— Tennessee Football (@Vol_Football) September 29, 2016
georgia sucks.
Lighting of Bristol state line sign Orange & Maroon. @knoxnews pic.twitter.com/frqsmDGBtw— Michael Patrick (@michaelpix) September 9, 2016
The Bristol Virginia-Tennessee Slogan Sign is a landmark in the twin cities of Bristol, Virginia and Bristol, Tennessee, United States. The sign is positioned over State Street, a roadway along the border separating the two states. Although the landmark is technically located in both Tennessee and Virginia, the National Register considers the location as Tennessee. (via)thank you very much.
The world’s largest 4-sided screen was installed by a @UTK_COE alum! --> https://t.co/Yxi9CkIOk0 #BattleAtBristol pic.twitter.com/oIsZSB4V65
— UT Knoxville Alumni (@tennalum) September 8, 2016
i'd venture to guess that none of these seats are gonna be great.A view from maybe worst seat at Bristol Motor Speedway. @GrantRamey with view from Row 13 Wallace Tower granstands https://t.co/qcYZknH5n7
— Phil Kaplan (@philkaplan) September 7, 2016
Good morning #VolNation! Check out Smokey's little brother Smokey Joe who was hanging out at #Neyland yesterday. pic.twitter.com/ZeDRp4e4BO
— Vol Photos (@Vol_Photos) June 9, 2016
At my alma mater and I'm feeling it. pic.twitter.com/XpEnfkuz15— Paula Pell (@perlapell) May 20, 2016
In 1979, a gay rights activist, communist and Angeleno named Harry Hay — a founder of a neo-pagan countercultural movement called the Radical Faeries — urged gay men to ‘‘throw off the ugly green frog skin of hetero-imitation.’’ Instead of fighting for the rights that straights had, like marriage and adoption, the faeries believed that to be gay was to possess a unique nature and a special destiny apart from straight people, and that this destiny would reach its full flowering in the wilds of rural America. So it was perhaps fitting that the faeries began to refer to their secluded outposts as sanctuaries. There are more than a dozen loosely affiliated sanctuaries across three continents today, but in the same year that Hay made his pronouncement, the mother ship of the faeries landed on Short Mountain, one of the tallest points in Middle Tennessee. It remains home to what is almost certainly the largest, oldest, best known and most visited planned community for lesbian, gay and transgender people in the country, a place that one local described to me as a veritable Gayberry, U.S.A. (via)
Make plays. Move mountains. Introducing our @usnikefootball Mach Speed Uniforms
http://t.co/JBifnXQ2EK #OneTennessee pic.twitter.com/6swJnthXuj
— Tennessee Football (@Vol_Football) July 1, 2015