Tuesday, February 25, 2014
Issue 33, Volume 125
UT employee killed in parking garage accident Victim served as supervisor in College of Law since 1979 the corner of 16th Street and White Avenue on her way to work early Monday McCord Pagan morning. Copy Editor According to a Knoxville Police Department report, A University of Tennessee Phyllis Carter, 60, parked employee was killed in the her Toyota Prius in the parking garage located on garage but accidentally
Troy Provost-Heron Sports Editor
Phyllis âSallyâ Carter
left it in neutral, and the car began to roll down an incline inside the garage. Carter chased after it in an attempt to stop it but was crushed between a wall and the car. After her fellow employees realized that Carter, who went by Sally, had failed to show up for work, they started calling around, according to KPD spokesman Darrell DeBusk.
The employees contacted her husband and when he couldnât reach her via cell phone, he began to search for her with another UT employee. Authorities determined that the victim âhad not been there long â before her body was found. She was pronounced dead at the scene. Carter was a supervisor in the UT College of Law
Stephan Hatfield⢠The Daily Beacon
SEE
INSIDE
Angel Olsenâs new folk effort taps into the existential soulseeker in all of us
ARTS & CULTURE >>pg. 5
Martin not concerned with chatter surrounding job security Steven Cook Copy Editor
Sex Week officials are now legally labeled as âcondemnedâ after House resolution passes, 69-17 NEWS >>pg. 2
Library and has worked at the university since 1979. âSally was a treasured and valuable member of the law school community who contributed so much to make the College of Law a better place,â said Doug Blaze, dean of the College of Law, in a statement. âShe will be sorely missed. Our thoughts and prayers are with her entire family.â
ing. âThe adrenaline you get from a sparring match is just so fun,â Adkins said. âIt really is. Itâs just ecstatic.â In January, Adkins began a low-carb diet to drop 21 pounds, permitting him to box as a Junior Welterweight. Adkins recommends âcutting.â Otherwise, he believes, boxers face serious disadvantages. âI would have to go up and fight people who probably cut and made the weight,â Adkins said. âSo they would be bigger, taller with longer reach and more power.â
The elephant in the room has hardly been brought up all season long. On Monday, it could no longer be ignored. Coming off another bad loss to Texas A&M and sitting at 16-11 in what many pegged as a makeor-break season for Tennessee basketball, the embattled face of the program was prodded by question after question from reporters over his job security. And Cuonzo Martin, like practically everything else the third-year coach has faced since arriving in Knoxville on March 2011, handled it with a business-like, no-nonsense approach. âDonât waste time and energy on it,â Martin said of how he deals with outside criticism and pressure. âThe next game presents itself and you move forward.â Pressure is nothing new to Martin, who played four years at Purdue, two years in the NBA and had two years of head coaching experience at Missouri State before arriving on Rocky Top. But with the tough spell UT has fallen upon as a program in this past half-decade, pressure and negativity has reached another level as of late on Rocky Top. That has only intensified with each loss this year.
See BOXING on Page 3
See LUNCHEON on Page 6
After weigh-ins on Sunday, Golden Gloves Gym management hold a mandatory meeting for boxers participating in the upcoming Ace Miller Memorial Boxing Tournament. The majority of the boxers in the photo raised their hands to signify they have no prior experience in the ring.
Boxers ready to trade blows After months of preparation, annual Boxing Weekend nears closer Hanna Lustig News Editor Standing in line on Sunday, Elliot Watson knows he has made his weight class. Heâs already been to the sauna and heâs been training for two and half, maybe three months. Watson, senior in Supply Chain Management, is a two-time veteran and champion of the Ace Miller Memorial Boxing Tournament. A ravenous one, at that. âI canât wait to eat,â said Watson, a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon. â... Iâm really more excited about drinking
a lot of water. I canât wait to down a good Gatorade because Iâm a little dehydrated.â The feeling, among boxers waiting for their final weighins, is mutual. Before a swarm of eager spectators fill the Jacobs Center or a single jab is thrown on Thursday night, the Ace Miller Memorial Boxing Tournament has already begun. It started weeks, even months ago. It started beneath the lights of the Golden Gloves Gym with sweaty T-shirts and sparring. It started with forgoing Cookout burgers and whiskey to stay trim for weigh-ins.
Every match fought on Boxing Weekend is prefaced by tireless, bloody practice. Every match is won long before the boxers step inside the ring. âIâm at Golden Gloves a lot when theyâre training,â said Holt Edwards, senior in political science and tournament executive director. âTheyâre not joking around. They take it very seriously.â Taylor Adkins, sophomore business analytics and member of Sigma Chi, is another of these serious boxers. For him, that training period stretches back to May, with conditioning and mastering technique. This yearâs tournament will mark his first year participat-
âVagabondia Castleâ a haven for artistic roots
Tennessee forwardâs increased âselfishnessâ Overlooked Knoxville fortress housed childrenâs author Frances Hodgson Burnett in 1800s could be the difference write beloved childrenâs classics herself that she had,â Jones said. has long since splintered away exception. Liv McConnell âIâd been here quite a while including âThe Secret Gardenâ âYou can tell this by the name she and with it most of its modern in late season NCAA run Copy Editor The year is 1865, only two years after the bloodshed of the Campaign, and the city >>pg. 6 Knoxville is struggling to resurrect itself. Rising from crumbled foundations and carnage is a new breed of Knoxvillian â freed blacks and immigrants flood the city in expectation of opportunity. An imaginative 16-year-old girl, INSIDE THE DAILY BEACON packed onto a ship from England following her fatherâs untimely In Short Page 2 death, is one such lowly dreamer. News Page 3 Made to marry a man she didnât love and forced to move from Opinions Page 4 shack to shack, she reinvented Arts & Culture Page 5 her humble prospects and drew Knoxvilleâs budding artistic circle Sports Page 6 to her riverside refuge, known to all as âVagabondia Castle.â Scribbling stories in ledger books since girlhood, she would go on to
SPORTS
and âA Little Princess.â Her name â one that has since become as shrouded and obscure as her literary garden â was Frances Hodgson Burnett. âBurnett is a well-hidden secret in Knoxville,â Whitney Jones, lecturer in childrenâs literature, said. âVery few people know about her presence here, which is unusual because I think we know a lot about the other authors whoâve had histories here. Maybe itâs because she left here and never came back.â As a girl from impoverished origins with a heart fixated upon far more worldly prospects, Burnett felt âalmost imprisonedâ by the poverty of her Knoxville life. âHaving to live in dirt-floor shacks, it just wasnât the image of
gives to the shack on the river, Vagabondia Castle. She had these illusions of grandeur and decided to make this shack into some kind of artistic refuge for the highthinkers of Knoxville.â Jones describes âa pretty large communityâ of artists inhabiting mid-19th century Knoxville, a city rife with historic transience due to its river location and recent installation of a major railway line. Burnett hosted musicians, bartenders, philosophers and artists of all stripes in her ramshackle home. âIt was very poor, very dilapidated,â Jones said, âand she sort of recolored it through her imagination into this artistâs refuge, this salon for philosophical and artistic thinkers, and held court there.â Today, the rickety shanty
remembrance. An unobtrusive rock, its gray slate inscribed with a commemorative paragraph about the author, serves as sole sentinel to Burnettâs memory. Swallowed by the shadow of Calhounâs On the River, the location historians believe to have once been the site of Vagabondia Castle, Calhounâs manager Steve Fletcher has walked past the stone tribute countless times without paying mind to it. âIâve worked at Calhounâs since â98 and walk by (the rock) twice nearly every day on my way in and out of work,â Fletcher said. âItâs right next to the dumpsters.â Fletcher, who has never heard anyone at the restaurant mention the landâs literary significance, read the rockâs engraving out of idle curiosity but believes he is an
before stopping to read it and learning of Burnettâs presence,â he said. âItâs a strange thing, realizing such an interesting and valuable bit of local history could go so ignored. âThe rock is hardly visible and doesnât do her story or memory justice.â âShe often said she started really writing, or getting the ideas for, âThe Secret Gardenâ here in Knoxville because of the outdoor, wilderness feel,â Jones said. âIn her memoir, she talks about this little bird leading her off into the fields and woods of Knoxville, and thatâs when she has these hugely transcendent moments where she realizes how connected she is to nature.â
See BURNETT on Page 5