Issue 22, Volume 122
Friday, February 8, 2013
Fracking concerns some in UT community Lauren Parker Contributor When energy exploration crops up in conversation, Tennessee is not typically a state that is mentioned. However, UT is considering leasing several thousand acres of land in the Cumberland Forest northeast of Oak Ridge to an oil and gas company to conduct research on the environmental effects of hydraulic fracturing, also known as “hydrofracking.” Hydrofracking as a drilling technique has become popular and profitable in the last decade due to refined drilling techniques, rising energy costs and lack of regulation. While fracking is providing fairly clean energy for Europe, North America and China without having to buy oil from
the conflict-riddled Middle East, it still feeds the fossil fuel addiction plaguing most industrialized countries. Hydraulic fracturing starts with the drilling of a vertical well. A horizontal well branches off from the main well into the rock layer. A pipe is then inserted into the well, and a highly pressurized mixture of water, chemicals and sand is pumped down into the well at high speeds to create or widen pre-existing fractures in the rock layer. The sand keeps the fissures open and allows the trapped natural gas to escape into the well and be collected at the surface. The recovered water mixture is stored in open pits • Photo courtesy of agriculture.utk.edu and then taken to treatment The UT Forest Resources Center demonstrates a restoration project in the UT Cumberland Forest in Morgan facilities. County. The Cumberland Forest could be leased for hydraulic fracturing, a controversial drilling technique, in order to study environment impacts. See FRACKING on Page 3
Library celebrates new Commons Students receive language credits studying abroad Melodi Erdogan
of campus and we wanted the main corridor … to have services that were very student centered and were open more Justin Joo than just 8-5. …” Staff Writer But although the construcThe renovations to the section on the second floor is ond floor Commons in Hodges complete, additional renovaLibrary are officially complete, tions will soon begin on the and UT wanted to celebrate. ground floor of Hodges. Administration, faculty, Within a few weeks, Dean of staff and students gathered Libraries Steve Smith said that throughout the second floor construction will begin on the of Hodges Thursday afternoon ground floor to make room for to celebrate the completion of One Stop, a central location to months and months of renovacombine the services needed tions done to the Commons. for students to manage their All along the main hall of enrollment, registration, finanthe second floor booths for cial aid and paydifferent library ments. It will act services were on as an alternate locadisplay. More than tion for the Student a hundred students Services. and faculty mingled Smith does not from table to table, foresee the consigning up for a struction impeding raffle drawing and access to Hodges sampling snacks from the ground that some of the floor entrance, booths offered. but he said that it Some of the would be noticetables includable. He hopes that ed the Writing it will be finished Center, the Office by the summer. of Information During the sumand Technology, mer, renovations UTPD, the Office will be done to of Multicultural the third through Student Life and a sixth floors, known photo booth with as the Stacks. costumes, just to Renovations will name a few. include making Teresa Walker, more room and head of integrated install more electric user services, was outlets as well as very proud of both enhance security the Commons and Tara Sripunvoraskul • The Daily Beacon elements due to the celebration. Hodges now being “We have put Students study in the newly renovated Commons on the second floor open 24 hours a day. so much time, and of Hodges Library on Nov. 13. The library welcomed students to a The first floor thought and energy celebration to get to know the new additions on Feb. 7. Commons will also into this,” Walker receive renovations, said, “and we’ve our library is better than were added and the Studio but Smith said that they probabeen living this renovation for Vanderbilt’s,” Cheek joked to a was expanded. Many of the bly wouldn’t begin for another so long now that we really services offered, such as OIT two to three years because of a roaring crowd. want to celebrate what we’ve A small buffet of food was and Research Assistance, were lack of funding. done and see students using But for Smith, the afternoon offered to those attending the relocated to be in a more cenit.” festivities in the Mary Greer tral and accessible location. was about the completion of Dean of Libraries Steve Room after the speeches were Areas for the Student Success the second floor’s renovations. Smith, Interim Assistant Vice Center, the Math Tutorial For him it was a moment of done. Chancellor for Information The entire renovation cost Center, the Writing Center pride. Technology Joel Reeves, “You know, as proud as I $3 million. The massive proj- and the Stat 201 Lab were also Provost Susan Martin and am about the space, I’m more ect began in the summer 2012 relocated. Chancellor Jimmy Cheek all “The main thing that we proud of our staff,” said Smith. and was expected to be comgave speeches toward the latpleted by the fall semester. were going for … was to reno- “The library staff, UT staff, ter part of the dedication. However, due to the many vate the entire second floor to the contractors, all the people “It’s always a great day when other construction projects at have a mainstream quality,” that made this happen. There’s we can celebrate something UT, the renovations were not Walker explained. “So what definitely a sense of pride in that benefits our students,” completed until well into the we were thinking of was that the people and the results.” Cheek said in his speech. “And fall semester, although certain the library really is the center Assistant Arts & Culture Editor
I’m very proud of the work that’s been done here because it’s all dedicated to making our students a better place in the library.” The chancellor noted a recent meeting with Smith where Smith noted that Hodges has been ranked 25th among all public U.S. academic libraries, which goes in conjunction with the Top 25 initiative. That ranking puts Hodges third among SEC libraries (beaten only by Texas A&M and Florida) and ranked number one in the state. “And that means that
parts were accessible to students prior to completion. But for some students, such as communications sophomore Brittany Jaimungal-Singh, the wait was worth it. “I love the new Commons, it’s very worker friendly and new installed plugs on the ground so you can work anywhere if you have a laptop,” Jaimungal-Singh said. “It was worth waiting for the construction. It annoyed me a little bit but it’s better now.” Much of the construction was done to increase space. A dozen new group study rooms
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As professors and media outlets increasingly discuss the importance of globalization, many students at UT are using study abroad opportunities to complete foreign language requirements. In their spare time, of course, they visit the beach. “Class is three hours a day, five days a week, and the rest of your time is your own. I’ll be available, but they don’t have to do anything,” said Laura Atwood, an associate professor of Spanish who is co-leading a study abroad trip to Costa Rica this summer. “In five weeks, you go to Costa Rica, spend your weekends on the beach and finish your language requirement.” The young Spanish teacher was approached in spring of 2012 by a former graduate professor, Dr. Oscar RiveraRodas, who currently teaches in the Modern Foreign Languages department. He enlisted her help in raising awareness about a trip he was leading and in the process piqued Atwood’s own interest in leading a study abroad trip. Their five-week stay in Costa Rica offers four different tracks, each requiring six credit hours. Trips like this are common among foreign languages at UT, offered to countries that speak French, German, Mandarin Chinese and more. This trip in particular offers an intensive intermediate track, essentially completing an entire foreign language requirement in little over a month. Lesley Bringhurst, a sophomore in business with a minor in Spanish, went on a similar trip to San Pedro, Spain last summer. Dr. Rivera-Rodas served as the UT faculty during her stay in the coastal city of southeastern Spain.
For Bringhurst, the practical application of her studies was a huge benefactor. “Since I lived with a host family, I had to communicate with them everyday about little things, if I was sick or hungry or something like that,” she said. “I didn’t have my professor or anyone else that spoke English in the house, so I had to make do and learn to say things the stupidest way possible. I learned how to communicate.” Spending half of the summer in another country is no vacation for the professor, and Bringhurst said that Dr. Rivera-Rodas possesses a special ability to bring the subject to life. “He was really good at finding outside sources to teach from,” she said. “Rather than just quoting from the textbook, he would find poems or movies or funny videos or personal stories that he had that would relate to what we were learning so we could have more reference of what we were doing.” Although the professors work hard, Bringhurst mentioned that Dr. Rivera-Rodas did go out on the town a few times, even venturing into a club or two. Bringhurst credits the trip to Spain as fundamental to her Spanish education and entirely worth the cost. With the help of UT’s Study Abroad office, she was able to use the summer Hope Scholarship and a study abroad scholarship to pay for airfare and food. “It was totally worth the money, absolutely,” she said. Many of the trips cost between $4,000 and $6,000, but typically include all expenses. The $6,000 price of Rivera and Atwood’s trip to Costa Rica even allots for passport fees. For more information about studying abroad, visit studyabroad.utk.edu.
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