Wednesday, June 11, 2014
Issue 02, Volume 126
utdailybeacon.com
Summer basketball camps allows team to give back Wes Tripp
Contributor Tennessee head coach Donnie Tyndall and his basketball team are hosting a series of camps this summer, giving attendees a different taste of what the summer can be. Last week was the first of two Fundamental Skills Camp for Kindergarten through 8th grade students. The Fundamental Skills Camps are fourday camps that consist of competitive and fun drills designed to improve each camper’s skill and knowledge of the game. Each day, campers are able to interact with current Tennessee coaches and players who man stations, demonstrate drills, and speak about what it takes to be great on and off
INSIDE
Your professor grades you, but do you actually grade your professor?
NEWS >>pg. 3
Bonnaroo bound? Don’t miss these acts while you’re on the Farm ARTS & CULTURE >>pg. 5
Salvage the homes: this UT almunae gives Knox history charitable new life ARTS & CULTURE >>pg. 5
Not all Vols go to the NFL - but these players did
SPORTS >>pg.6
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was going to basketball camp,” Richardson said. “Getting to meet college basketball players was a big thing for me. I’ve been in their shoes and I just want to make it as fun as I can for them.” Sophomore guard Robert Hubbs said fundamentals camp means as much to him as it does the campers. “I know when I was a little kid my dad used to take me to basketball camps and just looking up to college players that would maybe be pros one day was great,” Hubb said. “I just want to help them and to see their excitement coming out here. I’m just trying to teach them the game of basketball.” “It’s been a good time. I like doing the 5-on-5 scrimmages,” said camper Hunter Watts, who was coached by former player Cameron Tatum.
Watts said he most enjoyed meeting and working with current players. “It’s cool getting to know them and experiencing what they do in their workout drills,” Watts said. The camp has challenged Watts to improve his basketball game. “I’m not as good working with my left hand,” Watts said. “So its good that they have challenged me to work with my left hand and that has made my left hand even better.” In the midst of their own summer workouts, the Tennessee players and coaching staff hosted one more fundamental camp, a father/son camp on June 8, and will host an intense skills camp for high school students on August 31.
Hollywood culture visits the Scruffy City Chelsea Faulkner Staff Writer
Celebrating its fifth year, the Knoxville 24 Hour Film Festival has expanded into a two-week celebration of not only film, but music and production. Now the Knoxville Film and Music Festival, the exhibition draws large crowds to Scruffy City Hall from all corners of the country and beyond to celebrate artistic ingenuity from an array of genres. The festivities coalesced into a jubilant froth this past weekend, filling Scruffy City Hall to capacity Saturday evening for the Band Eat Band competition and offering an abundant variety of local film and musical options. The fun has only just begun, said festival director Michael Samstag. “The 24 Hour Film Festival has become a landmark in the Knoxville community,” Samstag said. “It is a beloved event and this year has drawn artists from all over the country.” Samstag and his staff whittled the list of over 400 film entries down to 26 to be shown and judged in competition in the 2014 festival. The submissions span a wide range of categories from narrative and documentary films to animation and music videos. Finalists include films from Korea, Europe, the US, and more. An avid and enthusiastic lover of the arts, Samstag has worked to bring this festival to fruition, viewing the final product as a true labor of love. “It’s like Christmas and my birthday all rolled into one,” Samstag said. “It is my favorite time of the year.”
In its second year as a combined music and film collaborative, the Knoxville Film and Music festival boasts a very impressive roster. For the remainder of the week, highlights include a screening of the independent comedy film, Jammed, a party concert from renowned Croatian DJ, Damir Ludvig, and the highly anticipated showing of South Park’s “Black Friday Trilogy” followed by a Q&A with Executive Producer Frank Agnone, Head of Animation Eric Stough, and Senior Story Editor Gian Ganziano. In addition to the entertainment, the festival also offers a variety of workshops and classes to current and aspiring musicians and filmmakers. “This festival has so much to offer to all ages and backgrounds,” Samstag said. “I’ve always considered myself a big fan of film, so having the opportunity to watch anything that’s locally grown makes me love my city that much more,” said festival patron Cody Brown. “I also love bluegrass. So being able to combine the things I love into one weekend is just amazing,” said Brown. Located on the corner of Market Square across from Bill Lyons Pavilion, most events are $10 with many being free. Student tickets are also available for most shows at up to 50 percent off regular admission prices. The festival concludes June 14 with an awards ceremony and late night wrap party. Updates and special offers are added daily to The Knoxville 24 Hour Film Festival Facebook page.
Photo Courtesy of Bill Foster
SEE
the court. Both Tyndall and players recalled the fun of camp as children. “I remember as a young guy growing up cutting lawns and picking blueberries, believe it or not, to save enough money to go to camp and it was the best part of my summer each and every summer,” Tyndall said. “I want to give back to these young people who I know are looking forward to camp all summer long. It’s a great opportunity to help them get better and help them to improve and just have a great week and enjoy themselves. It’s a special time for me and my staff.” Senior guard Josh Richardson said he looks forward to participating in fundamentals camp every summer “I remember when I was younger and I
A band plays at the Scruffy City Hall for the Knoxville Film and Music Festival in Market Square.
UT library acquires first-edition books Men’s Lauren Robinson
UT’s copy of “Poems” was purchased from a private collector and is missing the original frontispiece but bears the poet’s authenticated signature opposite UT Libraries has adorned its special the dedication page. However, Caldwell collections department with two new says that Special Collections does hold another first-edition copy of the work, works. First-edition prints of Phillis with frontispiece intact. Wheatley’s “Poems on Various Subjects, Religious and Moral,” and the autobiography “Life of Ma-ka-tai-me-she-kia-kia, or Black Hawk,” are now available. Christopher Caldwell, humanities services librarian, works closely with Special Collections to assist in library research and acquisitions. “Special Collections is always acquiring rare materials to support our existing collection areas and faculty research interests,” Caldwell said. “A library collection is a living thing, always growing. These particular acquisitions have a wider appeal among researchers and -Christopher Caldwell undeniable cultural significance.” Sold into slavery at 7 to an affluent Boston couple, Phillis Wheatley began Ma-ka-tai-me-she-kia-kia, or Black studying English, Latin, and the Bible at an early age and astounded skeptics with Hawk (1767-1838), a warrior and memher classical allusions and reverent ele- ber of the Sauk tribal nation, was imprisgies to men such as George Washington oned by the United States following the Black Hawk War of 1832. During and King George III. Before the death of Susanna Wheatley his incarceration, Black Hawk worked and her eventual release from slavery, with translator Antoine LeClaire and Wheatley became the first African- editor J.B. Patterson to chronicle the American and second woman to publish history of interactions between the Sauk nation and the US government, begina book in the colonies. Contributor
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library collection is a living thing, always growing. ”
ning with the land-appropriating treaty of 1804, which Black Hawk and his followers considered to be invalid. Due to the rising popularity of the “noble savage,” the resulting work, the first Native American autobiography to be printed in the United States, became an instant bestseller, going through five printings in the first year. Katherine Chiles, assistant professor of English and Africana Studies, specializes in early African American and Native American literature. With the help of Christopher Caldwell and Dawn Coleman, associate professor of English, Chiles discovered UT’s first-edition copy of Black Hawk’s work in an antiquarian shop, and quickly brought it to the library’s attention. “The library has several editions of this important book,” Chiles said, “but we did not yet own the very first-edition.” “I believe (the study of African American and Native American literature) is of vital importance because it gives us crucial insight into both the promises and problems of this fraught and fascinating period,” Chiles said. “Access to first-edition prints such as these will allow students to learn a great deal about what Native American and African American writers could do with the written word (as well as) what we call ‘the history of the book’– all of the particular qualities of any printed text.”
“I was selected by the student body in a campus-wide vote to serve as trustee; however, I was not selected by the governor to serve on the board.” OPINIONS >>pg. 4
basketball starts with fresh legs Wes Tripp
Contributor At the end of the semester, many questioned whether the Tennessee men’s basketball team could even put a team on the court. Last week, the team started summer workouts. Tennessee lost starters Jerrone Maymon, Jordan McRae, and Antonio Barton to graduation. Junior forward Jarnell Stokes forwent his senior year to enter the NBA draft. Freshman guards A.J. Davis and Darius Thompson transferred to other schools, leaving just five players on the roster. However, Head Coach Donnie Tyndall went to work to put together a team. He signed six players to letters of intent, picked up two graduate transfers and two walkons. See BASKETBALL on Page 6
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