The Daily Beacon

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Men’s basketball takes out North Alabama 117-79

Partly Cloudy with a 20% chance of rain HIGH LOW 64 39

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Tuesday, November 3, 2009 Issue 51

T H E

E D I T O R I A L L Y

PUBLISHED SINCE 1906

S T U D E N T

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http://dailybeacon.utk.edu

Vol. 112

I N D E P E N D E N T

Michael Jackson sells movie tickets from beyond the grave

N E W S P A P E R

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U N I V E R S I T Y

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Updates improve basketball ticket system Katie Freeman News Editor UT men’s and women’s basketball programs are going to a new ticketing system. As with football tickets, the new system will utilize

the Big Orange Tix Web site with some differences, but basketball tickets will still be free and general admission. SGA Presdient Laura Nishida said that many students have wanted to see a basketball ticketing system

for some time. “People said they really would like to see it (basketball ticketing) because a reason a lot of students don’t attend basketball games is because long lines intimidate them,” Nishida said. “They see long lines,

and they think, ‘I’m not going to get a seat.’” Despite the lines, Nishida said general admission seating was available for everyone who showed up at the games last year. Associate Dean of Students J.J. Brown said

student reaction to Big Orange Tix during the football season has been positive. “Initially, the thought was to try and tie it into multiple sports, and certainly basketball is that next transition,” Brown said.

Katie Hogin • The Daily Beacon

Freshman walk-on Skylar McBee dribbles the ball down the court in the exhibition game against North Alabama on Friday. The Vols finished 117-79.

Cobbins Moved The Associated Press KNOXVILLE — Convicted killer Letalvis Cobbins was moved Monday to a maximum-security prison after a state senator and victims’ families complained that a medium-security lockup was insufficient punishment for his role in the slayings of a young Knoxville couple. Cobbins, 26, was convicted in August of first-degree murder in the Knoxville torture death of Channon Christian, 21, and facilitating the murder of her boyfriend Christopher Newsom, 23, in 2007. The victims’ families were outraged that Cobbins was sent to the medium-security Hardeman County prison to serve his life-without-parole sentence. After state Sen. Tim Burchett, R-Knoxville, complained, Correction Commissioner George Little decided the maximum-security West Tennessee State Penitentiary in Henning would be more appropriate. Corrections spokeswoman Dorinda Carter told The Associated Press that Cobbins arrived at the penitentiary Monday. “I would say (Burchett’s call) maybe was a factor in the commissioner’s decision,” Carter said. “But he had already been looking at what would be the best placement for him (Cobbins).” By contrast, Cobbins’ brother, Lemaricus Davidson, was taken to Riverbend Maximum Security Institution in Nashville within hours of being sentenced to death Friday in the Christian-Newsom slayings. Two more defendants await trial. Burchett told The Knoxville News Sentinel that he plans to file legislation next year that would have all inmates convicted of such “heinous” violent crimes sent into maximum security. Little said he would make it happen if “the Legislature is willing to put up the dollars.” The state currently has about 900 maximum-security units and about 4,500 murderers — including the 90 inmates on death row. Carter said the only inmates now sent directly to maximum security are those with death sentences. “The other cases we look at not just based on the offenses, but at the offender and what their behavior will likely be,” she said. Burchett said he appreciates that, “but I think there’s also something to be said for retribution. If they are not going to be executed, they ought to spend the rest of their life in an eight by 12 box.”

While reserving a ticket before the day of the game will allow students to attend class or work up until the time the game starts, fans will not be assigned a seat through the system and can show up early for better seats. “With basketball, they will not be incorporating the (loyalty) point system,” Nishida said. “The tickets are going to remain general admission, so those avid basketball fans can still go early and get those great seats.” The loyalty point system implemented for football tickets allots points to students who regularly attend home games, according to BigOrangeTix.com. “There’s no lottery,” Nishida said. “It’s first come, first serve.” Because there are more basketball games per season than football, students will be able to reserve tickets for each period, usually three to five games, during one log-in. Another revision to Big Orange Tix to accommodate basketball fans is making ticket records available on each student’s VolCard. “Students are not going to have to print off tickets,” Nishida said. “Because it’s general admission, you just have to come with your student I.D., and we’ll scan the barcode on the VolCard.” Students will also not be required to claim a ticket after seats have been assigned. See TICKETS on Page 3

UT students utilize StudyBlue notes Web site provides study guides, facilitates effective collaboration Kristian Smith Student Life Editor StudyBlue, the student contentdriven study site, is making its mark at UT. Ben Jedd, StudyBlue chief communications officer, said more than 50 percent of undergraduates at UT are on StudyBlue. “I am really impressed with the adoption (of StudyBlue) at UT,” Jedd said. Josh Campbell, the StudyBlue campus representative for the university, said UT has the highest percentage of undergraduates on StudyBlue of all participating schools. Jedd said UT has more than 15,000 notes on the site. As the campus representative, Campbell, senior in nursing, hands out T-shirts, fliers, highlighters and puzzles to increase awareness about StudyBlue. He said the feedback he has gotten about StudyBlue has been very positive. “I always get good reactions when I am handing things out,” Campbell said. “People always say, ‘I love StudyBlue,’ when they see what I am handing out.” Clarke Riner, senior in biochemistry and cellular and molecular biology, said he is a frequent StudyBlue user. “It’s a good way to find notes that I’ve missed and to find tests from previous years,” he said. Campbell said when he walks through the library to hand out Tshirts and fliers, he always sees people on StudyBlue. StudyBlue has a lot to offer students. Because the site’s content is all student-created, students have much more say than on other sites, such as Blackboard. “(The creators of StudyBlue) were unhappy with Blackboard because there was too much professor power,” Jedd said. “StudyBlue is a place for students.” Jedd said that, before StudyBlue, there were no strong study aids to

meet the needs of students. He said the best thing about StudyBlue is that it allows students to work together to study. “Research has proven that collaboration is the best way to study, and StudyBlue gives students the opportunity to share information,” Jedd said. Besides sharing notes, StudyBlue also allows students to create flashcards and has a new quizzing feature that asks true/false and matching questions based on study material. Campbell said StudyBlue has

Research has proven that

collaboration is the best way to study, and StudyBlue gives students

the opportunity to share information.

Students receive 50 cents for each set of notes they add and an additional 50 cents for each person that rates their notes. Some students have made hundreds of dollars by adding notes. Campbell said study guides seem to be the most lucrative. “I put up a study guide for my 90person nursing class and made more than a hundred dollars,” he said. Campbell said that problems with money scams last semester led StudyBlue to create a more foolproof system to rate notes. “Now it’s harder to cheat the system, because to rate notes and get money for them, you have to be in the class,” Campbell said. Campbell said people can still view notes in classes they are not registered for but cannot rate them. StudyBlue also has a system to make sure notes on the site are quality study aides. “If two students click a file to say that it’s bad, it is immediately removed from the site,” Jedd said. Campbell, who said he was a frequent user of StudyBlue before becoming the UT campus representative, encourages students to use the site. “It’s an easy tool to use if you miss class,” he said. “It is also a good way to double-check your notes and your answers on study guides.” Jedd said StudyBlue was created in 2007 by two students at the University of Wisconsin. One student was in business and the other student was in computer science. Now the site has more than 2,100 universities and more than 1,800 high schools signed up. Campbell said Wisconsin has the second-highest percentage of students on StudyBlue, topped only by UT. To get involved with StudyBlue, Jedd said the site offers internships and other jobs, such as bloggers and campus representatives, that can be found by clicking on the “jobs” section at the bottom of the StudyBlue home page.

– Ben Jedd, speaking about StudyBlue and its rising popularity.

recently created an application for the iPhone, where students can view notes and flashcards on their phones. He said an application for the Blackberry may also be in the works. Besides a study tool, StudyBlue can also be a source of income for college students. Jedd said the site has a rewards program that pays students for their contributions.


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