The Daily Beacon

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Monday, November 12, 2012

Issue 55, Volume 121

Vols downed by Tigers in four overtimes Austin Bornheim Assistant Sports Editor In a game that looked like it would go Tennessee’s way, the Volunteers couldn’t put away the Missouri Tigers and eventually fell 51-48 in four overtimes. “It’s a hard loss and we fought good and our players played their tails off,” head coach Derek Dooley said. “We just didn’t execute at the end to win the game.”

Tennessee (4-6, 0-6 SEC) started with the ball in the fourth overtime period and elected to go for the first down on fourthand-three from Missouri’s 18-yard line instead of kicking a go-ahead field goal. Tyler Bray’s pass fell incomplete, as senior receiver Zach Rogers was unable to corral the ball to move the chains. After three running plays on its possession, the Tigers sent redshirt freshman Andrew Baggett out for the 35-yard field goal attempt. Baggett’s kick sailed through

the uprights and the Tigers flooded the field to celebrate. “It was fourth-and-three and I didn’t have a lot of confidence that we were stopping them on the other side,” said Dooley. “So they scored four straight touchdowns. On our bread and butter, we didn’t execute …” Tennessee led by 14 with 8:03 left in the third quarter, but Missouri (5-5, 2-5 SEC) scored two unanswered touchdowns, capped off by a fourth-and-12 touchdown

pass from quarterback James Franklin to Dorial Green-Beckham with less than a minute left in regulation, sending the game to overtime. “B-Mo (Byron Moore) said he had the deep half, but they had two guys in his zone and when the quarterback scrambled he took one of the guys and the quarterback hit the other guy,” said senior cornerback Prentiss Waggner. See MIZZOU on Page 3

Students seek Street named after UT legend alternative study spots Beacon Staff Reports

Claire Dodson Staff Writer Imagine a finals week where everyone always has a computer, the lines at Starbucks are never more than a couple people long, and outlets and white boards abound. Tables are always available, the temperature is comfortable, and the noise level is just right. With over 27,000 students, this seems about as likely as all finals being cancelled. However, with over 50 buildings on the main campus alone, UT students are getting creative with their study habits. “I like to go places where there aren’t very many people,” Iman Ferdjallah, junior in biological sciences, said. “Once it gets crowded, I go find somewhere else.” It is this adventurous spirit that leads students to venture out of the all-inclusive, crowded Hodges Library and search for unique, unexpected and unconventional study spots. For Ben Parrott, sophomore in chemistry, this means everything from the study lounge on the 6th floor of Min Kao to a booth in the Presidential Court Building Café. “Min Kao is really convenient

when I’m on the Hill, it has pretty much everything you need for studying — couches, tables, conversational atmosphere,” Parrott said. “If I have another class on the Hill later that day, it’s kind of a pain to walk anywhere else.” Although the café part of PCB requires some form of payment to get in, unlimited snacks and drink refills while doing homework is an obvious perk. There is also a computer lab with printers on the bottom floor. Some UT students find total quiet the only way to get studying done. For Sarah Moog, freshman in communications, her search for quiet leads her to the James D. Hoskins Library. “The ... library is awesome for people studying individually and there is usually plenty of room,” Moog said. “But if you talk above a whisper, people look at you funny.” For group meetings, the Baker Center also provides a relatively uncrowded study space and has several classrooms and study rooms available. The recent renovations to HSS, including the common areas on each floor and the computer lab on the third floor, make it another spot that is conducive for group studying. See ALT. STUDY on Page 3

When UT decides to name a street after someone, they do not select just any normal Volunteer. Peyton Manning, Tee Martin, Chamique Holdsclaw — all of those Vols were famous for their superior dedication to the Volunteer community. Enter Ann Baker Furrow, the newest addition to UT road name honorees. As the first woman to ever play a men’s varsity sport at UT, Furrow was a member on the golf team in 1964 and 1965. She went on to win five Tennessee Women’s A m a t e u r Championships and still holds the record for Knox Area Women’s Golf Association titles with 12. Ranked 19th in a Division I coaches’ poll, UT women’s golf has become a stalwart on leaderboards. The sport would not exist at UT, however, if it had not

File Photo • The Daily Beacon

Ann Baker Furrow hits the ball out of a sand trap in this photo from her 1965 season. been for Furrow. She pushed for the creation of the team in 1991, serving as the interim head coach for a year before working as an assistant coach for the next fifteen. Her fundraising efforts have raised $2 million to endow the team. Even though her

titles and contributions in the sports world are renowned, sports were just the beginning for Furrow. She continued to pioneer, serving as the first woman appointed to the UT Board of Trustees. At the time, in 1970, Furrow was also the youngest member ever on the board at age

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Showers 70% chance of rain HIGH LOW 63 39

26. Over the next 18 years, Furrow would serve as the board’s vice chair and on the Academic Affairs Committee. Perhaps her most impressive achievement at UT was the breadth of her achievements themselves. She received the first Robert R. Neyland Academic Scholarship, served as the president of her sorority Alpha Delta Pi and was a homecoming queen finalist in 1966, as a junior. She also filled the sweetheart role for Phi Delta Theta — her now husband, Sam Furrow, was a brother there. On the road that bears her name already lay the homes of several sororities in the Sorority Village. ADPi moved in Friday night, and more are scheduled throughout the year. No one can deny that Ann Baker Furrow Boulevard will be a busy street someday. Granted, Ann Baker Furrow was a pretty busy woman herself.

The Daily Beacon is printed using soy based ink on newsprint containing recycled content, utilizing renewable sources and produced in a sustainable, environmentall responsible manner.

Buckingham to bring sound to Bijou page 5

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