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Big Boi brings flavor for Homecoming concert

Daily Beacon Basketball Preview

Friday, November 12, 2010

SECTION B T H E

E D I T O R I A L L Y

Sunny with a 0% chance of rain HIGH LOW 75 42

Issue 60

PUBLISHED SINCE 1906 http://utdailybeacon.com

Vol. 115

I N D E P E N D E N T

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 5A O F

T E N N E S S E E

Homecoming Queen prank lives on in infamy 1970 jokester upset candidates in landslide election through widespread write-in campaign Candidate.’” When the winner of the election was announced, the student Editor-in-Chief body was shocked: The bag-headed Staten stood on top with nearly 2,500 votes, garnering close to 60 percent of the student For many, Homecoming represents a time to honor one’s vote using a write-in campaign. school with pride. For Vince Staten, Homecoming served as an “My first runner-up got about 300 (votes),” Staten said. opportunity to stage one of the most elaborate jokes in UT histoThough it was clear UT students found humor in Staten’s ry, a prank that changed the school’s Homecoming nearly 40 antics, the Homecoming Advisory Board wasn’t laughing. years ago. Homecoming bigwigs quickly declared Staten ineligible because In 1970, Staten, a Daily Beacon humor columnist and graduhe was a graduate student. A handful of Staten’s friends — many ate student, used a write-in candidacy and the help of friends to former SGA presidents — rushed to his defense, complaining to earn the UT student body’s selection as the Student Tribunal on the grounds that year’s Homecoming Queen. It was that Staten’s ineligibility was unjust. an election — and an ensuing aftermath The Tribunal then threw the election — that cemented Staten’s escapade out, leaving no Homecoming Queen among one of UT’s most memorable selected in 1970. Homecoming weekends. “The candidates were really upset,” The catch? Staten won the election Jester, a graduate student at UT from without a true campaign — all while 1969-71, said. “There was this one wearing a bag over his head. woman who went to the president of the “It was a total fluke,” Tom Jester, a SGA and said this had ruined her life. freelance journalist and friend of Staten, There was one fraternity who organized said. “It just was. It was just a little bit some student squad who wanted to beat of the spirit of the times. People were in up Vince. sort of a ‘protesting mood’ anyway. “... There were people who were very “Here we have a guy who was a literal and not good at getting the joke. humor columnist for the Daily Beacon But the students, they accepted the running as a write-in with a bag over his Homecoming Queen candidate. It was head. How obvious could that be?” just a big joke.” Staten, who once pitched the idea of Today, the effects of Staten’s wearing a bag over his head in a Beacon Homecoming victory are still felt on columnist mugshot, was no stranger to UT’s Homecoming weekend. The campus-wide jokes. In the SGA election crowning of a queen was discontinued of 1969, Staten created an election after Staten’s win until the mid-’80s, party within his column known as the though no Homecoming Queen has “Apathy Party.” He counted every stubeen crowned since 1985. Instead, UT dent who failed to vote in the SGA elecselects Miss Homecoming each fall. File Photo • The Daily Beacon tion as a member of his party. The trio of Staten, Jester and “Everybody who didn’t vote was cast- Daily Beacon columnist Vince Staten poses for the camera in this 1971 Volunteer Yearbook photo. Dudenbostel still reminisces about the ing their ballot for me, so I declared Staten staged a well-publicized write-in campaign for that year’s Homecoming Queen, winning Homecoming election four decades ago. myself the winner of the SGA elections with over 60 percent of the student vote. However, the election was later declared invalid. The men meet once a month at Old that spring,” said Staten, who is now a College Inn on the Strip — a gathering metro columnist for the Kingsport Times-News in Kingsport, Presidents for Vince” — with students casting write-in ballots in the group calls “The Queen’s Court.” The three former students Tenn. “The Homecoming Queen was yet another Apathy Party favor of Staten’s bag-headed candidate. even recreated the famous bag-headed pictures earlier this year campaign, though there wasn’t really a campaign. I didn’t even “In one of the big, tall dormitories, somebody hung a sheet in Neyland Stadium, an ode to Staten, who still finds humor in announce I was running.” out their window,” Staten said. “They’d copied the picture of me his farfetched idea. The apathy that resonated from UT’s student body regarding from the Beacon, and they’d written under it “‘The Un“I like to think I’m still reigning (as queen),” Staten said.

Zac Ellis

Homecoming Queen elections sparked the “paper bag” idea in Staten and other Beacon staffers. Jokes of Staten’s Homecoming Queen candidacy began to spread across campus, and when Staten denied running, the Beacon ran a front-page story denouncing its columnist’s candidacy. But the student body didn’t take the hint. “That’s how it all started,” said Staten. Through a strictly word-of-mouth campaign, Staten, Jester and Beacon photographer Don Dudenbostel spread the news of Staten’s candidacy. Groups quickly formed in support of the faux campaign — one such group named itself “Former SGA

Construction creates problems New music building causes hassle for wide variety of students Kyle Turner News Editor Tradition gets displaced For more than 140 years, the Pride of the Southland Marching Band has been a fixture of UT, practicing diligently to provide the university with one of the most prestigious bands in the country. Now, with the construction of the new music building, music students and band members alike have been displaced, putting their scholastic achievement in jeopardy. The problems that have precipitated from the construction of the new music building have led to troubles for music students and non-music students alike. Just last week, Chancellor Cheek was given a petition with more than 300 signatures from members of the band and School of Music, expressing their discontent with the learning environment they have been subjugated to. Currently located in the HPER building, the Pride is forced to practice in a converted gymnasium, lacking nearly everything needed for a conducive environment, Alex White, drum major for the Pride of the Southland Marching Band, said. The current conditions jeopardize the band’s credibility, quality and ability of the university to recruit music students, White said. White, as the official student leader of the Pride, has reached out to administrators consistently, asking for small concessions for the band. At any given time of rehearsal, loud music, basketballs hitting the walls and whistles blowing can be heard from the neighboring gym. “A key component to the band is the ability to listen to the drum major, who blows a whistle,” White said. “Hearing whistles from next door disrupts the band and can create confusion when members are trying to listen to me.” The current practice room has been retrofitted but is simply not enough, said band members, who remark their inability to even hear themselves during practice, a key component for any band. Chancellor Cheek has responded to the student demands and plans on doing what is

necessary over Winter Break to ensure the success of the Pride of the Southland Marching Band. “It is a huge relief to know that something is going to be done to make our practice room suitable,” White said. “We are paying students just like everyone else, and it is nice to finally be heard.” Quality concerns While the Pride is receiving necessary help to ensure adequate practice facilities during the wait for the new music building, other students have not fared as well. Jonathan Ziegler, graduate student in collaborative piano and graduate teaching assistant for the School of Music, is concerned with the conditions of Melrose Hall, where many practice rooms are located for music students. Since the displacement, Melrose Hall and AMB have been the main areas for music students to practice, and they present their own set of challenges. “Our practice rooms had no air condition over the summer, and now with winter approaching, it makes me worried to know if the heating will be adequate,” Ziegler said. The condition of the rooms themselves raise concerns to those who practice within Melrose. “One of my practice rooms in particular has warnings on the pipes to not scratch or touch due to asbestos,” Ziegler said. “I do not doubt that the rooms are OK, but it just makes me wonder about the condition of my health, having to spend so much time in there.” Ziegler does, however, have the opportunity to practice in AMB, when it is not closed. “On the Fridays before home games, AMB is closed, restricting myself and fellow pianists from the five practice rooms,” Ziegler said. “And now with the music building gone, recitals held on Thursday nights lack free parking for anyone wishing to attend.” According to Ziegler, none of these problems are necessarily new but just more pronounced and evident with the limited faciliGeorge Richardson • The Daily Beacon ties during the time of construction. Another addition to Neyland Stadium will be a large statue of Gen. Robert Neyland, which was placed under the Tennessee Terrace on Wednesday night. The statue See MUSIC on Page 3A will be unveiled today at 2:30 p.m.


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