The Daily Beacon

Page 1

Follow us: @DailyBeacon

Give Matt Dixon a shot at athletic director

PAGE 6 T H E

E D I T O R I A L L Y

PM T-Storms 40% chance of rain HIGH LOW 96 79

‘Franchise’ keeps summer fun

Friday, July 11, 2011 Issue 12 I N D E P E N D E N T

PUBLISHED SINCE 1906 http://utdailybeacon.com

Vol. 117 S T U D E N T

N E W S P A P E R

O F

T H E

U N I V E R S I T Y

PAGE 5 O F

T E N N E S S E E

Knoxville area commerce continues to grow Analysts, businesses take notice of region’s diverse, growing commercial landscape The Old City in particular has seen an influx of new business. On Central Street, the new Scottish pub Jig and Reel is offering Knoxville a taste of Scotland with haggis at the old Manhattan’s location. Just up the street is the Old City Entertainment Venue, a wine bar and restaurant that opened in March. NV Nightclub, the newest spot for Knoxville nightlife located on Jackson Avenue, opened a few weeks ago in the same building where Blue Cats once operated. Duane Carleo, owner of Old City night-

of burger joints, but that’s not stopping Mooyah Burgers from trying to win over the city in its new West Knoxville location. According to FastCasual.com, the burgers, shakes and fries eatery ranked No. 1 in the website’s 2009 “Movers and Shakers” list. Both small- and big-name grocery stores are making headlines in Knoxville this year. West Knoxville is buzzing about two grocery store chains coming in the next few years. Publix announced this spring that it would debut in Knoxville at the Northshore Town Center in the summer of 2012.

area last year. Others soon followed. The Market, a grocery store in Maryville, announced in June that it will open a new Staff Writer location on Gay Street. The new grocery store, called The Market at Union & Gay, is While the national economy might be scheduled to be open later this month. clawing its way out of the recession, Even North Knoxville is bustling with new Knoxville is seeing quite a few “coming business, with Marco’s Pizza set to open in soon” and “now open” signs hanging across Fountain City and Don Jose’s Mexican Grill town. already open in the Gibbs area. In the last two years, Knoxville has been Marco’s Pizza is also opening a location given national recognition as a great city for on Middlebrook Pike. According to the webentrepreneurs and companies by publicasite, Marco’s Pizza is opening 60 new locations such as Forbes, Southern Business & tions this year. Development and A small local busiBusiness Facilities. ness called Twister’s Knoxville was Shakes and Sundaes, named a “Top 5 Metro located on Tazewell for Economic Growth Pike in Gibbs, is Potential” by Business expanding by opening Facilities in 2010. a new location on Southern Business & Washington Pike near Development ranked Knoxville Center the city sixth in “Top Mall. Twister’s serves Ten Mid-Markets of up shakes and sunthe Decade.” daes, as well as classic According to American fare, such Forbes, Knoxville as barbecue and burgranked No. 56 in the ers. Owned and opermagazine’s 2010 “Best ated by the Miller Places for Business family, Twister’s and Careers” list. opened in 2007, and While this is a fall its success in the comfrom its 2007 rank at munity has prompted No. 5, it has not the owners to expand deterred companies Twisters to a second from taking on location in North Knoxville as a new Knoxville. enterprise. Not all the busiDowntown nesses that are comKnoxville has experiing to Knoxville are enced business growth new to residents. in the last year, adding Some businesses, a few grocery stores, a such as local clothing few nightclubs and retailer Goody’s, are even a bookstore. reopening their doors Michele Hummel, after closing during director of the Central the recession. B u s i n e s s Goody’s Family Improvement District Clothing, which (CBID), explained closed its doors in that downtown 2009, recently posted Knoxville’s business a sign near its former growth is part of a George Richardson • The Daily Beacon Halls location on national trend of cenCustomers enjoy the food of Blue Coast Burrito in Market Square on Monday, July 11. Blue Coast Burrito is one of a number Norris Freeway, saytralization. ing it was reopening “In downtown of new businesses that have opened in Knoxville despite a slow economy. Aug. 31. This will be Knoxville, there has Whole Foods threw its name in the mix by the first Goody’s location in Knoxville to been a push to move towards the inner city,” clubs including Southbound and NV she said. “When the economy went into a Nightclub, said opening a business in the old announcing a store in the shopping center reopen, though other Goody’s have reopened recession, downtown Knoxville was able to Blue Cats location was an easy decision for located at Papermill Drive and Kingston in nearby Maryville and Jefferson City. his company, Carleo Entertainment. Pike. However, Knoxvillians will have to wait While new business is a good sign for the hold its own.” “The courtyard on this property is huge, longer for Whole Foods. It is not slated to local economy, Knoxville has not been While Hummel notes that a majority of immune to business closures. businesses in downtown Knoxville are and it has a very unique look,” he said. “The open until 2013. Farragut is also getting some publicity Jim ’N Nick’s Bar-B-Q on Lovell Road restaurants, she adds that CBID is working property had already operated as a night club hard to add diversity to the downtown land- before, so the startup costs were essentially with the announcement in May that Costco, closed this spring, and the S&W restaurant cut in half.” a wholesale club similar to Sam’s Club, is on Gay Street, a renovation of the old cafetescape. Even the Market Square area is in the moving into the neighborhood at the inter- ria by the same name, abruptly closed in “It has been our strategic plan to diversiJanuary. The S&W was only open for a year fy downtown Knoxville with different kinds process of getting a new restaurant. Local section of Lovell Road and Kingston Pike. Downtown Knoxville, which only a couple before it shut down. of businesses,” she said. “We have about 72 restaurant company Ruby Tuesday is in Carleo said Knoxville is a great city to restaurant businesses, but we’re really push- works with Lime Fresh Mexican Grill to years prior had lacked a grocery store in the open a franchise location in the future. area, now can boast three grocery stores. open up shop and is not surprised that the ing for more non-restaurant retail.” “We’ve seen an increase in restaurants and Market Square is still enjoying the newest Aisle Nine, located on South Central Street city is growing in popularity. “Knoxville is a good place to start up a retail downtown,” she said. “Approximately addition to the block, Blue Coast Burrito, and which offers online grocery shopping delivered to customers via bicycle, was the business,” he said. “And I think people are 10 businesses have opened or are in the which opened in March. The metro may not be lacking in its choice first to open a grocery store in the downtown taking notice.” process of opening downtown this year.”

Jamie Cunningham

UT artists, designers achieve excellence Rob Davis Staff Writer

George Richardson • The Daily Beacon

Carlos Jackson, senior in psychology, bowls in the University Center Down Under on Monday, July 11.

Art faculty and students won four American Institute of Graphic Artists Southeastern Excellence in Design awards. “The AIGD (American Institute for Graphic Design) SEED awards are awarded every two years to recognize design excellence in the Southeast,” Deborah Shmerler, associate professor in graphic design, said. “They represent the best work across all disciplines of communications and strategy from designers in Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Tennessee, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, South Carolina and North Carolina.” Shmerler and a group of students won gold in their category for their Living Light house plans. “Living Light is the University of Tennessee’s entry into the Solar Decathlon 2011 competition,” Shmerler said. “As one of 20 university teams from around the world competing, UT has been challenged by the U.S. Department of Energy Solar Decathlon 2011 to design, build and exhibit

an energy-efficient, solarpowered home.” The national competition takes place Sept. 23 through Oct. 2 on the National Mall in Washington, D.C. Participants demonstrate clean-energy solutions, while developing a well-trained work force dedicated to environmental sustainability and green technologies. The homes will be juried beginning in October in 10 categories, including, but not limited to: architecture, engineering, communications and market appeal. In addition to the SEED award, Shmerler also won an excellence for her stART now program, a mentoring program at UT developed by graphic design students in the spring of 2009. “(The students) spent the semester mentoring an advanced art class, taught by Peggy Leland at Central High School,” Shmerler said. The overall goal of this Design Ignites Change initiative was to promote and encourage high school students to develop projects that would benefit their local community through energizing their personal goals and interests. See ART on Page 3


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.