UCB&PA Prayer Breakfast welcomed a crowd

Chairman Martin Shafer opened the 28th Annual Union County Business & Professional Prayer Breakfast on Good Friday with a warm country welcome of fellowship and good food. The First Baptist Church Fellowship Hall in Maynardville was packed with friends who not only wanted to share fellowship, but also to donate to several UC nonprofits. Father Neil Pezzulo of St. Teresa of Kolkata Catholic Church blessed the bounty and reminded everyone that no one should be afraid to walk with the Lord and enjoy the peace that comes from belief.

Commission votes to abolish constable positions in 2026

The Union County Commission voted to abolish the position of constable for the second reading at the commission meeting on April 28. All voted for the motion by Sidney Jessee and seconded by Kenny Moore with the exception of Angela Conner-Murphy, who abstained. A handful of citizens and a representative of the Tennessee Constables Association requested that commissioners find another solution. But the recent lawsuits that have been filed due to the wreck in Sharps Chapel heavily influenced the vote.

UC Retired Teachers elect officers

Members of Union County Retired Teachers Association met for lunch at Tacolandia in Maynardville in April. Officers were elected for 2025-2026: President Marilyn Toppins, Vice President Rhonda Ryder, Secretary Dawn Patelke, and Treasurer Pat Walker.

Dawn Patelke, Roger Flatford, and Rhonda Ryder volunteered to judge the UC Spelling Bee on Thursday, April 10, at the UCHS Library. The UCRTA and the UC Education Association provided prizes for the event.

Draw, Pardner

I think I’ve become a dinosaur.
Rarely a day goes by that someone doesn’t ask me how much longer I’m going to work.
The short answer: I can retire anytime I wish. I just haven’t “wished” enough yet.
The long answer: When the job becomes more of a burden than a joy, I’ll retire.
I asked my doctor, the legendary Fred A. Hurst, the same question. He told me he didn’t golf, fish, hunt or even mow his own yard, so what would he do if he retired?

A Changing America Part III

Part II of my coverage of America’s slide from the most respected nation to the America of today is also keyed to the 1970’s. One helping person who was a Democratic supporter of Richard M. Nixon being re-elected for a second term was George Wallace the long time Governor of Alabama. George Wallace was a Dixiecrat, was very conservative and did not have any use for Richard Nixon’s competitor who happened to be a liberal Democrat whose name happened to be George McGovern a senator from South Dakota. According to H.R. Haldeman’s diary which he kept daily while serving as President Nixon’s Chief of Staff, whenever McGovern happened to pull up close to Nixon in the polls, Nixon would tell Haldeman to call George Wallace and get him to start campaigning harder, which would always effectively lower McGovern’s poll numbers. This can be confirmed in H.R. Haldeman’s book published after Nixon’s second term was terminated because of the Watergate debacle. The book is “The Haldeman Diaries” published by G. P. Putnam’s Sons, Copyright 1994. This book is a good read for those who want to know what really went on in the second Nixon Presidency.

Be What You Are

BE WHAT YOU ARE

Be what you are.
Cause if you ain’t what you are.
You are what you ain’t.

Jimmy Wolfenbarger taught me that little poem. Mr. Wolfenbarger passed away this past weekend. Jimmy loved his Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ with all his heart, with all his soul, with all his mind, and with all his strength. Loving the Lord with all your, heart, soul, mind and strength is the first commandment, see Mark 12:29-31. I know that Mr. Wolfenbarger loved the Lord for two reasons.

Planting by the Signs

My Grandpa Roark was really into doing farm activities according to the signs, be it planting crops, killing weeds, or dehorning cattle. And his preference was to go by a system that used human body part signs to tell when it was a good time to do things: plant root crops when the signs are in the head and kill weeds when the signs are in the bowels. I grew up hearing this stuff and had no clue what they were talking about, except that they always used a calendar given out by one of the local banks that indicated what the signs were on a particular day. With gardening season upon us, I set out to finally figure them out…I think. The astronomy and astrology involved is mind boggling but let me take a shot at sorting it out.