George Quarles has not yet personalized his new office inside the Lee Athletic Center at Webb School of Knoxville. Two Spartan football helmets sit under a television, and on the white board, players’ last names are scrawled in black marker with each group separated by class. The decor is minimal, yet Quarles appears right at home in his new digs. After leading Maryville to 11 state titles in 18 years as head coach and spending almost a decade with three different college programs, the Jefferson County graduate is ready for a fresh start in a setting that is all too familiar. “The biggest thing to me is the mountains,” he said with a smile. “Whether it’s down Alcoa Highway or Pellissippi going back toward Maryville, just seeing those mountains calms me down and makes me feel good. “It’s just the right time for me to come back and do this. And we have so many friends that live here, so that’s been a good part for us. It has been really nice to be back home.” In his return to East Tennessee, the 58-year-old is tasked with leading a Webb program that is looking to return to prominence in Division II-AA.
Read MoreMotorists and patrons of Cotton Eyed Joe might expect to see a new sign at the long-time entertainment venue at 11220 Outlet Drive. Chuck Ward, owner of Cotton Eyed, is looking to improve its existing sign, so he took the old sign down with plans to replace the neon with LED lighting. “When you’re getting four or five hundred calls from people complaining … voicing their opinion about the sign, you want to get it fixed," he said. “This sign was put up 33 years ago, and it’s an eyesore. It doesn’t work,” Ward said. “The neon’s out of it because of the transformers or things of that nature. “So, we started taking bids about two years ago to redo it,” he said. “And, the gentleman who originally built it came to me and said, ‘I can redo it.’ So that’s who we went with, Tony Saples with Neon Services. “He came out, looked at it and we discussed a couple quotes,” Ward said. “We decided we’d let (Saples) do it. “It’s been about six months in the works to take it down just because of the weather, and he’s very busy. “Finally, this week we got a chance to take it down, and here we are,” he said. “It’s in his shop, getting ready to be refurbished.
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