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Monday, April 25, 2011 Issue 66

PUBLISHED SINCE 1906

I N D E P E N D E N T

S T U D E N T

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Vol. 116

N E W S P A P E R

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T H E

U N I V E R S I T Y

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T E N N E S S E E

Master Plan presented to UT community Laboratory space, building renovations included in objectives buildings in the Lake and Terrace Avenues areas. The Master Plan is also committed to preserve The Hill. “The Hill is considered by many at the university as a very special place,” Catron said. “We are recommending UT presented the 2011 draft of its Master Plan to the within the Master Plan that The Hill always be treated that community Thursday at the UT Visitors Center. way, so that in the event that buildings need to be replaced, Curtis Catron, consultant and landscape architect for the replacement building be of a character that’s appropriate Bullock, Smith and Partners, presented the to complement Ayres.” Master Plan preferred concept to attendees The renovation and demolition of before sharing the floor with Chris Cimino, historic buildings, along with the vice chancellor of finance and administraarchitectural style of newly constructtion, to take questions and comments. ed buildings, was brought up during The original UT Master Plan was draftthe comments and questions section. ed in 1994 and updated in 2001. In 2009 “One of the dialogues that has Chancellor Jimmy Cheek started another been a theme is a lot of times, people round of updates by establishing the look at this and they say, ‘Well, it Master Plan Advisory Committee. looks like you’re tearing a lot of stuff One of the driving forces shaping this down. It looks like you’re putting latest draft is UT’s desire to become a top buildings here and there,’ but this is a 25 research university. vision, and it’s a plan,” Catron said. “This was significant in our planning “Not everything will fit exactly in 40 effort because the university, every year, or 50 years with how it’s being submits its list of projects that it would like designed today.” to fund or have the state fund,” Catron This mindset of staying flexible said. “That priority is set based off of the has led the Master Plan Advisory needs within the academic realm in that Committee to address the static more class lab space, rather than pure acanature of the Master Plan. demic space, will be needed on the front “We are now having some dialogue end of the Master Plan.” about turning this into a living docuAdding more laboratory and research ment,” Cimino said. “It would be our space coincides with UT’s projection of Joy Hill • The Daily Beacon vision not to just wait five to seven significant growth in the number of graduyears but also to create that living Students crowd the Pedestrian Mall between morning classes on Monday, Jan. 24. Making ate students. document for that continuous The presentation was split into near and campus more pedestrian-friendly is just one of a series of renovations outlined by UT’s improvement and input.” master plan. long-term projects. Consistent in both was The current draft of the Master the commitment to make UT more pedesPlan will be submitted for approval trian friendly. This involves pushing parking and main roads Other short-term, state-funded projects on the main cam- to the UT Board of Trustees in June. If approved, the plan to the outside of campus while creating more green space pus include the renovations of Strong Hall, Jessie Harris will be sent to the Tennessee Higher Education Commission and bike accessibility inward. Building, Walters Life Sciences, Early Learning Center and before making its final stop at the State Building “We are really bringing bicycle paths to the forefront by Hoskins Library. Ellington Plant Sciences, located on the Commission. either placing them in walkways or putting them in planned For more information on the UT Master Plan, visit agricultural campus, will be expanded. roadways,” Catron said. Long-term projects include renovating Estabrook Hall http://masterplan.utk.edu. The response to this initiative has been positive. and Henson Hall, along with the construction of academic

Jamison Lanum Staff Writer

“Overall, we are getting great feedback about the pedestrian green space that we are adding to the campus,” Cimino said. In order to make UT more pedestrian friendly, Andy Holt Avenue, Melrose Avenue, Temple Street and part of Volunteer Avenue will be closed and converted as part of a proposed Grand Mall or another pedestrian green space.

Sudanese forces combat militia Associated Press

George Richardson • The Daily Beacon

Workers walk along scaffolding outside windows on the third floor of Hodges Library on Monday, April 18.

NOW LEASING FOR FALL 2011!

SUBA, Sudan — At least 115 people have died in violence between government forces and rebel militias in Southern Sudan this week, an official said Sunday, raising concerns of southern instability ahead of the region's independence declaration in July. Brig. Malaak Ayuen, the head of the Southern Sudan’s Army Information Department, said fighting on Saturday between a group of rebels led by Maj. Gen. Gabriel Tanginye in Jonglei state and southern government forces led to 57 people being killed and scores being injured. Ayuen said that five days of fighting between government forces and those loyal to another rebel chief, Peter Gatdet, in Unity state which is northwest of Jonglei, led to the deaths of 48 people. He did not give a breakdown of the number of civilians, rebels and the army killed in both incidents. Since its January independence referendum, Southern Sudan has seen a wave of violence that has killed hundreds. The south voted nearly unanimously to secede from the north, but there are many issues that still remain unaddressed including the sharing of oil revenues, the status of southerner and northerner minorities living on both sides of the border, and who controls the disputed border region of Abyei, a fertile area near large oil fields. Southern officials now claim the militia groups they are fighting are being funded by the north to cause instability with the goal of taking over the oil fields in the south. Before this week’s violence, the U.N. said that at least 800 people had been killed and 94,000 displaced because of violence in Southern Sudan this year. The fresh clashes between Tanginye’s forces and the army erupted on Saturday morning in Kaldak village north of Jonglei state, where his forces have been assembled for reintegration

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into the Sudan People’s Liberation Army, poised to become Southern Sudan’s regular force in July. Tanginye said his base was attacked by the southern army because he refused to disarm his men ahead of the reintegration process, an allegation the army has dismissed as a “lie.” Tanginye was a Khartoum-sponsored warlord, who burned and looted southern villages along the Nile River during the decades-long north-south civil war. He continued serving for the north after a 2005 peace deal ended the war. Although he accepted an amnesty and reintegration package with the southern army late last year, it is now unclear which side Tanginye is fighting for. The fighting in Unity state erupted on Tuesday and continued until Saturday, with both the army and the rebels claiming control of Mankien village in Mayom County, where the fighting was concentrated. The army field commander in Mayom, Brig. Peter Makal said on Saturday that his forces defeated the rebels. He accused them of being funded by the north to invade the area with an aim of taking over Mayom’s oil fields. However, a spokesman for the rebels, Bol Gatkuoth, claimed they tactfully retreated to regroup for a fresh attack aimed at reaching the state capital, Bentiu, which lies further south. Nearly 4,000 civilians in the area have fled their devastated villages for safety, Charles Machieng, Mayom’s County Commissioner said on Saturday. "The whole town was burnt down. There was no single structure remaining because people are using houses made from grass," Machieng said. "There is still fear in the entire community because they heard heavy artillery fire. They have seen heavy fighting." The state authorities responded by ordering the northern and foreign employees of the oil companies working in the state to evacuate. Southern Sudan’s referendum was part of a 2005 peace deal, ending a two-decade civil war that cost some two million lives.


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