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Vols take fifth win of season against Vanderbilt 24-10 T H E
E D I T O R I A L L Y
Jury forces Brumley family members to share rights to “I’ll Fly Away”
Monday, November 22, 2010
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Issue 66 I N D E P E N D E N T
PUBLISHED SINCE 1906
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Pearl suspended for first eight SEC games Matt Dixon Sports Editor Tennessee announced that men’s basketball coach Bruce Pearl would be suspended for the first eight games of the SEC conference season in a press conference on Friday. Pearl, athletic director Mike Hamilton and Chancellor Jimmy Cheek addressed the action taken by the SEC. SEC Commissioner Mike Slive made the decision and informed the university in a letter on Thursday, Nov. 18 and was available via teleconference after the press conference was concluded. According to Slive, the consequences could’ve been much worse if Pearl hadn’t admitted to misleading the NCAA earlier this year. “In the final analysis I determined that there may well have been enough to suspend coach Pearl for the entire conference season,” Slive said. “But the fact that he owned up to what he had done, owned up to the underlying violations, I felt that half of the conference season was an appropriate penalty in this matter.” Slive said he considered taking action against UT’s assistant coaches but ultimately decided to direct all penalties at Pearl, citing Pearl as being liable for all the misconduct of his assistants. “I thought that the suspension of coach Pearl from eight conference games is in part premised on the fact that he is responsible for the conduct of his coaching staff, and he is accountable for their behavior, and he was in this matter,” Slive said. “This penalty is heavy and impacts the entire program, and so at the moment anyway, I am not planning any additional penalties against
the assistant coaches.” Pearl said he wasn’t caught off-guard by the suspension, because he had talked with Slive before the season began, and Slive informed him he was considering taking action. “(I) wasn’t blindsided, because we knew, as Mike knew, that I had talked to the commission-
Despite the suspension, Pearl is humbled that he has the support of Hamilton and Cheek. “I’m still very appreciative of the support that we’ve received, from the university in particular — Mike Hamilton and Jimmy Cheek — they have stood by me, and I know I’ve disappointed them, but they have stood by me through this,
Tia Patron • The Daily Beacon
Bruce Pearl speaks to media on Friday, Nov. 19. SEC Commissioner Mike Slive announced Friday that Pearl would be suspended for the first eight games of the conference season because of recruiting violations that surfaced during an NCAA investigation of the basketball program. er during the basketball Media Day (in October),” Pearl said. “I knew that he was considering doing something more, and I knew he had respect for the proactive nature of what the university did.”
and I appreciate that,” Pearl said. “It’s our intention to overcome this adversity, and it’s my anticipation that we will.” During the eight games Pearl is suspended, assistant coaches will have to increase their
roles. “Tony Jones, our associate head coach, will coach in those eight games,” Pearl said. “He will be assisted by Jason Shay and Steve Forbes and, in particular, whoever has that scout will be the closest to Tony, in his ear. “The suspension is, as I understand it, really involves not only eight games, but just eight days. I’ll be able to coach the team, prepare the team, but not be able to coach in those particular games, so I’ll still be involved in the preparation and the game plan, and my assistant coaches and the players will execute it.” The Vols do play a nonconference game at Connecticut on Jan. 22, in which Pearl will be allowed to coach. “Coach Pearl’s going to coach against UConn,” Hamilton said. “This is an SEC penalty, SEC games, and we have a full expectation that coach will coach us against UConn.” The suspension was strictly from the SEC, and specifically Commissioner Slive. The NCAA is expected to conclude its investigation sometime next month and inform UT of its findings. “This is a period of adversity for all of us,” Cheek said. “We believe we’ve made the right decision, coach Pearl is our coach, and he’s going to be our coach for many, many years. We’re going to get through this adversity, and we are going to be stronger as a consequence of it.” The announcement of the suspension comes just days before the team will travel to New York City to play in the semifinals of the Dick’s Sporting Goods NIT Season Tip-off. The Vols will play VCU on Wednesday, Nov. 24 at 7 p.m.
Professor explores Methodism, theater Robbie Hargett Staff Writer Misty Anderson, associate professor in English, gave a presentation on the relationship between 18th-century British Methodism, satire and theater last week on Nov.16. The presentation, a Centripetal luncheon sponsored by the University Studies Program, entitled “18th Century Methodism and the Theater of the Real,” focused on the satirical depictions of Methodism when it was an emerging, yet successful movement within the Anglican church and what these depictions revealed about British society at the time. “As Misty’s current book, ‘Enthusiastic Methods: Methodism and the Eighteenth-Century British Imagination’ points out, Methodism made its way into the world as a dramatic spectacle in which crowds of hundreds of singing, swaying, weeping, praying women and men made their way to the altar to dedicate their lives to the Lord,” Allen Dunn, professor of English at UT, said in his introduction to Anderson’s presentation. Anderson pointed to many similarities between Methodist field preachings and the theater, including the enormous crowds and ticketing. George Whitefield, one of the most prominent Methodist preachers of the time, was a talented actor and even had a portable stage for his very theatrical sermons. “The Methodist preachers themselves, however, were very much against the theater as a result of actors, particularly Samuel Foote, and satirists, particularly William Hogarth, parodying Methodism to great success,” Anderson said. “Methodist preachers had been commonly regarded as theatrical and none more so than Whitefield,” she said. “Foote’s imitation of Whitefield as Dr. Squintum, a name that stuck after his performance, provided a test case for mid-18th century ideas about authenticity. Foote’s cynical pitch that Whitefield is merely an actor who hypocritically objects to theater, masks a more substantive concern that the Methodist meaning, led by charismatic preachers, is a Theater of the Real, in which something happens, something that is an uncanny illustration of the relationship between performance and belief.” Theater audiences in the 18th century were primed to distinguish between the actor and his role, unlike today’s theatergoers, who are invited to believe that actor and role are inseparable. “Methodism’s Theater of the Real unsettled the boundary between actor and role, as well as the space between actor and audience, in sermons that left congregants deeply moved, even changed,” Anderson said. Dunn said that religion remains an important part of theater today. “It is a truism to note that modern secular drama has its origins in religious ritual and that such ritual, no matter how refined, retains an irreducible element of theatricality,” he said. No students attended this presentation, but because these Centripetals are intended for a more specialized audience, many faculty members and colleagues of Anderson attended the luncheon. “The Centripetal lunches are a great chance to hear what my colleagues are doing,” Dawn Coleman, assistant professor of English, said. “It’s a chance for me to really learn about what she’s working on. I think she has some really fascinating things to say about the overlap between Methodism and theatricality in the 18th century.” Matthew DeMaria • The Daily Beacon Upcoming University Studies Centripetal luncheons include Penny White’s “Money, Sex, and Special Interest: A A UT swimmer waits for the signal to dive into the pool before a heat on Saturday, Nov. 20. Both men’s and Crisis of Confidence in Today’s Courts” and Nathan Sanders’ women’s swimming and diving programs wrapped up three days of competition in the Tennessee Invitational Sunday, coming in third and second, respectively. “Why Do Ants Rule the World.”