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Tuesday, July 24, 2012
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Issue 16
E D I T O R I A L L Y
PUBLISHED SINCE 1906 http://utdailybeacon.com
Vol. 120
I N D E P E N D E N T
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U N I V E R S I T Y
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UT nuclear students receive national award Nathan George, Cole Gentry both receive prestigious award Wesley Mills News Editor Two nuclear Ph.D. students at UT have just received high honors in the “Innovation and Fuel Cycle Research” award from the US Department of Energy, Fuel Cycle and Research Development. A few years back, Nathan George received an internship with Oak Ridge National Laboratory. George met with professors and really liked working in the lab, so much so that he applied to UT’s graduate school and was accepted. Now the school is funding him to do research. His award-winning research paper was titled “Neutronics Studies of Uranium-Based Fully Ceramic MicroEncapsulated Fuel for PWR’s.” PWR’s are pressurized water reactors. In essence, these reactors pump water under high pressure to the core of the reactor where it is heated by energy. Once it is heated, it transfers thermal energy where steams is produced and flows to turbines that spin the generator. George and his lab team demonstrated in their project that they had a new design that could be just as efficient. “None of them have the design that I simulated in them, but they have a similar design and we were just trying to show that they would work in those,” he said. George said that he didn’t formulate the idea, but not many people have done anything like this before, and so in some ways it was an innovation. “The fact that this is a study just shows it is what it is,” he said. “It’s not industry work, it’s just research. I might do all this work, and nothing may come of this. It could, however, eventually be commercialized and put in reactors that obtain power. We don’t know.” For over a year George has worked on this paper, and now he is seeing the results.
• Photo courtesy of research.utk.edu
Cole Gentry
Knoxville artist reuses old items for art, jewelry
UT ecology professor receives global award
Liv McConnell Assistant News Editor
Staff Reports A University of Tennessee, Knoxville, professor who is one of the world’s leading experts on invasive species has received the world’s preeminent prize for ecology and environmental science. Daniel Simberloff, the Gore-Hunger Professor of Environmental Studies in the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, has won the 2012 Ramon Margalef Award for Ecology. The award is presented annually by the Government of Catalonia, an autonomous region in northeast Spain, “to recognize an exceptional scientific career or discovery in the field of ecological science.” Simberloff, who in May became UT’s third faculty member in history to be elected to the National Academy of Sciences, is being honored for “his contributions to the observation and theoretical analysis of the structure and dynamics of ecological communities, and for the application of these studies to conservation biology.” Ecologists worldwide are considered for the prize named for Margalef, one of Spain’s most distinguished scientists and a founding father of modern ecology. The prize includes a cash award of about $100,000 and a sculpture memorializing Margalef.
• Photo courtesy of research.utk.edu
See NUCLEAR STUDENTS on Page 3
Nathan George
• Photo courtesy of Morgan McConnell
Erin Kennedy, sophomore in English, looks over some jewlery crafted by Sarah Brobst on July 14.
Aurora, Colo. mass shooter appears in court his eyes drooping as the judge advised him of the severity of CENTENNIAL, Colo. — the case. At one point, Holmes His hair dyed a shocking simply closed his eyes. He never said a word. His comic-book shade of orangered, the former doctoral stu- attorneys did all the talking dent accused of killing movie- when the judge asked if he understood his goers at a rights. showing of the Prosecutors new Batman said later they m o v i e didn't know if appeared in Holmes was on court for the medication. first time on Authorities have Monday, but said he is being he didn’t seem held in isolation to be there at at the jail. all. H o l m e s ' d e m e a n o r James Holmes shuffled into • Photo courtesy of University appeared to anger of CO/Splash News the relatives of court in a some of the vicmaroon jailtims who attended the hearhouse jumpsuit with his hands cuffed — the first look the ing. One woman's eyes welled world got of the 24-year-old up with tears. The hearing was also the since the Friday shooting that left 12 people dead and 58 oth- first confirmation that Holmes’ ers injured at a packed mid- hair was colored. On Friday, night screening of “The Dark there were reports of his hair being red and that he told Knight Rises.” Unshaven and appearing arresting officers that he was dazed, Holmes sat virtually “The Joker.” Batman’s nemesis motionless during the hearing, in the fictional Gotham has brightly colored hair.
Knoxville resident Sarah Brobst turns the old into the delightfully new again with her one-of-a-kind salvage jewelry. Brobst, who has been making jewelry since high school, repurposes elements like vintage watches, elaborate brooches and antique knick-knacks in her work. She scours thrift stores, flea markets and eBay in order to select the antique curios that she will transform into quirky and unique creations. From there, the 31-yearold entrepreneur hits the drawing board and waits
for the right inspiration to seize her. “I just look at all the pieces that I lay out on my art table and start picking through,” she said. “Eventually the puzzle comes together into a beautiful piece.” This can sometimes be a time consuming process. “It takes a lot of rearranging and going back to the drawing board because sometimes the ideas don’t work,” she said. Brobst then takes her finished hoard of bangles, necklaces, pins, rings and earrings to the Farmers Market held in Market Square every Saturday morning. Her whimsically
arranged booth draws a sizable throng of admirers. “Her work is very unique, it looks sort of upcycled,” said customer Caroline Broady as she fingered a bracelet that may have served as a belt buckle in a previous life. “It’s clean, it’s wearable and it’s interesting.” Her younger brother, Adam Broady, chimes in. “It reminds me of a time when there weren’t really big businesses that mass produced stuff,” he said. “Things were handcrafted by artisans, one thing at a time, and things were made to last.” See JEWELRY on Page 3
The Associated Press
Tia Patron • The Daily Beacon
The infamous rock is on hiatus on July 23 as construction for the new Natalie L. Haslam music building continues construction. The rock will be fenced off for about a month and is expected to reopen before students are back on campus for the fall.