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Tennis Vols victorious on Senior Day

Wednesday, April 13, 2011 Issue 59

E D I T O R I A L L Y

Sunny with a 0% chance of rain HIGH LOW 73 47

I N D E P E N D E N T

Vol. 116 S T U D E N T

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U N I V E R S I T Y

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Ceramics Club hosts biannual pottery sale Proceeds finance student scholarships, opportunities to accommodate visiting artists ty,” said Short. Another way the club uses the proceeds Brittney Dougherty is to give scholarships. Holloway says Staff Writer these are given to members if they earn a Student artists are raising money for certain amount with their pieces. They the ceramic arts program by selling their can use the money to attend the National pottery today and Thursday in the Art and Council for Education in the Ceramic Arts conferences. Architecture Building. “You have an opportunity to get a perPresident of the Ceramic Arts Club and graduate teaching assistant in art, Hannah centage of the sale and you can put it Short, says this is a biannual sale, which toward room and board at the conferhappens in November and April and is ences,” he said. The Ceramic Arts Club has been a part designed so students have a way to purchase works of art in order to give them as of UT since 1973 and is university-sponsored. The club is gifts. mostly made up cur“We always try to rent ceramics stuhave it right before dents as well as alumChristmas and right ni. However, everyone before Mother’s Day,” is welcome and there Short said. are a few ways to sign The money the up. club earns from the “Usually you can event will benefit the just talk to some of members in multiple the people in the ways. Matthew ceramics studio,” Holloway, senior in Holloway said, “and studio art, is the vice there’s also a president of the Facebook page.” Ceramic Arts Club Short and and says some of the Holloway agree that money goes to host- – Hannah Short, President of the Ceramic the club makes a lot ing visiting artists. Arts Club, on the club’s biannual sale of art from functional Right now, Michal pottery to sculpture. Puszczynski from They also plan the biPoland is staying for a few months. His art will also be part of annual sale and arrangements for visiting artists. Holloway says working with the the sale. “The biggest part of our club is that it visiting artists is very interesting and is brings in visiting artists for the ceramics also fun to show them around town. At the sale, there will be a variety of area,” Holloway said. ceramics from plates and bowls to more The last artist they had in residence complicated pieces. Holloway says there was Walter McConnell and he was only in will most likely be some paintings and town for a small amount of time. Short sculptures as well. says that the club’s last pottery sale The sale will be today and tomorrow enabled them to have McConnell stay for from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. in the Art and an extended week. She says the club mainArchitecture building. Prices for the art ly helped McConnel with work at the will vary but there will also be raffles so Tara Sripunvoraskul • The Daily Beacon Downtown Gallery on Gay Street. “It’s things like that which expose us as that students have a chance to win some of Students observe different kinds of ceramics during the Pot and Print sale last ceramic students to other artists and the more expensive pieces by entering semester. The UT Potters will be holding their bi-annual pottery sale today and other professors in the ceramic communi- their names. tomorrow from 9 a.m.- 6 p.m. in the Art and Architecture building.

It’s things like

that which expose

us as ceramic students to other artists and other

professors in the ceramic community.

Judge makes statement with high bail Associated Press CHESTER, Pa. — A judge wanting to send a message about violence in a crime-ridden Philadelphia suburb jailed a 16-year-old shooting suspect on $2.5 million bail on Monday, three days after a guard spotted him with a gun outside a social hall where a shooting killed two teens and wounded eight other people. Kanei Daniel Avery was charged with aggravated assault and related charges following Friday’s shooting in Chester, a city outside Philadelphia where violence was so pervasive last year the mayor declared a state of emergency and instituted a 9 p.m. curfew in some high-crime areas. “A situation like this, you have to make a statement,” said District Judge Spencer Seaton, according to The Philadelphia Inquirer. “These things have to stop. These families are hurting. The community is hurting as a whole.” Three others from nearby Claymont, Del., are also charged, including the 19year-old woman who rented the hall for a party, authorities said. No one has been charged in the deaths of Robel Laboy, 18, and David Gabi Caballero • The Daily Beacon Johnson, 19. The cause of A performer dances during the Anadasgisi, the Gathering of International Natives Kickoff on April 8 in the HSS the shooting remains under Amphitheater. The event included dancing, food, an Aztec Fire Dance and an open discussion with Principal investigation, but a neighChief Michell Hicks of the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians.

borhood feud could be to blame, police said. “Preliminarily, we’re getting information that it was two different neighborhood groups within the city that had a history over the past year and a half,” said Major John Gretsky told the Delaware County Daily Times. Ballistics tests are being performed on multiple weapons recovered from the scene, but police have not determined their owners, Chester police said. A hundred or more teens attended the party at the Minaret Temple No. 174 before shooting broke out shortly before 11:30 p.m. Friday. Authorities said Avery was holding a silver handgun at the base of the temple’s steps when he was tackled by a security guard. Police arrested him moments later. Three other people were taken into custody in an office inside the temple. Carlisha Coleman, 19, had rented the hall for a birthday party that was advertised on Facebook. She and Gregory Santana, 23, and Derrick Hamlin, 18, were charged with assault, reckless endangerment and risking a catastrophe. They were held on $300,000 bail. The district judge’s office has no record of any of the four suspects having attorneys. Court records indicate none has requested a public defender.


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