10.03.19 | Vol.96 | No.1
The Art of Defiant Optimism : using creativity to find hope again By Brandon Black
Inside Marsha Blackburn’s new bill to DNA test immigrants Page 4
Century 21: the unlikely epicenter of Murfreesboro’s music scene Page 12
Photo by Jack Millard
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ix years ago, actor and artist Jack Millard tragically lost his wife of 17 ½ years to a car accident while she was in the middle of a losing battle with stage-four breast cancer. This is the kind of life event that can make or break a person, so Jack chose to utilize his grief and take the road-less traveled. He did this by building boats. Not full sized, operational boats that can be taken out for the day at your average marina. Small boats that can fit in the palm of your hand, with each one representing Millard’s continued grief following the death of his life partner. “It was three years to the day after my wife was killed by a drunk driver,” he said. “I left a boat to represent every day for the last three years that she was gone, and I went up the California coast, leaving them for people to find.” Millard’s primary occupation is as an actor, and he’s had bit parts in big movies such as “The Big Short“ and 2009’s Star Trek.” He thinks of himself as an artist in more ways than just performance though, as is evidenced by his current passion project. He calls them his “Little Boats of Hope,” and places as many as he can in places where he feels the people who need them will find them. “I found myself at a crossroads of what to do emotionally about dealing with grief and I realized my way out of grief was to create, and to create something that was of hope. I was feeling rather hopeless myself, and I’m a believer of, in a biblical sense, ‘As ye sow, so shall ye reap.’ If you want hope you need to give hope.” So that’s precisely what he did.
Continued on page 10
MTSU HOCKEY: The unknown MTSU gem taking on the world Page 14
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