Follow us: @DailyBeacon
Documentary explores benefits of whole foods diets
Pearl, Kiffin, UT go before committee
PAGE 6 T H E
E D I T O R I A L L Y
Tuesday, June 14, 2011 Issue 4
Vol. 117
I N D E P E N D E N T
S T U D E N T
Isolated T-storms 30% chance of rain HIGH LOW 85 65
PUBLISHED SINCE 1906
PAGE 5
http://utdailybeacon.com N E W S P A P E R
O F
T H E
U N I V E R S I T Y
O F
T E N N E S S E E
International students get Lean on campus UT students learn Lean Management, focusing on improving business production brought in after use and are cleaned, packaged, sterilized and then taken back to be used once again. “It’s fun,” Zenteno said. “People are nice, but it is really strict. You can’t afford to mess up. We need to work around medical timings and have to work within tight conditions.” David Guzman, a recent Monterrey Tech graduate, works with Frigorizados La Huerta in Aguascalientes, Mexico. La Huerta is a frozen foods company that had hired Guzman to work as the projects manager. Since
sons into production. “It is very convenient because the Lean philosophy and the La Huerta philosophy are so aligned that it reflects Staff Writer the workplace and community,” Guzman said. “There is a strong relationship between La Huerta and the communiThe month of June is a busy month for UT. With ty and the suppliers.” Destination ImagiNation finishing up and new student When teaching a lesson Thursday on dysfunctional orientations beginning, Rupy Sawhney, associate profesproduction processes and how to improve them, Sawhney sor and associate department head of the Department of used Legos as a teaching platform. Industrial and Information Engineering, has had someThe class was broken up into production staff and conthing else planned for the university. sultants. For five minutes, the Working with the Institute of Technology “staff ” would operate and create a and Superior Studies of Monterrey, Mexico, production line in which they proUT is hosting 26 students, with majors duced a Lego “product.” ranging from industrial engineering to When the five minutes were up, mechatronics. the “consultants” would critique These students learn business concepts what went wrong and try to impleto improve production at local area busiment a new plan where time would nesses and at home. This concept, known as be saved and personnel could be Lean Management, is a process that focuses used differently. on the reduction of waste, inventory and The students will not only go to customer response time. the companies but learn about East The concept of this program began a few Tennessee culture as well. The stuyears ago when Sawhney was invited to dents joined members of the speak at the Aguascalientes campus of International House on a trip to the Monterrey Tech about the Lean Smoky Mountains. For many of Management process. This is the first year them, it was the first time they had that the program will take place in seen mountains. With the weekend Knoxville. ending, it’s back to work for this Led by Sawhney, graduate student group. Enrique Macias de Andas and Christopher After lecture each day, they then Wright from the UT Institute of Public go to work putting what they Service, classes are held Monday through learned in the classroom into play Thursday in the Haslam Business Building at their job site. On Fridays they from 9 a.m. to noon. travel to major companies and tour The students, all of whom came from five their facilities. This past Friday, different campuses, will work with three they toured Denso Manufacturing local companies to observe and improve the in Maryville. They will go to Alcoa, manufacturing processes at each location. Oak Ridge National Laboratory, The state will track the changes made at and the Corvette plant in Bowling each company to measure the economic Green, Ky. impact that each team influenced. This year decides a lot about the The companies taking part in this proAnthony Cespedes • The Daily Beacon gram are SL Tennessee out of Clinton, Enrique Macias De Anda, graduate student in Industrial Engineering, helps a student teach future of the program, Sawhney Fulton Bellows in South Knoxville and East Lean Management on Thursday, June 9. The Department of Industrial and Information said. “Everything depends on the Tennessee Children’s Hospital near UT’s Engineering, in partnershp with the Institute of Technology and Superior Studies of success of this summer,” he said. campus. Monterrey, Mexico, is hosting students at UT to teach concepts of Lean business practices. “These students had the opportuThe students have already jumped into Guzman is a graduate, La Huerta paid the majority of his nity to go elsewhere, but for them to choose Tennessee is the inner workings of each company. tuition for the summer program. a tremendous opportunity. When they are asked, ‘Where At East Tennessee Children’s Hospital, students dress What makes Guzman different from the rest of the did you learn Lean Management?’ they will say ‘the in sterilized jumpsuits every day to observe the sterilization process the hospital uses. Andrea Zenteno, junior at group is that he implements at work everything that he University of Tennessee.’ I see this program becoming Monterrey Tech, watched from where the instruments are learns in class. Using Skype and Microsoft Outlook, he bigger and better in the years to come.” communicates with his team in Mexico to put these les-
Anthony Cespedes
Early Southern sermons published Rob Davis Staff Writer UT Libraries’ Newfound Press published English professor Michael Lofaro’s “Southern Manuscript Sermons before 1800: A Bibliography” in 2010, but instead of limiting the bibliography to book form, Newfound Press also established an online search engine for Lofaro’s book. “English professor Michael Lofaro started working on a bibliography of Southern manuscript sermons,” Linda Phillips, UT Libraries interim dean, said. “The texts he found would be not published. They were just manuscripts. (He) went all over the South looking for these.” “Southern Manuscript Sermons before 1800: A Bibliography” is the first guide published examining sermon manuscripts in the Southern colonies, and later, the states. Full texts of the manuscripts are found in several different university libraries, including libraries at Georgetown University, University of Maryland and Oxford University in England. But Lofaro did not begin the project. He joined it in 1976. “This project had been started by a very prominent English professor here, Richard Beale Davis,” Phillips said. “It was 1946 that he started it, using only index cards. Lofaro was the one who kept this work going after Davis’ death.” In 2008, Lofaro approached Newfound Press to publish his database of sermons into a print edition. The current database, which can be found on the Newfound Press website, was made by employees of the university libraries. “The database was two years in develGeorge Richardson • The Daily Beacon opment,” Phillips said. “It’s a very robust Danielle Davis, senior in anthropology, studies public policy over lunch in Rocky Top database.” Cafe in the UC on Monday, June 13.
The database contains such information about the manuscripts as keywords, author, date of sermon, denomination of the author and the repository of the texts, where the full text is located. Newfound Press’ online database allows users to search by any subject listed in the bibliography, including author, repository and books of the Bible. Since the database has been online, it has received more than 1,700 manuscripts in less than a year, and the book has been downloaded 261 times. Although the bibliography provides much information about the more than 1,500 sermons, the full text is not available on either the website or in the book. “It’s not full text because the full text is located in libraries all around the South,” Phillips said. “The full text has not been digitized, but that would be a logical next step.” Newfound Press allows users to access the full text of the written bibliography on its website, as well as the opportunity for users to download the full text. The bibliography is marketed towards scholarly research; however, the database is still pertinent to students. “I took an Appalachian history course last year,” Philip Davis, senior in history, said. “It would have been really useful to see what topics preachers were covering in the Appalachian area during the early history of the United States.” In addition to Lofaro’s book, Newfound Press has also published books by several different authors. “One of the reasons that we founded Newfound Press is to make very specialized scholarly material available around the world for free,” Phillips said. “Publishers can’t afford to publish books like these unless they are selling thousands of copies of these.” The database for Lofaro’s bibliography is at http://dlc.lib.utk.edu/sermons/sermons_public.htm.