Friday, August 25, 2006
Today’s Response
Middle Tennessee State University
The long lens of the law
NewsChannel5+ had better ratings at times during the Perry March murder trial than network news channels. Will the March trial coverage pave the way for more live televised coverage of local trials? Dr. Bob Pondillo, electronic media communication, says we should remember that our tax dollars pay for the maintenance of our public courts. “So long as a fair trial is in no way compromised or sensationalized by television cameras in the courtroom, I think it’s our right—indeed, some might argue our responsibility—to be able to see undiluted, gavel-to-gavel coverage of any given trial.”
Contact Pondillo at 615-904-8465.
pondillo@mtsu.edu
Jumping jacks junkies
Is there an increase in “exercise addiction” among women? Dr. Rebecca Johns-Wommack, health and human performance, says, “I teach women every semester who confess to me that they know exactly how many calories are in a Subway sandwich or brownie and exactly how long they have to exercise to work it off. I analyze their food diaries and see that they are only consuming 1,000 calories a day (while) exercising two-plus hours a day and can not understand why their bodies can not respond to the stress and demand placed upon them.”
Contact Johns-Wommack at 615-898-2904.
rjohns@mtsu.edu
The commercialization of “cool”
You know the counterculture has become the mainstream when what once was considered edgy ends up in a television commercial. That said, consider the first Woodstock festival, which occurred 37 years ago this month. Woodstock was supposed to be about free music, free love, and relatively cheap drugs. But, says Dr. Larry Burriss, journalism, “The original Woodstock has also been commercialized and commemorated twice with a 1994 25th anniversary concert (and) in 1999 (with a) 30th (anniversary concert).” Moreover, “now the bongs have disappeared as coffee-table accessories, theembroidered gauze shirts and tie-dyed tees are in the back of the closet, and the psychedelic posters are fetching high prices on eBay.”
Contact Burriss at 615-898-2983.
lburriss@mtsu.edu
TR EXTRA
RUN FOR THE VETERANS--Pay tribute to the MTSU faculty, staff, alumni and students who lost their lives while serving in the armed forces by taking part in the MTSU Veterans Memorial Run/Walk at 2 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 17. There will be individual and team awards for top finishers in all age and gender divisions. Each pre-registered entrant will receive a race T-shirt. Early registration is $15, and online registration will close at 8 p.m. Central time Friday, Sept. 15. All proceeds will go towards construction of an on-campus memorial to military personnel. Media welcomed. For more information, contact Maj. Chuck Giles at 1-888-682-7682 or cgiles@mtsu.edu
GET A HEAD START ON TAILGATING--Football weather has not arrived yet, but plans are in the works for the upcoming football season. This year, the MTSU Rutherford County Alumni Chapter’s annual Pigskin Pregame will be held from 7 p.m. unil 11 p.m. TOMORROW. Tickets will be $25 at the door. The ticket price includes an exclusive preview of Murfreesboro’s newest restaurant, Kirkenburt’s Smokehouse Grill, wine, beer truck, soft drinks, music, door prizes and more. Parking will be available at Central Middle School. All proceeds from Pigskin Pregame will benefit the Rutherford County Chapter Scholarship Fund. Media welcomed. Contact the MTSU Alumni Office at 1-800-533-MTSU (6878) or visit http://www.mtalumni.com.
FAIR ENOUGH FOR EVERYONE--Memorabilia and free goodies will be available at MTSU’s booth at the Wilson County Fair through TOMORROW at the James E. Ward Agricultural Center in Lebanon. The fair is regarded as the top fair in the state and is listed in the Top 20 Events in August by the Southeast Tourism Association. Wilson County alumni and personnel from MT athletics, athletic marketing and the alumni office will be staffed. The fairgrounds are located one mile off Interstate 40. Festival goers should take I-40 to exit 239B, then U.S. 70 West. Contact the MTSU Alumni Office at 1-800-533-MTSU (6878) or visit http://www.wilsoncountyfair.net.
BAKE IT AND TAKE IT--The Blue Raider Bake Off and Blue Raider Bash are slated for 5:45 p.m. Tuesday, Aug. 29 next to Cummings Hall. Members of the campus community will enter delicious desserts for a chance to win a tailgate party to feed 15 people. There are two categories—one for students and one for staff, faculty and administration. There will be a winner in each of the two categories. The applications are available at http://www.mtsu.edu/~nsfp.Click on Welcome Week, then Big Fat Blue Raider Bake Off, then application. Fill it out and turn it in to Keathley University Center, Room 326. MTSU student athletes will be on hand and there will be plenty of barbecue. All the eats are FREE, and the event is OPEN TO THE PUBLIC. Media welcomed. Contact Rob Patterson, coordinator, New Student and Family Programs at 615-898-2454 or rpatters@mtsu.edu
AGRARIAN ART—“The Upper Cumberland Collection: The Plateau Years” is on display at the Baldwin Photographic Gallery in the McWherter Learning Resources Center through Sept. 8. These photos are by Jack Stoddart, who began his career photographing a disappearing culture between 1971 and 1974. The gelatin silver images became a mainstay of future exhibits chronicling the last vestiges of an agrarian lifestyle that still existed in rural north central Tennessee. There will be a lecture by Stoddart at 7:30 p.m. on Wed., Sept. 6 in Room 104 of the John Bragg Mass Communication Building. A reception will follow in the gallery. Exhibitions are free and open to the public Mon.-Fri. 8 a.m.-4:30 p.m. and Sat. Noon-4 p.m. For more information contact Tom Jimison, curator, at 651-898-2085 or tjimison@mtsu.edu
FAT ISN’T PHAT--Greg Critser, author of Fat Land, will be MTSU’s University Convocation speaker at 2 p.m. THIS SUNDAY at Murphy Center. Fat Land, which investigates why 60 percent of Americans are now considered overweight, is this year’s summer University reading selection. The book examines the many factors involved in American life—from supersizing to Super Mario, from high fructose corn syrup to the high cost of physical education in schools. The annual convocation welcomes new students into the MTSU learning community with faculty marching in regalia, dramatic music played by the university band, and explanations of MTSU traditions and rituals. FREE and OPEN to the public. Media welcomed. Contact the Office of News and Public Affairs at 615-898-2919 or news@mtsu.edu
DOUBLE YOUR PLEASURE, DOUBLE YOUR FUN—Enjoy Japanese hospitality and learn more about the Asia-related courses offered at MTSU as the Japan-U.S. Program welcomes new Japanese students, their friends and all students enrolled in Japan-related courses at TWO parties Friday, Sept. 1. The first event will take place from 5-6:30 p.m. in the SunTrust Room of the Business Aerospace Building. The follow-up party, or niji-kai, will take place at the home of Dr. Kiyoshi Kawahito, 202 Eventide Drive in Murfreesboro, at 7 p.m. Guests will include exchange students from partner institutions in Japan, Korea and the Philippines. But Kawahito says, “ … many returning Japanese students take this as a ‘welcome back party’ for them and as a great occasion to eat good foods—as much as they want. During the second party, I keep cooking, cooking and cooking.” For further information, especially about directions and parking, call the Japan-U.S. Program at 615-898-2229 or send an e-mail to japan@mtsu.edu
BLOOD SPORT--MTSU vs. Tennessee Tech: It’s the Thursday, Sept. 14 football game and Sept. 12-13 blood drive. MT athletics and the Student Government Association arefully behind the Red Cross blood drive that will be held from 10 a.m. until 4 p.m. both days. Anyone 17-and-over with a valid ID can participate. MTSU will compete against its longtime Ohio Valley Conference rival to see which school can “pump up” the most blood. For more information, call Jennifer Kirk, KUC event coordinator, at 615-898-2590.
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