Tennessee
Cool, unusual, eclectic: Sale underway of items belonging to Tennessee poet laureate
![Cool, unusual, eclectic: Sale underway of items belonging to Tennessee poet laureate](https://ewscripps.brightspotcdn.com/dims4/default/ec825f6/2147483647/strip/true/crop/1920x1008%200%2036/resize/1200x630!/quality/90/?url=http://ewscripps-brightspot.s3.amazonaws.com/ca/8c/42da4e5843faa50fe9eef0ec889c/maggi-one.jpg)
BELL BUCKLE, Tenn. (WTVF) — If you like to hunt for cool, unusual, eclectic stuff, you’re not going to find a sale quite like this. That’s because it’s being held by an extraordinary person with an important story to Tennessee.
Friday morning, people lined up to get inside the banquet hall in Bell Buckle.
“I’ve always wanted a bigger Boop!” laughed one visitor, holding up a large statue of Bettie Boop.
“Got a big fork!” added another visitor. “I mean. You can’t beat that, right?”
The important part was who was throwing this sale.
“If you’re a writer or anything in the arts, you gotta do it,” a voice told a visitor.
Margaret Britton Vaughn, known to friends as Maggi, is Tennessee’s poet laureate and a country music songwriter.
“Wrote for Loretta Lynn and Conway Twitty!” Maggi said.
She always knew she was born to write.
“My mother looked down at me and said, ‘are you sure you don’t wanna be a nurse?’” Maggi remembered. “‘No, mama, I wanna be a songwriter and a poet.’ I’m not a fancy writer. I can’t spell doodly squat.”
However, her words come from her heart.
“People say, ‘Maggi, these books, you’ve written my life,’” she said.
Maggi’s dream has led her to meet interesting people and artists. The banquet hall showcased an ice-cold Pepsi phone, a fork and spoon lamp, a musical washboard, doll heads.
“I don’t know! I just like unusual!” Maggi said. “Practically everything I have has a story. The stuff? Some of it’s junk and some of its real valuable.”
“I can’t believe this is completed constructed out of coat hangers,” said Billy Phillips of Phillips General Store, holding up a wire sculpture shaped like a typewriter. “Maggi Britton Vaughn commissioned Vannoy Streeter, the artist who makes everything out of coat hangers, to make this typewriter.”
“If I buy it, I love it, and it’s hard to let go of sometimes, but I’m having this big ole sale ’cause I just turned 85,” Maggi said. “When I’m dead and gone, they won’t know what to do with everything.”
Maggi’s sharing the items that help tell her story. She’s happy to have a moment with every person who walks in to encourage them to follow dreams just like she did.
“I want to put one of her poems right here like it’d be typed on this type writer,” Billy said, holding up the typewriter made of coat hangers. “Maggi’s the most eclectic person I’ve ever known in my entire life, and I mean that in every sense of the word.”
Maggi’s living estate sale continues Saturday, Aug. 12, at the Bell Buckle Banquet Hall. Doors open at 9:30 a.m. and stay open until 8:00 pm.
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Tennessee
Tennessee Army National Guard puts on Boot Camp for students
![Tennessee Army National Guard puts on Boot Camp for students](https://whnt.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/20/2024/06/PKG.00_00_15_04.Still001.jpg?w=1280)
FAYETTEVILLE, Tenn. (WHNT) — One step at a time, a group of seven students are seeing if they have what it takes to join the Tennessee Army National Guard.
They’re participating in a week-long “boot camp” summer program put on by the Tennessee Army National Guard at Lincoln County High School.
“We just wanted to make sure we had something for the kids in the area to do something over the summer,” said Specialist Bree Bailey, a Recruiter with the Tennessee Army National Guard.
She said that it is rewarding to see the students’ eyes open to new career opportunities within the military because of the camp.
“You see a light bulb go off, that’s for sure,” she said. “They realize that it’s not all about getting deployed and going overseas and all the scary things and the stories that they hear….You’re able to kind of educate them a little bit further on what the military actually is and what it does have to offer, opportunities, doors that can be opened” .”
Throughout the week, the students, who range from 12 to 18 years old, have learned basic medical skills, weapons systems, squad movements, and more.
Specialist Bailey said, “Pretty much by the end of the week, they will be able to run a full mission from start to finish.”
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On Thursday, a Deputy from the Lincoln County Sheriff’s Office gave the students a hands-on lesson on basic combative skills. That included foot positioning, how to throw a punch and protect yourself.
“We’re going to be soft with it,” Bailey said. “We’re not here to hurt each other, but just to give them a little bit of taste.”
This is the first year that the Tennessee Army National Guard has put on this camp in several years. Specialist Bailey said she looks forward to growing their presence in Lincoln County and hopes next year’s camp is double in size.
Tennessee
Tennessee State Parks provides new all-terrain wheelchairs at additional state parks – KTVZ
![Tennessee State Parks provides new all-terrain wheelchairs at additional state parks – KTVZ](https://ktvz.b-cdn.net/2024/06/WTVFTNstateparkswheelchairs-300.jpg)
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NASHVILLE, Tennessee (WTVF) — Tennessee State Parks are providing new all-terrain wheelchairs at state parks!
You may remember this story from last summer, where our Cole Johnson showed how the wheelchairs were helping those at Radnor Lake State Park.
The new additions announced this week will bring the total chairs to 22. The chairs are designed to navigate a wide range of terrains and give visitors the opportunity to access recreation that they would’ve been unable to access prior.
The chairs are free and are available for kids and adults.
You are allowed to request a wheelchair upon arrival to the park, but its advised to give advance notice to the park you’re visiting so that you can ensure there’s one available for use.
The wheelchairs are available at the following parks:
Cedars of Lebanon State Park Cordell Hull Birthplace State Park David Crockett State Park Fall Creek Falls State Park Fort Pillow State Historic Park Harrison Bay State Park Indian Mountain State Park Meeman-Shelby Forest State Park Nathan Bedford Forrest State Park Sgt. Alvin C. York State Park Booker T. Washington State Park Cove Lake State Park Cumberland Mountain State Park Cummins Falls State Park Chickasaw State Park Henry Horton State Park Long Hunter State Park Natchez Trace State Park Radnor Lake State Park Tims Ford State Park Lamar Alexander Rocky Fork State Park Warriors’ Path State Park
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Tennessee
What guaranteed admission to University of Tennessee? You now need a test score (and more)
![What guaranteed admission to University of Tennessee? You now need a test score (and more)](https://www.gannett-cdn.com/authoring/authoring-images/2024/05/11/PKNS/73653058007-1183-20240510-rss-ac-graduation.jpg?auto=webp&crop=3236,1821,x0,y168&format=pjpg&width=1200)
University of Tennessee Knoxville parking: Walk or drive to campus?
Tennessee Volunteers say parking is tough this semester. We experimented to see if it’s faster to walk to campus or drive and look for parking.
The University of Tennessee System has standardized its language across all campuses to include standardized test scores in its guaranteed admissions requirements for top-performing high school seniors.
The biggest change to the guaranteed admissions policy, which is less than one year old, most applies to the University of Tennessee at Knoxville. The flagship campus previously did not require an ACT or SAT score for guaranteed admission. UT Chattanooga, UT Martin and UT Southern did.
The ACT and SAT score requirements, which vary between universities, are in addition to requirements related to student performance and class standing.
Previously, UT Knoxville only required a 4.0 cumulative GPA or that students finish in the top 10% of their class for guaranteed admission. Other campuses had their own requirements, including a lower GPA benchmark and an ACT score.
Here’s how the new policy, approved at the UT System Board of Trustees meeting June 25, will work for students applying for fall 2025:
For UT Knoxville
- Students must get either a 4.0 cumulative grade-point average (GPA) or finish in the top 10% of their high school graduating class.
- And students need a 24 ACT composite score (or an SAT score of 1160-1190 or higher).
For UT Chattanooga, UT Martin and UT Southern:
- Students must get either at least a 3.2 cumulative GPA or finish in the top 10% of their high school graduating class.
- And students need a 23 ACT composite score (or an SAT score of 1130-1150 or higher).
The original guaranteed admissions policy was approved in September 2023 as a way to give top-earning high schoolers in Tennessee the opportunity to receive early admission to any UT campus across the state.
Why the University of Tennessee changed the guaranteed admissions policy
Only 30% of Tennessee high schools reported class ranking data to UT for the high school graduating class of 2024, according to UT Knoxville Chancellor Donde Plowman. That’s just 226 of 740 high schools.
The original guaranteed admissions policy also was challenged by the lower requirements from UT Martin, UT Chattanooga and UT Southern. Their policies, which required a 3.2 GPA and 23 ACT composite score, were so close to standard admission criteria that prospective students were worried no guaranteed admission would mean no admission at all, according to Bernie Savarese, vice president for academic affairs, research and student success for the UT System.
When the UT System Board of Trustees kicked off its annual meeting June 24, Savarese presented a different version of the proposed changes that would have made 4.0 the required GPA for all campuses. The top 10% criteria also would have been dropped.
But because the guaranteed admissions policy is so new, the board was hesitant to make such drastic changes. The policy needs more time for data to accrue before it can be reevaluated at a higher level, trustee Jamie Woodson said during the meeting.
Keenan Thomas is a higher education reporter. Email keenan.thomas@knoxnews.com. X, formerly known as Twitter @specialk2real.
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