/Cottage w/detached sep living quarters. Great 2-family home. Main house has hdwd fl rs, sun rm, new roof & 1-car gar. $184,900 (874943)
HALLS – Charming 3BR/2BA home in quiet neighborhood on a dbl lot, bamboo fl rs 4 yrs old, carpet 3 yrs old, new roof in 2013, new hybrid HVAC in 2012, custom closet organizer, fl oored attic stg & 6.5' tall crawl space. THIS IS A MUST SEE!! $159,900 (874278)
GIBBS – Immaculate 4BR/2.5BA in excellent condition. Fea-tues: Bonus rm or 5th BR, 9' ceilings, mstr on main, formal dining, hdwd & tile, lg walk-in closets, mstr suite -w/dbl vanity, shower whirlpool tub, great stg, level fenced yard & lg deck great for entertain-ing. Freshly painted. $209,900 (874824)
KNOX – 142.9 acres on co line. 61.57 acres in Knox Co & 81.33 acres in Union Co. Branch runs across both ends of property & has a spring fed pond. Property has a brick bldg near road. $599,000 (874438)
POWELL – Investment oppor-tunity. Exc. loc. near I-75 on E. Raccoon Valley Road. 36.7 acres - front 10.77 acres has an existing mobile home park w/42 pads & a 4-plex w/2BR apartments. Presently 36 pads are rented. Park is set up for 16 x 80 singlewide. $999,000 (865016)
HALLS – Custom stone & brick 2-story bsmt w/3-car gar. Wood-ed in back w/seasonal lake view. This home features 7BR/4BA & over 4,800 SF w/plenty of stg. Crown molding throughout, eat-in kit w/granite tops, LR w/gas FP, mstr on main & BR on main, 3BR & bonus up. Downstairs has 2BRs living rm w/2nd FP & bonus/media rm pre-wired for surround sound. On quiet cul-de-sac. $414,900 (872896)
PLENTY OF ROOM TO ROAM!This custom brick B-rancher has 3BR/3.5BA & features: Lg rms, formal LR or offi ce on main, mstr on main & fi nished bsmt w/full BA. Enjoy the out-doors w/above ground pool & decking. Great for workshop or boat stg. $249,900 (870156)
CLINTON – Bring your horses & livestock! This 11.4 acre farm features: Totally updated 3BR/3BA home, 6-stall barn w/loft, tack rm & tractor shed. House has crown molding, granite tops, hdwd, tile & updates throughout includ-ing HVAC 4 yrs, roof 3 yrs & gutters 1 yr. Barn: Water & elect, 6 stalls, tack rm, 3 stg rms,& tractor shed. $369,900 (874343)
POWELL – Bring your boat or mo-tor home. This 3BR/2.5BA home features: Mstr w/full BA & 2nd BR w/half BA. Detached gar w/14' door & overhead stg. Attached 2-car gar, fenced backyard, screened porch, new windows & so much more. Reduced. $179,900 (867491)
HALLS – 3BR/3BA, 2-story planned unit features: Mstr on main, BR/offi ce on main w/shared hall BA access, LR, eat-in kit w/dbl pantry & laun-dry, sun rm & screened porch w/patio. Bonus, BR & Full BA up. Plenty of unfi nished 8x9 stg. $174,900 (872964)
GIBBS – 8+ acre, level sin-gle family tracts, starting at $110,000 (870239)
N KNOX – Great 3BR rancher on level lot. This home features: Refi nished hdwd fl rs, eat-in kit, formal LR & den wi/woodburn-ing FP. Mstr BR has half BA. Level fenced backyard w/stg bldg & lots of new decking great for entertaining. $129,900 (870453)
POWELL – Great 1- level 2BR/2Ba. This home features: Vaulted ceilings, arch design, mstr w/walk-in. Hall BA shared w/2nd BR, pre-wired for sec sys & fl oored pull-down attic stg. Private fenced back patio area. $129,900 (844872)
POWELL – 1.2 acres, adorable, well kept, 2BR/1BA. Convenient location close to I-75 at Callahan. Features: Covered front porch, 1-car det gar, covered patio w/stg bldg, side deck, hdwd un-der carpet. A must see. $79,900 (876209)
HALLS – Custom 4BR/5.5BA contemporary. Great for en-tertaining w/lg tile patio w/gorgeous mtn view. This home features: Vaulted ceilings, cus-tom built-ins, massive foyer & over 4,200+ SF on main. The 800+ SF main level mstr suite features sep BAs w/steam shower, whirlpool tub, sep walk-in closet & private ter-race. Custom kit w/Sub Zero Fridge, conv oven & 6-eye gas stove. Sep living down w/rec rm, BR, full BA & kit. 3car gar- 2car on main & 1-car down w/sep driveway. A must see. $999,900 (858773)
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CrossCurrents
LynnPitts
A capable wife who can fi nd? She is far more pre-cious than jewels. Strength and dignity are her clothing … Her children rise up and call her happy; her husband too, and he praises her… Many women have done excel-lently, but you surpass them all. Charm is deceitful, and beauty is vain, but a woman who fears the Lord is to be praised. Give her a share in the fruit of her hands, and let her works praise her in the city gates.
(Proverbs 31, selected verses)
Graduation
I have always taken a dim view of people who use eu-phemisms for death: pass-ing away, gone to glory, gone to his reward, etc. I was of the opinion that it was an attempt to avoid the truth, which is bluntly and unavoid-ably, “She died.” I thought people should just say so.
When the phone call came, at an hour on a Sat-urday morning when no one makes a phone call for a friendly chat, I knew what it was. I was already up and getting dressed to go see my mother in the nursing home.
We had known for several days that the end of her jour-ney was near. The last time I had seen her, just days be-fore, I knew that it was a mat-ter of weeks, possibly days.
I answered the phone and the gentle voice on the other end of the line said, “Lynn, your mother passed this morning.”
There it was, the euphe-mism. She “passed.” No, I thought, sadly. She died.
I called my daughters, both of whom had made travel plans to get here in time. Jordan was on the road already, and Eden had plane tickets for later in the week.
In the next few hours, there was much to be done: people to notify, arrange-ments to set in motion, de-cisions to make. It wasn’t until we were on the road that it hit me.
She passed. How apt for someone
who had been a teacher! It is true: she passed. She has graduated into heaven.
Do not misunderstand me: I still believe that we are saved by grace and no one of us can earn our way into heaven. But maybe, just may-be, God grades on the curve.
As I write this, we are in that short and, at the same time, interminable
limbo between a death and a burial. Nothing else can go forward, no plans can be made, no other work is so important as mourning the loss of my mother and my children’s grandmother.
Mother was known for her love of red. She wore red well and often, and after she entered the nursing home, exclusively! It was Eden who, about an hour after I notifi ed her of Mother’s death, called me back and said, “I have an idea. I think we should all wear red at the service.”
I laughed out loud, in spite of my grief, and said, “What a great idea! Moth-er would love it!” And so, spurning any sign of mourn-ing – no black allowed – we will send her to eternity, all of us dressed in red.
For the past 40 years, a framed motto hung in Moth-er’s house. It sums up her ap-proach to life perfectly.
I have to live with myself, and so
I want to be fi t for myself to know.
I want to be able, as days go by,
Always to look myself in the eye.
I don’t want to stand in the setting sun
And hate myself for things I’ve done.
I want to go out with my head erect;
I want to deserve my own respect.
I feel sure the Lord has already told her, “Well done, thou good and faithful ser-vant. And, by the way, love the red!”
By Cindy TaylorThe women’s ministry at Wallace Memorial Baptist Church
holds a quarterly sewing event to support local, regional and world missions.
The group “Fabric Quarters” has sewn clothes for an orphanage in Haiti, cut patterns for shoes through the organization Sole Hope, and made items for Angelic Ministries. Members also stuff stockings with goodies at Christ-mas for local centers such as Western Heights Baptist Center. Their most recent get-together was to create items to benefi t single moms.
“We know that single moms are a large and grow-ing population, and they are in need of so much support,” said volunteer Heather Tes-terman. “The bags are just a small gift of love for these moms.”
The group sewed small bags and purses and stuffed them with pampering items donated by the women at Wallace.
“Our mission is to pray continually, serve, connect and grow with those in our community and around the world,” said Testerman.
Volunteers included Ka-trina Reiling, Jordan and Stacey Evans and Bethany Summers.
Fabric Quarters volun-
teer Martha Hall sews
bags that will be stuff ed
with items for single
moms. Photo submitted
‘Sew’much love
By Wendy Smith Bob Lupton was enjoying
his fi rst Christmas as a resi-dent of inner-city Atlanta when he witnessed some-thing that changed his entire ministry. When members of a suburban church brought Christmas presents to a poor, urban family, the kids were ecstatic, the mom was embarrassed, and the dad vanished out the back door.
The charitable gift ex-posed the dad’s inability to provide, and it was more than his fatherly pride could handle, he said.
Lupton, the author of “Toxic Charity,” shared in-sight he’s gained from over 40 years of ministering to the poor at Cedar Springs Presbyterian Church’s 2014 Global Mission Conference.
After that Christmas, Lupton examined the min-istry’s other charity pro-grams and noticed a pat-tern. If someone received something once, they were appreciative. If they re-ceived it twice, there was some anticipation. When they received it a third time, it created expectation, and after the fourth time, it cre-ated entitlement. If some-one received something fi ve times, the result was pure dependence. That, he says, is toxic charity.
Bob Lupton speaks at Cedar
Springs Presbyterian Church’s
2014 Global Mission Confer-
ence. Photo by Wendy Smith
When giving hurtsisn’t accomplished through one-way giving. He began to see both the needs and the resources in his neigh-borhood, and utilize the re-sources. Nobody is so poor they don’t have something to contribute, he said. Even the homebound elderly can serve as the neighborhood watch.
His golden rule is “Never do for others when they have the capacity to do for themselves.”
The ministry’s programs evolved into neighbor-run organizations that meet needs and empower. A free clothing closet became a business when customers were required to purchase items. The new business provides employment, and customers feel appreciated rather than demeaned.
A food pantry became a food co-op when neighbors pooled resources to have more purchasing power at a local food bank. The arrange-ment led to a weekly potluck lunch where neighbors show off their cooking skills.
Christmas has changed, too. Generous church mem-bers still purchase items, but the unwrapped gifts are placed in a store where par-ents can shop for their chil-dren at reduced prices.
“What kids need more than toys is effective par-
WORSHIP NOTES ■ Glenwood Baptist Church,
7212 Central Avenue Pike, is
accepting appointments for
the John 5 Food Pantry. Call
865-938-2611. If you must
leave a message, your call will
be returned.
■ Central Baptist Fountain City is enrolling for its sum-
mer program. Fees are $105/
week for full-time and $85/
week for part-time with a
registration fee of $190. Info:
688-3031.
■ Women’s Contemplative Beach Retreat is set for April
28 to May 4 with registra-
tion deadline March 15. Info:
holypaths.org/.
From then on, he adopted the position that charity is helpful only in a crisis situ-ation. After the crisis has passed, it’s time to rebuild.
“Development is the right response to chronic poverty issues,” he said.
Defi ning “crisis” is tricky. Hunger, he said, is not a crisis.
“In 42 years of living in the city, I’ve never seen a starving person. I’ve seen food insecurity, but not starvation.”
Lupton’s response to the chronic needs of his neigh-bors was to build healthy re-lationships, something that
ents,” Lupton said.He shared the story of his
neighbor, Virgil, who com-plained about the vans full of church people that fl ood into the neighborhood each sum-mer to do service projects.
He wouldn’t go so far as to say they weren’t needed, but he suggested that ser-vice projects should be community-initiated and community-led.
He also thought subur-banites could learn a thing or two from those in the in-ner city.
Lupton shared Virgil’s words: “They have no idea how God is working in our neighborhood. They have no idea what it’s like to live by faith.”
Catch up with all your favorite columnists every Monday at www.ShopperNewsNow.com
The sixth annual event, sponsored by Rusty Wal-lace Honda, kicked off from Chilhowee Park and included varying degrees of difficulty from a one-mile fun walk through the zoo to a 5K run/walk through the park and a 100-yard dash for those 12 and younger.
Principal Jessica Bird-song ran for Pleas-ant Ridge E l e m e n -tary School along with t e a c h e r L a u r e n C l o w e r s . Clowers is e x p e c t i n g
her second child in a few weeks.
A-8 • MARCH 10, 2014 • POWELL Shopper news kids
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for these types of people to eat frequently and have protein at every meal. This type of person will want to avoid high glycemic foods that limit their carbohydrates, and stick mainly to low glycemic fruits and vegetables and small amounts of grain.
Mixed oxidizers are people who are actually a combination of both types and can sometimes fl uctuate between one type or the other depending on stress and other external environmental factors. Mixed types obviously have the most freedom with the way they eat but must be in tune with their bodies to know if they are leaning one way or the other from day to day. A mixed oxidizer will generally do better to eat a diet containing approximately 50 percent carbohydrates, 30 percent proteins and 20 percent fats, however this could vary from day to day depending on their stressors.
Losing weight is not as easy as choosing the latest fad diet. It is a process of fi guring out the type of diet you were born to eat and make sure you stay within those parameters during each meal. To get the weight loss you want you need to eat like your body wants to eat, not like the latest fad diet or the way your favorite fi tness model eats.
Next week: You are when you eat
By Dr. Donald G. Wegener
Each one of us is individual, inside and outside. This is why some diets work for some people while others succeed with a totally different type of diet. There are literally hundreds of different diets books available today, each claiming to be the perfect diet for you,
and each one promises to give you increased energy, vitality and weight loss. Figuring out what foods do best for your individual physiology is called metabolic typing. There are three basic metabolic types: slow oxidizers, fast oxidizers and mixed oxidizers.
Slow oxidizers are people who tend to quickly burn up fat and therefore do better on a high carbohydrate diet. A higher carbohydrate intake spares fat to help balance out how quickly food is used for energy in a slow oxidizer. These people usually do best on a ration of 60 percent carbohydrates, 25 percent proteins and 16 percent fat. These are the type of people who feel better when they consume carbohydrates, but they have to be careful not to get addicted to them because too many carbohydrates will make anyone fatter.
Fast oxidizers are people who tend to burn carbohydrates quickly and therefore require a relatively large amount of fats and proteins in their diet to balance out their metabolism. If you are a fast oxidizer you will want to experiment with a diet that has roughly 30 percent carbohydrates, 40 percent proteins and 30 percent fats. It is important
NEWS FROM POWELL CHIROPRACTIC
Rule #2: You are how you eat
Dr. Wegener
Dr. Donald G. WegenerPowell Chiropractic Center
Powell Chiropractic Center7311 Clinton Hwy., Powell
865-938-8700
www.keepyourspineinline.com
By Cindy TaylorSenior class offi cers and
representatives at Powell High School presented the Enchantment Under the Sea Prom Fashion Show to raise money for prom ex-penses.
Students send a special thanks to the sponsors: Photography by Stephanie Seaburd, Gilded Gown, Savvi Formal Wear, Mary Kay consultants April Howe and Julie Maxey, Tennessee College of Ap-plied Technology, PHS Cos-metology, Home Depot and PHS Carpentry.
■ Sadie Who?What was supposed to be
a Valentine’s Dance at Pow-ell Middle School turned into a Sadie Hawkins Dance due to weather and rescheduling. Students danced, joked and mingled for a few hours after school.
Most of the students didn’t know who Sadie Hawkins was or how to dress the part but that didn’t matter – they still had fun.
■ Teacher honoreesKnox County Schools
has chosen three teachers who will move on to re-gional and state competi-tion: Kristin Risdahl from Brickey-McCloud, elemen-tary; Merry Anderson from Karns, middle school; and Leslie Howe from Farragut, high school.
Meanwhile, those nomi-nated from area schools de-serve recognition.
Brian Patton represent-ed Pleasant Ridge Elemen-tary School in the competi-tion. He teaches music.
Tiffany Flood, Michelle Staal and Cheryl Robert-son represented North-west Middle School. Flood teaches math, Staal is the AVID teacher and Robert-son teaches science.
■ Running for their schoolRun for the Schools drew
more than 1,500 students, teachers and staff from schools all across Knox County.
Clowers
Patton
Robertson Staal
Flood
Christopher Sorensen and
Katherine Sweat enjoy the
Powell Middle School Sadie
Hawkins dance. Photos by Cindy Taylor Modeling fashions for girls in the PHS Prom Fashion Show are (front) Ashley Anderson, Meaghan Miller, Wendy Cessna, Esha
Bostick; (back) Destini Brown-Gordon, Tashay Edwards, Ashlyn Hurst, Hope Captain, Kaylee Thompson, Alex Hurst, Tori Palmer,
Sasha Holloway, Aija Jackson and Susan Martin. Photos submitted
Modeling fashions for the guys are Noah Muncey, Josh Neely, Harrison Cooke, Caleb Brewer, Tamarius Hunt, James Wee, Koby
Hyde and Aaron Taylor. Not pictured: Shay Ammons, Austin Irby, Tanner Hill, Brad Carr, Ken Davis, Braxton Adams, Zane LaMotte,
Mark Smith and Brad Holloway.
Andrew Foust and Britten
Hutchison get exercise at the
Sadie Hawkins dance in ways
that didn’t involve dancing –
such as chin-ups.
Staff and students who participated in Run for the Schools at Powell Elementary are Christa
Shaw, PES race organizer Kim England, teacher Linda Bresler, daughter and 3rd-grader Kennedy
Bresler and kindergartner Leila Easterly, whose entire family ran. Not pictured: Special Ed bus
driver Brenda Brown. Photo by Cindy Taylor
Spring into fashion
“I have been running during this pregnancy in the hope that I can get back in shape faster afterward,”
she said.Participating schools re-
ceived a minimum of $5 for each registrant along with
other awards and special prizes.
Catch up with all your favorite columnists every Monday at www.ShopperNewsNow.com
POWELL Shopper news • MARCH 10, 2014 • A-9
■ Baptist Academy sets open houseFirst Baptist Academy
will present an open house at 6:30 p.m. Thursday, March 13. The program will begin in the Family Life Center and feature elemen-tary students performing worship music.
Students will showcase their artwork and elemen-tary science-fair projects, and each classroom will be open. Staff will lead tours of
the school.“This is a great opportu-
nity for our families to see their students’ hard work,” said staff member Jennifer Neal. “We would also like to invite anyone who is in-terested in learning more about FBA to come be a part of our open house.”
First Baptist Academy is a fully accredited classical Christian education school for kindergarten through 12th grade.Reach Cindy Taylor at ctaylorsn@gmail.
com.
Fifth-grader Samantha Taylor holds her still-life painting.
First Baptist Academy kindergartner Dean McKitrick with his
self-expression creation. Photos submitted
Third-grader Mollie Howard with her fl ower painting.
SPORTS NOTES ■ Two players needed for
2014 Cherokee AAA/Ma-
jor 10u. Info: 414-8464.
■ RBI Outlaws 10U baseball team needs
experienced players.
Low signup fee with all
of the RBI perks. For a
private tryout, call Clint
Taylor at 740-8560.
■ Knoxville Bulldogs 9/10U travel baseball
team needs a few
players to complete its
roster for the year. Info:
Coach Jeff , 385-7396
or email knoxbulldogs.
jeff @gmail.com.
Space donated by:
Dennis Brock portrays Mr.
Brown from a Dr. Seuss clas-
sic as Copper Ridge Elemen-
tary School celebrated Dr.
Seuss’ birthday with a color-
ful parade around the school. Photos by Ruth White
Sailor Holt and teacher Kasey Mathis get ready for the pa-
rade at Copper Ridge Elementary.
Elyssa Wilson sports a red
hat.
Celebrating Dr. Seuss’
Lucy Ortner and Hunter Norris are Star-bellied Sneeches.
Emma Mayes is the Queen
of Quincy.
Mollie Addison Turner makes
a cute Daisy Head Mayzie.
Call Cindy at
922-4136
Got school news?
www.ShopperNewsNow.com
Space donated by Shopper-News.
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■ Cash Mob at Josie’s BoutiqueORNL Federal Credit
Union will host a Cash Mob from 5-7 p.m. Thursday, March 13, at Josie’s Bou-tique & New Release Video, 7508 Clinton Highway. The fi rst 30 people (one per fam-ily or couple) will receive a free $20 gift card courtesy of the credit union.
Business owner Abby Payne opened Josie’s Bou-tique in 1985, and, like many small businesses, has evolved with the changing industry ever since. Origi-nally focused on providing designer brands to con-sumers at affordable pric-es, the store now features a full-service hair and tan-ning salon and has become a destination for renting and purchasing new release movies.
Having been in business for almost 30 years, Josie’s Boutique & New Release Video is a staple for small businesses in the Powell area, and is one of the many reasons why it was selected by ORNL Federal Credit Union for the promotion. To nominate a local merchant, visit www.SmallBusiness-Counts.com.
■ Stress reliefLisa Birnesser, occu-
pational therapist, spoke about stress m a n a g e -ment to the East Towne Area Busi-ness and Profession-al Associa-tion March 5 at the New
Harvest Park Community Center.
City Council member
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Early voting starts April 16, barely a month away, and the candidates are eager to meet interested voters. Three community groups are sponsoring just such an opportunity.
Nancy Whittaker
Lisa Birnesser
Meet Knox County candidates
The Northeast Knox Preservation Association, Fountain City Town Hall
Nick Della Volpe is spear-heading a project to remove brush to open up visibility along I640. The ETABPA encourages all businesses in the East Knox corridor to attend the next meeting at 8 a.m. April 2. Contact the group at its new email ad-dress: etabpa2013@gmail.com.
■ Upcoming ■ Fountain City Busi-
ness and Professional As-sociation will meet at 11:45 a.m. Wednesday, March 12, at Central Baptist Church. Lunch is $10 (fi rst come, fi rst served). The speaker is G. Larry Hartsook, presi-
dent of Global Integrated Security Solutions. Info: fountaincitybusiness.com or 865-688-2421.
■ Powell Business and Professional Association will meet at noon Tuesday, March 11, at Jubilee Ban-quet Facility. Lunch is $14, and the speaker will be Rick Ross. Info: Sage Kohler, 938-2800.
■ Halls Business and Professional Association will meet at noon Tuesday, March 18, at Beaver Brook Country Club. Speaker is Patti Bounds, running unop-posed for school board from District 7. Buffet lunch is $10. Info: Bob Crye, 922-2793.
and Alice Bell Springhill Neighborhood Association are co-hosting a Meet and Greet for candidates from 6-8 p.m. Monday, March 17, at Harvest Park Community Center.
Also, the Halls Busi-ness and Professional As-sociation has invited school board candidate Patti Bounds to speak at noon Tuesday, March 18, and can-didates for county commis-sion Bo Bennett and Charles Busler to speak at noon Tuesday, April 15. Meetings are at Beaver Brook Coun-try Club and are open to the
Alexia Murriel
Fulton grad explores art at PSCC
News from Pellissippi State- Magnolia Campus
By Heather BeckWhen most people think
theater masks, the ancient Greek masks of comedy and tragedy come to mind.
Alexia Murriel, a student at Pellissippi State Com-munity College’s Magnolia Avenue Campus, recently put her own slant on a fi nal project in a theater class by creating African-inspired religious masks.
A Fulton High School graduate, Murriel is in her fourth semester at Pellis-sippi State, pursuing a gen-eral associate of arts degree. Once fi nished, she plans to attend a four-year university and earn a bachelor’s degree in mechanical engineering.
“Rituals were one of the early forms of theater,” Mur-riel said. The masks were modeled after those used in Nigeria and Zimbab we.
For Murriel, her love of art and her career pursuits are drawn from the same well of interest.
“I’m very much a hands-on and experimental per-son,” she said. “Anything I can make with my hands that’s my own idea is what interests me.
“Art was something that found me in elementary-school art class – I found that I was pretty good at drawing. At fi rst it was just pencil and paper, but now I use mostly acrylic paint on canvas boards. Then, in high school, I found I was
really good at math, so I be-came interested in mechan-ical engineering.”
Murriel is inspired by nature, but also by graffi ti, three-dimensional chalk drawings and aerosol art on canvas.
“I draw or paint just about anything that’s ap-pealing to the eye.”
In addition to attending college, Murriel also has considered joining the U.S. Air Force or Air Force Re-serve as well.
“I’m still exploring my options. I came to Pellis-sippi before going to a uni-versity to just get a feel for the college life.”
The Magnolia Avenue Campus is at 1610 E. Magno-lia Ave. Info: www.pstcc.edu/magnolia or 865-329-3100.
Bridging the digitaldivide in Lonsdale
News From Knoxville’s Community Development Corporation
By Alvin NancePhyllis Patrick, head of
the Lonsdale Homes Resi-dent Asso-ciation and a resident member of the KCDC Board of C o m m i s -sioners, has a vision for her commu-nity.
Her vision is a Lonsdale Community Technology Center.
More than 200 school-aged children live in the Lonsdale community. Only 18 percent of them have home access to the Internet. Studies consistently show a connection between pov-erty and lack of access to the Internet, a true digital divide across income lines.
This gap affects school test scores. Lonsdale chil-dren perform below the state average. Some of this can be attributed to lack of access to technology in their homes.
Commissioner Patrick believes we can bridge the digital divide in Lonsdale by placing a technology cen-
ter in the Lonsdale Homes community, and her vision is taking shape.
Plans call for locating the center in the on-site resi-dent association offi ce. In addition, neighboring steel recycler Gerdau has pledged fi nancial support toward outfi tting the center with computers. A team from the current Leadership Knox-ville class has adopted the project also.
We have consulted with Amy Brace, principal at Lonsdale Elementary, on student needs. We plan to start with students in the younger grades. When kids are not at the technology center, the neighborhood’s senior residents can also increase their computer skills.
We hope to have a grand opening in June to bring Commissioner Patrick’s vi-sion to fruition. As she told her fellow commissioners last month:
“I am glad to be a part of this. This is my neighbor-hood, and I want it to suc-ceed.”
Thanks to the help of all our partners, her vision will succeed.
Alvin Nance
POWELL Shopper news • MARCH 10, 2014 • A-11
By Betty BeanGood news for the envi-
ronment, nature lovers and neighborhood children; bad news for privet, honeysuck-le, kudzu and litterbugs.
The Tennessee Clean Wa-ter Network has acquired fi ve more acres for the Wil-liams Creek Urban Forest project – doubling its acre-age – and is preparing to tote the goats back to East Knoxville in June for the second chapter of a three-year land-clearing project. The goats not only made a big dent in clearing the area of invasive undergrowth last summer but also drew crowds of visitors who came to watch them munch weeds.
“The goats were very popular,” said TCWN Exec-utive Director Renee Hoyos. “People were coming by to take pictures, and they got to be a real family attrac-tion. Children loved them.”
In addition to being en-tertaining, the goats were
so effi cient that they cleared enough ground for crews of inmates who came behind them to be able to remove a massive dump site that included more than 500 junked tires.
The brush and the trash weren’t the only things that needed clearing, Hoyos said.
“Not only are we clean-ing the water, but we were cleaning titles. Every one of those (properties) had some crazy drama. The area had been a dump site forever.”
The fi rst fi ve acres of the forest were acquired by TCWN as a result of a law-suit it fi led in 2003 against Knoxville Utilities Board for storm-sewer overfl ows that polluted the ground-water and leached into the creek.
In 2004, KUB was slapped with a consent de-cree obligating it to a supple-mental environmental proj-ect requiring the purchase of property around the creek
Tennessee Clean Water Network Executive Director Renee Hoyos consults with Dr. Sharon Jean-Philippe, soil scientist and assistant professor of urban forestry at UT. Photo by Betty Bean
Urban forest, Eastside greenway take shapeto establish an urban forest to protect the creek and sur-rounding wetlands, and the parties reached an agree-ment.
In 2007, neighborhood resident Rick Roach and fellow St. Luke’s Episco-pal Church parishioner Lida Mayer started Friends of Williams Creek, which aimed at cleaning up the creek that represented Roach’s favorite childhood memories, many years be-fore it was declared the most polluted creek in Knox County. Friends of Williams Creek worked at building community support and joined forces with TCWN and other groups.
The second phase of the
cleanup was made possible by a $100,000 grant from the Aslan Foundation that put the project on a faster track and allowed Hoyos to do things like bringing in the goats.
The urban forest will be-come part of the extension of the James White Green-way along Dailey Street be-tween Brooks Avenue and South Chestnut Street to the east. The new land ac-quisition will enable the city to close Dailey, making it less inviting to illegal trash dumpers and other law-breakers. When completed, the greenway will link the Williams Creek Golf Course with the Knoxville Botani-cal Gardens.
with Sage Kohler
Coffee Break
Sage Kohler went to the “other UT,” but she found a home in East Tennessee.
In 2010, she had been with State Farm as an agent and in various executive positions for 28 years when the com-pany asked her to take over the agency in Powell after the unexpected death of agent Andy Anderson.
“We had never set foot in Tennessee,” she says. “I said, ‘I don’t know. I have to check it out.’
“We came down, and I fell in love. Absolutely fell in love. And six weeks later we were living here. It’s our fa-vorite place we’ve ever lived. I can’t imagine leaving here.”
Kohler was an Army brat, born in Fort Sill, Okla., who lived in 13 places before age 10, when her parents divorced. She moved with her mother and two younger sisters to Fort Lauderdale, where she says their life was nothing like the spring break good-times fantasy.
After high school, Kohler spent two years at Auburn University before transferring to the University of Texas at Austin. She landed a job before she even graduated, do-ing sales for a radio station purchased in Austin by Clear Channel Communications.
“I interviewed with Red McCombs and Lowry Mays,” she says, dropping some iconic names in radio history.
“I was their top salesperson for two years, but back in the early ’80s I was female, young and not married, and when the sales manager job came open, even though I was their lead salesperson, they wouldn’t even let me interview.
“I was like, done. I want to do something where I’m judged on what I do and not who I am or what sex I am. So I became a State Farm agent in 1984 at 24 years old.
“The fi rst policies I wrote were on myself. I was my best client for at least a month.”
Kohler was an agent for 13 years, but she went into management in 1997 when State Farm asked her to be-come the director of recruiting for Texas.
“As a State Farm agent, I have a few thousand house-holds that I represent, but as the director of recruiting I was going to hire people that each and every one of them had a few thousand people they could help.”
Helping people is Kohler’s goal in life. Although she went on to work in more management positions in Hunts-ville, Ala., Philadelphia and Louisville, Ky., she wanted to go back to being an agent, so the Knox County opening came at the perfect time.
While she has moved her offi ce from Powell to Hardin
Valley, where she lives with husband Louis, she remains involved in the Powell community – she’s president of the Powell Business and Professional Association – and says it’s an easy commute.
Now, she’s close enough to her offi ce to go home for lunch. And she’s right where she needs to be when – re-luctantly – she takes time off.
“We’re big lake people,” she says. “In the summertime we’re on the lake every weekend.”
Sit back and have a Coffee Break as you get to know Sage Kohler.
What is your favorite quote from TV or a movie?“I’ll have what she’s having” from “When Harry Met
Sally.” The whole scene is hilarious!
What are you guilty of?Overworking. My family is always telling me to “have
fun,” and my response is “when the work is done.” It just never seems to get fi nished.
What is your favorite material possession?My home – it’s my refuge. Its décor is eclectic – what-
ever I like, and I’m pretty eclectic.
What are you reading currently?I’m always reading several things at once. Currently,
I’m re-reading Stephen Covey’s “First Things First,” John Piper’s “A Godward Life” and Veronica Roth’s “Al-legiant” (last book in the “Divergent” series – requested by my 19-year-old daughter).
What was your most embarrassing moment? I was at a church worship weekend, and I went to a
different set of bathrooms than I normally do, and yes – you guessed it – I went in the men’s. BUT (it gets worse) I didn’t realize till I was sitting and heard two men walk in, talking.
What are the top three things on your bucket list? Go to Australia. Become a grandma. Live on the lake.
What is one word others often use to describe you and why?Intense. I’m pretty passionate about anything I
believe in or do … it’s never less than 110 percent, and I think that often exhausts the people around me.
If you could change one thing about yourself, what wouldit be?
That I would talk less and listen more. I’m getting better as I get older, so I fi gure if I live to about 110, I may be balanced.
What is your passion? Helping people – making a difference in their lives.
That’s why I do what I do. I love to be a resource for folks.
With whom, living or dead, would you most like to have along lunch?
J.R.R. Tolkien – the creativity in his writings fasci-nates me. I’d love to meet the mind behind his books.
Other than your parents, who has had the biggest infl u-ence on your life and why?
My husband, Louis (March 10, 2014, is our 30th wed-ding anniversary). He loves me because of me and in spite of me. I have never doubted his love, and knowing that has helped me face tough days/times.
I still can’t quite get the hang of … Our Mac Apple computer at home. I work in a Win-
dows environment all day, and when I try to do things on the Apple – it is NOT intuitive!
What is the best present you ever received in a box?Back in 1989, we really needed a car, and for Christ-
mas my husband, who was selling Mazdas for a living, gave me a small box – better than jewelry … It was the key to a new model of Mazda – a red Miata convertible.
What is the best advice your mother ever gave you?This is tough – she gave me so much. Things like,
“Don’t lay out in the sun or you’ll turn into an old brown leather purse,” but the best was probably, “Do what you know, not what you feel.”
What is your social media of choice? I’m terrible at all of it – not that I can’t or don’t enjoy
it. I can just never fi nd the time. If I had to pick, I’d say Facebook because I do love to catch up with old friends. It helped tremendously when I organized my 25th high school reunion.
What is the worst job you have ever had?Maid at my stepdad’s hotel. Not because I don’t like
cleaning, because I do. But my supervisor, “Frenchie,” was OCD, and after you cleaned, she truly gave it “the white-glove test.”
What was your favorite Saturday morning cartoon andwhy?
“Scooby-Doo, Where Are You!” – I think because they were such a diverse group of friends that had a goal and seemed to have the smarts to reach that goal – every week!
What irritates you?People who litter. Tennessee is so beautiful – I just
don’t understand why some folks don’t get it.
It can be your neighbor, club leader, bridge partner, boss, teacher – anyone you think would be interesting to Shopper News readers. Email suggestions to Betsy Pickle, betsypickle@yahoo.com. Include contact information if you can.
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A-12 • MARCH 10, 2014 • POWELL Shopper news
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Looking extremely festive are Kyla Lee
and her mother, Pepper Marcum, of
Friendsville. They come “for the joy of
it and the animal camaraderie.” Dogs
Yankee Doodle and Daisy Mae agree!
At the East Tennessee
Pit Bull Rescue booth,
Heather Wittig and
daughter Elizabeth
pose with beautiful
8-month-old Blossom,
who is happy to be
with such kind folks.
“She’s a baby with the
sweetest personality
– great with kids and
dogs,” says Heather. If
you’d like to adopt her
or another rescued pit
bull, visit www.etnpit-
bullrescue.org/.
Jeannine Jones of H.A.L.T.
(Humans & Animals Learning
Together) poses with Bumble,
who is available for adoption.
The bright, gentle little dog
has just taken part in a train-
ing session for the organiza-
tion, and she loves people.
Info: www.haltdogs.org/.
Karns residents Lori Friel and
her daughter, Jessica, enjoy
the party with dog Kipling.
Linda Price of Maryville cud-
dles her Parson Russell terrier/
Chihuahua mix puppy, Vali,
which she says is short for
“Valentine.”
Carol Zinavage
Carol’s Corner
The seventh annual Mar-di Growl parade and festival on Market Square proved to be a howlin’ good time for all involved.
Last year’s event took place in cold, rain and wind, but this year’s more compliant weather com-pelled hundreds of dog lovers to come out for a day of fun and festivities, all benefiting Young-Williams Animal Center.
good timeA howlin’
Cassandra Strunk of West Knox-
ville poses with handsome Ru-
pert, a 1-year-old white boxer.Magicians performed, bands played and costumed canines of all types strutted
their stuff. The animal center’s Spay
Shuttle drew a big crowd. It offers free spay/neuter ser-vices, and Young-Williams provided free rabies shots and microchipping at the event.
To check on these ser-vices or adoptable pets, call 215-6677 or visit www.young-williams.org/.Send story suggestions to news@
ShopperNewsNow.com
POWELL Shopper news • MARCH 10, 2014 • A-13
POWELL SERVICE GUIDE
To place an ad call
922-4136
THROUGH TUESDAY, MARCH 11Church revival, Christ UMC, 7535 Maynardville
Highway. Guest speaker: The Rev. Rosemary Brown. Info: 922-1412.
THROUGH SUNDAY, MARCH 16The 2014 annual Used Book Sale organized by
the Friends of the Knox County Public Library, at the Knoxville Convention and Exhibition Center in the Holiday Inn, World’s Fair Park. Schedule/info: www.knoxfriends.org or 215-8775.
SUNDAYS THROUGH JUNE 8GriefShare grief recovery group, 3-5 p.m., room
104, Fountain City UMC, 212 Hotel Road in Fountain City. Cost: $15 for materials. Child care available through 5th grade: $5 per child per session. To register: 689-5175.
MONDAY, MARCH 10Bobby Welch, Associate Executive Director
of Tennessee Baptist Convention, will be guest speaker, 6:45 p.m., Sharon Baptist Church, 7916 Pedi-go Road. Part of March Gladness series. Info: www.Sharonknoxville.com.
Registrations accepted for 2014-15 school year for Little Creations Parent’s Day Out program, 9 a.m.-noon, Beaver Dam Baptist Church, 4328 Emory Road. Info: 922-7529.
Family Movie Night: “Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs 2,” 5:30 p.m., Burlington Branch Li-brary, 4614 Asheville Highway. Info: 525-5431.
MONDAY-TUESDAY, MARCH 10-11Foothills Craft Guild Jury Fest submissions
accepted, 10 a.m.-3 p.m., Foothills Craft Guild offi ce, Emporium Building, 100 S. Gay St. The Jury Fest will be March 12. Info/application: www.foothillscraftguild.org or Ann Lacava, 938-4180.
TUESDAY, MARCH 11Sushi 101 cooking class, 6:30-8:30 p.m., Avanti
Savoia’s La Cucina, 7610 Maynardville Pike. Cost: $60. Info/reservations: 922-9916 or www.avantisavoia.com.
Healthy Choices, a plant-based free cooking class, 6 p.m., North Knoxville Seventh-day Adven-tist Church fellowship hall, 6530 Fountain City Road. Guest speaker: Melody Prettyman, gourmet chef as seen on 3ABN TV. Preregister by March 8 to: Kathy,
314-8204 or www.KnoxvilleInstep.com.Living Well with Chronic Conditions, 9:30 a.m.-
noon, Knox County Health Department classroom, 140 Dameron Ave. Free. To register: 215-5170.
“Nutrition Series: Food Safety,” 10:30 a.m.; “Scams & Identity Theft” presented by the Knoxville Police, noon; Humana Guidance Center, 4438 West-ern Ave. Free and open to the public. Info/calendar of events: 329-8892.
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 12The Bonny Kate Chapter of the Daughters of
the American Revolution meeting, noon, Second UMC, 1524 Western Ave. Guest speaker: Sharon Davis, state chair for women’s issues.
Registrations accepted for 2014-15 school year for Little Creations Parent’s Day Out program, 9 a.m.-noon, Beaver Dam Baptist Church, 4328 Emory Road. Info: 922-7529.
Computer Workshops: “Word 2007 Basics,” 2 p.m., Burlington Branch Library, 4614 Asheville High-way. Requires “Introducing the Computer” or equivalent skills. To register: 525-5431.
THURSDAY, MARCH 13Free Music Jam: country, bluegrass, etc.; pickers
and grinners, acoustical only; 7-9 p.m., Escapee’s RV Park, 908 Raccoon Valley Road.
Parent to Parent Support meeting for parents of children with mental health diagnoses, 6-8 p.m., K-TOWN Youth Empowerment Network, 901 E. Summit Hill Drive. Info: Alicia, 474-6692 or abanks@tnvoices.org.
The Appalachian Arts Craft Center Spring Porch Sale begins. Features marked down stock, sec-onds, student crafts and unjuried work by members of the Craft Center. Located at 2716 Andersonville Highway 61 in Norris. Info: 494-9854 or www.appalachianarts.net.
The Heiskell Community Center Seniors Month-ly meeting, 10 a.m.-2 p.m., Heiskell Community Center, 9420 Heiskell Road. Program: “Meet the Candidates” with candidates running for various offi ces in Knox County. Bring a dessert and a friend. Info: Janice White, 548-0326.
First Lutheran Church senior group 55 Alive meeting, noon, First Lutheran Church meeting room, 1207 N Broadway. Hot lunch: $7; reservations requested. Guest speaker: Susan Spicer will talk about the Stephen Ministry program. Info/reservations: 524-0366.
“Put A Spring in Your Step” luncheon hosted by Knoxville Christian Women’s Connection, 10:45 a.m., Buddy’s Bearden Banquet Hall on Kingston Pike. Cost: $12 inclusive. Complimentary child care by reserva-tion only. Reservations/info: Marie, 382-1155 or marie.rose139@hotmail.com.
Weekly Bible study, 9:30-11:30 a.m., at New Cov-enant Fellowship Church, 6828 Central Ave. Pike. Topic: “The Gate Keeper” with host Judy Burgess. Info: call Diane Shelby, 687-3687.
Dining with Diabetes, 2 p.m., Halls Branch Library, 4518 E. Emory Road. Last in a three-class series for people with diabetes and their family members. Topics include learning how to manage diabetes, food demon-strations and tasting of healthy foods. Info: 922-2552.
Diabetes Education class, 12:30-1:30 p.m., Foun-tain City Branch Library, 5300 Stanton Road. A pro-gram designed for people with diabetes and their family members. Info: 689-2681.
“Show and Tech” for teens, 5:30 p.m. Burlington Branch Library, 4614 Asheville Highway. Info: Nicole, 525-5431.
FRIDAY, MARCH 14Pizza Pizzazz cooking class, 6:30-8:30 p.m., Avanti
Savoia’s La Cucina, 7610 Maynardville Pike. Cost: $50. Info/reservations: 922-9916 or www.avantisavoia.com.
“Teen Tech Week: Customize it!” 1:30 p.m., Bur-lington Branch Library, 4614 Asheville Highway. Info: Nicole, 525-5431.
DIY: painting tips, 3:15 p.m., Humana Guidance Center, 4438 Western Ave. Free and open to the public. Info/calendar of events: 329-8892.
FRIDAY-SATURDAY, MARCH 14-15Spring Craft Show, 9 a.m.-8 p.m. Friday and 9
a.m.-6 p.m. Saturday, Lions Club Building at Fountain City Park. Fundraiser for Adrian Burnett Elementary School’s 5th grade Safety Patrol trip to Washington, D.C.
SATURDAY, MARCH 15Thunder Road Gospel Jubilee, 6 p.m., WMRD
94.5 FM, 1388 Main St., Maynardville. All pickers and singers welcome.
“Painting Landscapes in Acrylics” workshop, 10 a.m.-4 p.m., Fountain City Art Center, 213 Hotel Ave. Instructor: Terry Chandler. Info: 357-2787 or fcartcen-ter@knology.net.
Powell Church Clothes Closet Winter Apparel Cleanout, 9 a.m.-noon, Powell Church, 323 W. Emory Road. Info: talong1966@gmail.com.
Free Clothing/Household Goods giveaway, 8 a.m.-2 p.m., Christ UMC, 7535 Maynardville Highway.
The Samuel Frazier Chapter Daughters of the American Revolution meeting for the Historical Preservation “Witness to History” program, 11 a.m., the East Tennessee History Center, 601 South Gay St. Presentation: “The East TN Story through Important Artifacts” by Cherel Henderson. Visitors are welcome. Info: Martha Kroll, 603-4655.
“Stuff-A-Bag” sale sponsored by the Halls Cross-roads Women’s League, 9 a.m.-1 p.m., The Closet, corner of Maynardville Highway and Cunningham Road. $5 per bag to purchase good, used clothing; donations appreci-ated. Proceeds will be used to purchase school supplies for children in need.
SATURDAY-SUNDAY, MARCH 15-16East Tennessee Daffodil Society fl ower show,
1-5 p.m., UT Ag. Campus, Ellington Plant Sciences Building, 2436 Joe Johnson Drive. Free to the public.
MONDAY, MARCH 17Phillip Martin, Pastor of Cedar Grove Bap-
tist in Kingston, will be guest speaker, 6:45 p.m., Sharon Baptist Church, 7916 Pedigo Road. Part of March Gladness series. Info: www.Sharonknoxville.com.
Luttrell Seniors monthly luncheon, 10 a.m.-1 p.m. at the community center. Entertainment by John Clark. Bring items for the Yard Sale in the Park. Every-one welcome. Info: Fran, 992-0678.
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 19Union County Retired Teachers meeting, noon,
Hardee’s back room.
Send items to news@ShopperNewsNow.com
ShoppernewseVents
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A-14 • MARCH 10, 2014 • POWELL Shopper news
• Items and Prices are specifically intended to apply locally
where issue originates. No sales to dealers or competitors.
Quantity rights reserved. 2014 K-VA-T Food Stores, Inc.
Food City is an Equal Opportunity Employer.
SALE DATESSun., March 9, -
Sat., March 15, 2014
• KNOXVILLE, TN - N. BROADWAY, MAYNARDVILLE HWY., HARDIN VALLEY RD.,KINGSTON PIKE, MIDDLEBROOK PIKE, MORRELL RD. • POWELL, TN - 3501 EMORY RD.
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Armour Vienna
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With Card299
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With Card699
Enter For A Chance To Win @ Armour-Star.com
Win This Customized Bad Boy Buggies® from Armour Vienna® Sausages or one of our exciting monthly prizes.© 2014 Pinnacle Foods Group LLC. The name, likeness, logos of Kevin Harvick and JR Motorsports and Kevin Harvick, Incorporated, are registered trademarks of Kevin Harvick, Incorporated
and JR Motorsports and are used under license from Kevin Harvick, Incorporated and JR Motorsports. Bad Boy Buggies is a registered trademark of Textron Inc. Used by permission.
Enter our National Sweepstakes for a Chance to Win a Customized
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Vienna Sausages
Food City Fresh
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199
Red, Ripe
Fresh Strawberries16 Oz.
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2/400
100
Selected Varieties
Food Club Shredded Cheese
6-8 Oz.
SAVE AT LEAST 3.99 ON TWO With
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Nabisco Premium Saltines
9-16 Oz.
SAVE AT LEAST 2.99 ON TWO
With
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Pure
Crisco Vegetable Oil
48 Oz.
2/500With Card
Real
HeinzMayonnaise
30 Oz.
2/500With Card
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Food City Fresh
Assorted Pork ChopsPer Lb.
With Card199
Ripe, Sweet
Jumbo CantaloupeEach
With Card
2/400
93
Selected Varieties
Hershey's Candy Bars
1.4-1.85 Oz.
10/500With Card
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Tostitos Cantina Tortilla Chips
9-12 Oz.
2/400With Card
Maxwell House
Master Blend Coffee
30.6 Oz.
599With Card
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50 Oz., 24-32 Loads
499With Card
Gain Flings or Tide Pods
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48 Oz.
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20-50 Ct.
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24 Pk., 12 Oz. Cans or Btls.
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1127With Card
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2/100
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23 Oz.
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