Thursday, July 31, 2008

Thursday, July 31, 2008

Today’s Response
Middle Tennessee State University

On his way out

Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert announced yesterday that he will resign in September. Olmert has been plagued by allegations of political corruption. His decision leaves Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni and Transport Minister Shaul Mofaz to vie for the nomination of Olmert’s party, the Kadima Party. Livni, who was in Washington when Olmert made the announcement in Israel, then canceled a scheduled news conference. Dr. Karen Petersen, political science, says, “Olmert’s decision to step down was widely anticipated, as evidenced by Livni’s jockeying for position. I would not, however, characterize the situation as unstable. Politics in Israel, largely due to the electoral system, often appears chaotic to outsiders accustomed to a two-party democracy. The primary concern, expressed by Dr. [Condoleezza] Rice (U.S. Secretary of State), is the collapse of ‘peace’ talks in the region.”

Contact Petersen at 615-494-8662.
kpeterse@mtsu.edu

The truth is out there.

This past weekend, the latest “X-Files” movie placed fourth in box office receipts. Dr. Larry Burriss, journalism, says he was struck in reading the reviews by references to the “cult following” for all things “X-Files.” It prompted him to wonder about the criteria for defining a media “cult.” “Well, it isn’t about sales figures or quality or star power,” Burriss says. “Films ranging from ‘The Wizard of Oz’ to Walt Disney’s ‘Fantasia’ are sometimes accorded cult status. The thing all films that have a cult following seem to have in common is a huge fan base that knows everything there is to know about the film: dialogue, small details from every scene, every aspect of the cast and crew.”

Contact Burriss at 615-898-2983.
lburriss@mtsu.edu

Turf wars

Building permits for single family housing units dropped from 999 to 487 from June 2007 to June 2008 in the Nashville-Davidson-Murfreesboro area, according to statistics posted by MTSU’s Business and Economic Research Center. Permits for multifamily housing units rose from 16 to 34, but those are paltry numbers compared to the June 2006 figure of 193. In June 2008, there were 1,995 residential closings, a decline from the June 2007 total of 2,853. The residential median price last month was $183,615. In June 2007, it was $196,000.

Contact the Business and Economic Research Center at 615-898-2610.

TR EXTRA

TOWER OF EMPOWERMENT--An educational video produced for a program administered through MTSU’s Center for Environmental Education has won a coveted Silver Telly Award. “The Empower Hour” was made for WaterWorks!, a program designed to educate the public about how to protect water quality. The 13-minute video featured students from Brentwood High School and the Nashville School for the Arts. It was distributed to high schools, public access channels, and other outlets to enlighten viewers about the environmental impact of automotive fluids and the proper ways to recycle or dispose of them. The video was chosen from among approximately 13,500 entries and judged by more than 40 video, advertising and TV industry professionals. Broadcast Media Group of Starkville, Miss., produced it in conjunction with Nashville-based Bill Hudson & Associates. For more information about WaterWorks!, call 615-898-2660 or visit http://www.tennesseewaterworks.com/.

HOMETOWN HEROES--“Revisiting and Re-visioning the Hometown” is a unique opportunity for MTSU Honors students to learn more about the history, people, traditions, and future of their respective hometowns. The class, which is scheduled for Mondays and Wednesdays in the Fall 2008 semester, will require students to write journal entries and finished essays. They will make contacts in their communities, forming partnerships with schools, senior centers and other socially important groups or entities. Under the guidance of Dr. Ron Kates, English, each student will synthesize what he or she has learned in other classes to create a suitable and effective approach to the topic. Participants will create and refine the history-making and re-visioning processes as they learn while teaching others. Contact Kates at 615-898-2595 or rkates@mtsu.edu.

“A POLITICIAN IS A STATESMAN WHO APPROACHES EVERY QUESTION WITH AN OPEN MOUTH.”—ADLAI STEVENSON--Has a particular turn of phrase in a politician’s speech caught your ear and made you wonder why he or she chose those particular words? What is the speaker really saying? How do the candidates get their messages across to the voters? To figure all this out in this presidential election year, students can sign up for “Political Communication,” a class to be taught this fall at MTSU by Dr. Russell Church, speech and theatre professor. Participants will take on questions of whether race and gender are still issues, who votes and why, whether candidates are now more important than parties, whether the media now call all the shots, the power of interest groups, and how parties can increase turnout. The class will take place on Mondays and Wednesdays from 2:20 p.m. to 3:45 p.m. Contact Church at 615-494-7958 or rchurch@mtsu.edu.

TO THE “NTH” DEGREE—A projected 832 degree candidates will graduate during the 96th annual summer commencement ceremony at MTSU. The single-ceremony graduation will begin at 10 a.m. Saturday, Aug. 9, in Murphy Center with Dr. Kevin E. Smith, professor for the Department of Sociology and Anthropology and the current MTSU representative of the Tennessee Board of Regents’ Faculty Subcouncil, delivering the commencement address. At 8:30 a.m., Aug. 9, Murphy Center doors will open for the commencement ceremony. Candidates are expected to be in their assigned areas, dressed in their caps and gowns, no later than 9 a.m. Officials report that students who are not in their assigned places at the proper times will not be allowed to participate in the ceremony. Because commencement rehearsals are no longer conducted, timely attendance is mandatory for students to receive important instructions. Contact the Records Office at 615-898-2600 or go to http://www.mtsu.edu/~records/grad.htm.

THE SOUNDS OF SYRIA AND SAUDI ARABIA (AND MORE) --You can be transported to fascinating locales this fall without ever leaving home. Explore the fascinating, diverse “Music of the Middle East” in a new course at MTSU. Dr. David B. Pruett will take you on a “trip” through various Middle Eastern cultural soundscapes, including the relationship between folk, classical and popular musical traditions. Students also will examine music’s role in religious expression in the region. The class will take place from 6-9 p.m. on Mondays in Room 205 of the Saunders Fine Arts Building. Contact Pruett at 615-904-8354 or dpruett@mtsu.edu.

BALI HAI MAY CALL YOU--Dr. Derek Frisby, who is a veteran of Operation Desert Storm, will accompany students on an exploration of the Central Pacific World War II battlefields of Guam, Iwo Jima and Pelelieu in the spring 2009 semester. This MTSU study abroad course not only will give students a chance to earn college credit. While in the Pacific region, students will film portions of a documentary honoring MTSU veterans. Additionally, Frisby and his group will honor those Tennesseans who fought in the three engagements under study, including the three known MTSU fatalities. Frisby will talk in detail about this extraordinary opportunity on “MTSU On the Record,” a 30-minute public affairs program hosted by Gina Logue, at 7 a.m. this Sunday, Aug. 3, on WMOT-FM (89.5 or wmot.org). Contact Frisby at 615-494-8620 or dfrisby@mtsu.edu. For more information about “MTSU on the Record,” contact Gina Logue in the Office of News and Public Affairs at 615-898-5081 or gklogue@mtsu.edu or WMOT-FM at 615-898-2800.

MICKEY MOUSE MEANS BUSINESS!--MTSU and the Jennings A. Jones College of Business are pleased to present Disney Institute’s professional development program, the “Disney Keys to Excellence,” to the greater Nashville community. The event will be held from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 9, at the Sheraton Downtown Nashville, 623 Union Street. “Participants will discover Disney success stories and learn about management philosophies and behind-the-scenes operations that have made the Disney Parks and resorts a benchmark for businesses around the world,” says George Aguel, senior vice president for Walt Disney Parks and Resorts. “MTSU is preparing young men and women to become ethical, entrepreneurial successes in the business world, and the Disney Keys program is clearly in sync with our educational philosophy,” says Dr. Jim Burton, dean of the Jones College of Business. For more information and to register for the program, go to http://www.keysnashville.com/. Contact Burton at 615-898-2764 or eburton@mtsu.edu. For press credentials and interview arrangements, contact Tom Tozer in the Office of News and Public Affairs at 615-898-2919 or ttozer@mtsu.edu.

“POVERTY IS LIKE PUNISHMENT FOR A CRIME YOU DIDN’T COMMIT”—ELI KHAMAROV--MTSU student Steve Sibley will realize the educational experience of a lifetime this fall when he interns for 10 weeks in Bangladesh with the Grameen Bank, the financial institution founded by Nobel Peace Prize-winner and former MTSU professor Dr. Muhammad Yunus. Sibley is the first recipient of the Kawahito Scholarship for Experiential World Poverty Studies. Dr. Kiyoshi Kawahito, for whom the scholarship is named, says he created it to give students a chance to live in some of the most debilitating conditions on the planet, examine why these areas are impoverished and witness conscientious efforts to fight the poverty. “You have to jump into the midst of poverty and really observe and feel how poor people live and struggle,” says the professor emeritus of economics and finance and former director of the U.S.-Japan Program. For interviews or photos, contact Gina Logue in the Office of News and Public Affairs at 615-898-5081 or gklogue@mtsu.edu.

Wednesday, July 30, 2008

Wednesday, July 30, 2008

Today’s Response
Middle Tennessee State University

“Poverty is like punishment for a crime you didn’t commit.”—Eli Khamarov

MTSU student Steve Sibley will realize the educational experience of a lifetime this fall when he interns for 10 weeks in Bangladesh with the Grameen Bank, the financial institution founded by Nobel Peace Prize-winner and former MTSU professor Dr. Muhammad Yunus. Sibley is the first recipient of the Kawahito Scholarship for Experiential World Poverty Studies. Dr. Kiyoshi Kawahito, for whom the scholarship is named, says he created it to give students a chance to live in some of the most debilitating conditions on the planet, examine why these areas are impoverished and witness conscientious efforts to fight the poverty. “You have to jump into the midst of poverty and really observe and feel how poor people live and struggle,” says the professor emeritus of economics and finance and former director of the U.S.-Japan Program.

For interviews or photos, contact Gina Logue in the Office of News and Public Affairs at 615-898-5081.
gklogue@mtsu.edu

Mickey Mouse means business!

MTSU and the Jennings A. Jones College of Business are pleased to present Disney Institute’s professional development program, the “Disney Keys to Excellence,” to the greater Nashville community. The event will be held from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 9, at the Sheraton Downtown Nashville, 623 Union Street. “Participants will discover Disney success stories and learn about management philosophies and behind-the-scenes operations that have made the Disney Parks and resorts a benchmark for businesses around the world,” says George Aguel, senior vice president for Walt Disney Parks and Resorts. “MTSU is preparing young men and women to become ethical, entrepreneurial successes in the business world, and the Disney Keys program is clearly in sync with our educational philosophy,” says Dr. Jim Burton, dean of the Jones College of Business.

Contact Burton at 615-898-2764 or eburton@mtsu.edu.
For press credentials and interview arrangements, contact Tom Tozer in the Office of News and Public Affairs at 615-898-2919 or ttozer@mtsu.edu.

Assembly line agony

The manufacturing sector in the Nashville-Davidson-Murfreesboro area suffered another big dip in June, according to the latest data from MTSU’s Business and Economic Research Center. Manufacturing employment fell 6.39 percent from June 2007 totals, farther than any other sector of nonfarm employment. The only other nonfarm column to experience loss was financial activities with a drop of .64 percent. Education and health services rose 3.07 percent. Construction and mining went up 2.80 percent. The information sector increased 2.58 percent. The overall unemployment rate was 3.9 percent in June 2007. In June 2008, the jobless rate was 5.8 percent.

Contact the Business and Economic Research Center at 615-898-2610.

TR EXTRA

TOWER OF EMPOWERMENT--An educational video produced for a program administered through MTSU’s Center for Environmental Education has won a coveted Silver Telly Award. “The Empower Hour” was made for WaterWorks!, a program designed to educate the public about how to protect water quality. The 13-minute video featured students from Brentwood High School and the Nashville School for the Arts. It was distributed to high schools, public access channels, and other outlets to enlighten viewers about the environmental impact of automotive fluids and the proper ways to recycle or dispose of them. The video was chosen from among approximately 13,500 entries and judged by more than 40 video, advertising and TV industry professionals. Broadcast Media Group of Starkville, Miss., produced it in conjunction with Nashville-based Bill Hudson & Associates. For more information about WaterWorks!, call 615-898-2660 or visit http://www.tennesseewaterworks.com.

HOMETOWN HEROES--“Revisiting and Re-visioning the Hometown” is a unique opportunity for MTSU Honors students to learn more about the history, people, traditions, and future of their respective hometowns. The class, which is scheduled for Mondays and Wednesdays in the Fall 2008 semester, will require students to write journal entries and finished essays. They will make contacts in their communities, forming partnerships with schools, senior centers and other socially important groups or entities. Under the guidance of Dr. Ron Kates, English, each student will synthesize what he or she has learned in other classes to create a suitable and effective approach to the topic. Participants will create and refine the history-making and re-visioning processes as they learn while teaching others. Contact Kates at 615-898-2595 or rkates@mtsu.edu.

“A POLITICIAN IS A STATESMAN WHO APPROACHES EVERY QUESTION WITH AN OPEN MOUTH.”—ADLAI STEVENSON--Has a particular turn of phrase in a politician’s speech caught your ear and made you wonder why he or she chose those particular words? What is the speaker really saying? How do the candidates get their messages across to the voters? To figure all this out in this presidential election year, students can sign up for “Political Communication,” a class to be taught this fall at MTSU by Dr. Russell Church, speech and theatre professor. Participants will take on questions of whether race and gender are still issues, who votes and why, whether candidates are now more important than parties, whether the media now call all the shots, the power of interest groups, and how parties can increase turnout. The class will take place on Mondays and Wednesdays from 2:20 p.m. to 3:45 p.m. Contact Church at 615-494-7958 or rchurch@mtsu.edu.

TO THE “NTH” DEGREE—A projected 832 degree candidates will graduate during the 96th annual summer commencement ceremony at MTSU. The single-ceremony graduation will begin at 10 a.m. Saturday, Aug. 9, in Murphy Center with Dr. Kevin E. Smith, professor for the Department of Sociology and Anthropology and the current MTSU representative of the Tennessee Board of Regents’ Faculty Subcouncil, delivering the commencement address. At 8:30 a.m., Aug. 9, Murphy Center doors will open for the commencement ceremony. Candidates are expected to be in their assigned areas, dressed in their caps and gowns, no later than 9 a.m. Officials report that students who are not in their assigned places at the proper times will not be allowed to participate in the ceremony. Because commencement rehearsals are no longer conducted, timely attendance is mandatory for students to receive important instructions. Contact the Records Office at 615-898-2600 or go to http://www.mtsu.edu/~records/grad.htm.

THE SOUNDS OF SYRIA AND SAUDI ARABIA (AND MORE) --You can be transported to fascinating locales this fall without ever leaving home. Explore the fascinating, diverse “Music of the Middle East” in a new course at MTSU. Dr. David B. Pruett will take you on a “trip” through various Middle Eastern cultural soundscapes, including the relationship between folk, classical and popular musical traditions. Students also will examine music’s role in religious expression in the region. The class will take place from 6-9 p.m. on Mondays in Room 205 of the Saunders Fine Arts Building. Contact Pruett at 615-904-8354 or dpruett@mtsu.edu.

STAND AND DELIVER--The ninth annual MTSU McNair Symposium will be held from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. today and tomorrow, July 30 and 31, in the Tom H. Jackson Building. The McNair Program is designed to give low-income/first-generation and under-represented undergraduate students the support they need to prepare for and successfully complete a doctorate degree in their chosen fields. McNair scholars will make oral presentations of their 2008 summer research. Their research posters also will be on display. Topics to be addressed by the scholars include “A Mystery on Our Plate: Beliefs about Agriculture from a College Peer Group;” “Benefits of Physical Therapy from the Patients’ Perspective;” “Perceptions of Campus Crime Prevention Activities;” and “From Fright to Fight: The Evolution of the Female Action Hero.” Contact Cindy Howell at 615-904-8462 or chowell@mtsu.edu.

BALI HAI MAY CALL YOU--Dr. Derek Frisby, who is a veteran of Operation Desert Storm, will accompany students on an exploration of the Central Pacific World War II battlefields of Guam, Iwo Jima and Pelelieu in the spring 2009 semester. This MTSU study abroad course not only will give students a chance to earn college credit. While in the Pacific region, students will film portions of a documentary honoring MTSU veterans. Additionally, Frisby and his group will honor those Tennesseans who fought in the three engagements under study, including the three known MTSU fatalities. Frisby will talk in detail about this extraordinary opportunity on “MTSU On the Record,” a 30-minute public affairs program hosted by Gina Logue, at 7 a.m. this Sunday, Aug. 3, on WMOT-FM (89.5 or wmot.org). Contact Frisby at 615-494-8620 or dfrisby@mtsu.edu.
For more information about “MTSU on the Record,” contact Gina Logue in the Office of News and Public Affairs at 615-898-5081 or gklogue@mtsu.edu or WMOT-FM at 615-898-2800.

Tuesday, July 29, 2008

Tuesday, July 29, 2008

Today’s Response
Middle Tennessee State University

Flipping the Burger Court

Will the U.S. Supreme Court under Chief Justice John Roberts overturn the precedents set by the high court under Chief Justice Warren Burger? David Hudson, adjunct political science professor and First Amendment Center scholar, says the “Lemon test” might be the first to go. The Burger Court’s decision in Lemon v. Kurtzman (1971) established a three-pronged test for whether a statute violates the establishment clause of the First Amendment. “If (Justice Samuel) Alito, who succeeded (Justice Sandra Day) O’Connor, votes differently than O’Connor did on church-state separation cases, much establishment-clause jurisprudence hangs in the balance. This could mean that Lemon is living on borrowed time.”

Contact Hudson at 615-727-1600.
dhudson@fac.org

A run-of-the-play contract

Why is the divorce rate slowing down? Dr. Janet Belsky, an expert on lifespan development and professor of psychology at MTSU, says the overall age of the population might be one answer. “For instance,” she says, “while my students still want to find their passionate soul mate, they really understand that passion wanes after the first few years. They also understand that you have to marry someone who shares your values, and it’s important to find a person who is together and knows how to love. Plus, when you get married in your late 20s or 30s, you are more likely to stay with a partner simply because you have had ample time to have those horrible dating experiences—you don’t have a fantasy about who or what is waiting out there in terms of the single life.”

Contact Belsky at 615-898-5935.
jbelsky@mtsu.edu

Bali Hai may call you

Dr. Derek Frisby, who is a veteran of Operation Desert Storm, will accompany students on an exploration of the Central Pacific World War II battlefields of Guam, Iwo Jima and Pelelieu in the spring 2009 semester. This MTSU study abroad course not only will give students a chance to earn college credit. While in the Pacific region, students will film portions of a documentary honoring MTSU veterans. Additionally, Frisby and his group will honor those Tennesseans who fought in the three engagements under study, including the three known MTSU fatalities. Frisby will talk in detail about this extraordinary opportunity on “MTSU On the Record,” a 30-minute public affairs program hosted by Gina Logue, at 7 a.m. this Sunday, Aug. 3, on WMOT-FM (89.5 or wmot.org).

Contact Frisby at 615-494-8620 or dfrisby@mtsu.edu.
For more information about “MTSU on the Record,” contact Gina Logue in the Office of News and Public Affairs at 615-898-5081 or gklogue@mtsu.edu or WMOT-FM at 615-898-2800.

TR EXTRA

TOWER OF EMPOWERMENT--An educational video produced for a program administered through MTSU’s Center for Environmental Education has won a coveted Silver Telly Award. “The Empower Hour” was made for WaterWorks!, a program designed to educate the public about how to protect water quality. The 13-minute video featured students from Brentwood High School and the Nashville School for the Arts. It was distributed to high schools, public access channels, and other outlets to enlighten viewers about the environmental impact of automotive fluids and the proper ways to recycle or dispose of them. The video was chosen from among approximately 13,500 entries and judged by more than 40 video, advertising and TV industry professionals. Broadcast Media Group of Starkville, Miss., produced it in conjunction with Nashville-based Bill Hudson & Associates. For more information about WaterWorks!, call 615-898-2660 or visit http://www.tennesseewaterworks.com.

HOMETOWN HEROES--“Revisiting and Re-visioning the Hometown” is a unique opportunity for MTSU Honors students to learn more about the history, people, traditions, and future of their respective hometowns. The class, which is scheduled for Mondays and Wednesdays in the Fall 2008 semester, will require students to write journal entries and finished essays. They will make contacts in their communities, forming partnerships with schools, senior centers and other socially important groups or entities. Under the guidance of Dr. Ron Kates, English, each student will synthesize what he or she has learned in other classes to create a suitable and effective approach to the topic. Participants will create and refine the history-making and re-visioning processes as they learn while teaching others. Contact Kates at 615-898-2595 or rkates@mtsu.edu.

“A POLITICIAN IS A STATESMAN WHO APPROACHES EVERY QUESTION WITH AN OPEN MOUTH.”—ADLAI STEVENSON--Has a particular turn of phrase in a politician’s speech caught your ear and made you wonder why he or she chose those particular words? What is the speaker really saying? How do the candidates get their messages across to the voters? To figure all this out in this presidential election year, students can sign up for “Political Communication,” a class to be taught this fall at MTSU by Dr. Russell Church, speech and theatre professor. Participants will take on questions of whether race and gender are still issues, who votes and why, whether candidates are now more important than parties, whether the media now call all the shots, the power of interest groups, and how parties can increase turnout. The class will take place on Mondays and Wednesdays from 2:20 p.m. to 3:45 p.m. Contact Church at 615-494-7958 or rchurch@mtsu.edu.

TO THE “NTH” DEGREE—A projected 832 degree candidates will graduate during the 96th annual summer commencement ceremony at MTSU. The single-ceremony graduation will begin at 10 a.m. Saturday, Aug. 9, in Murphy Center with Dr. Kevin E. Smith, professor for the Department of Sociology and Anthropology and the current MTSU representative of the Tennessee Board of Regents’ Faculty Subcouncil, delivering the commencement address. At 8:30 a.m., Aug. 9, Murphy Center doors will open for the commencement ceremony. Candidates are expected to be in their assigned areas, dressed in their caps and gowns, no later than 9 a.m. Officials report that students who are not in their assigned places at the proper times will not be allowed to participate in the ceremony. Because commencement rehearsals are no longer conducted, timely attendance is mandatory for students to receive important instructions. Contact the Records Office at 615-898-2600 or go to http://www.mtsu.edu/~records/grad.htm.

THE SOUNDS OF SYRIA AND SAUDI ARABIA (AND MORE) --You can be transported to fascinating locales this fall without ever leaving home. Explore the fascinating, diverse “Music of the Middle East” in a new course at MTSU. Dr. David B. Pruett will take you on a “trip” through various Middle Eastern cultural soundscapes, including the relationship between folk, classical and popular musical traditions. Students also will examine music’s role in religious expression in the region. The class will take place from 6-9 p.m. on Mondays in Room 205 of the Saunders Fine Arts Building. Contact Pruett at 615-904-8354 or dpruett@mtsu.edu.

STAND AND DELIVER--The ninth annual MTSU McNair Symposium will be held from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. tomorrow and Thursday, July 30 and 31, in the Tom H. Jackson Building. The McNair Program is designed to give low-income/first-generation and under-represented undergraduate students the support they need to prepare for and successfully complete a doctorate degree in their chosen fields. McNair scholars will make oral presentations of their 2008 summer research. Their research posters also will be on display. Topics to be addressed by the scholars include “A Mystery on Our Plate: Beliefs about Agriculture from a College Peer Group;” “Benefits of Physical Therapy from the Patients’ Perspective;” “Perceptions of Campus Crime Prevention Activities;” and “From Fright to Fight: The Evolution of the Female Action Hero.” Contact Cindy Howell at 615-904-8462 or chowell@mtsu.edu.

Monday, July 28, 2008

Monday, July 28, 2008

Today’s Response
Middle Tennessee State University

Evinrude, eat your heart out!

MTSU is conducting cutting edge research in the field of alternative fuels, and part of the process is having students build their own conveyances and match them against vehicles built by other schools. Dr. Saeed Foroudastan, associate dean of the College of Basic and Applied Sciences, says one such contest is the annual Solar Splash World Championship of Intercollegiate Boating. In 2007, Foroudastan says, “MTSU won first place in Outstanding Drive Train Design, third for Outstanding Technical Report, fourth for Visual Display, and sixth in Workmanship. In the Technical Design Report, MTSU scored 85 out of 90 possible points, less than one point from winning second place. In 2006, the solar boat received the Rookie of the Year award with the highest overall score.”

Contact Foroudastan at 615-494-8786.
sforouda@mtsu.edu

Come alive! You’re in the Pepsi Generation!

MTSU has agreed in principle with Pepsi Bottling Group on a five-year contract for pouring rights on the Murfreesboro campus. This includes the positioning of ads and vending machines for Pepsi products, including Mountain Dew, 7Up, Squirt, Aquafina, Propel, Tropicana, Life Water, Lipton and Gatorade. The agreement, which is still being finalized and is expected to be signed in early August, is renewable for an additional five years. Coca-Cola bottling just ended a 10-year tenure on campus. “We hope to have 95 percent of the Pepsi machines on campus changed out by the end of July,” says Joe Hugh, assistant vice president for procurement services at MTSU. “Part of the requirement was to replace all of the equipment on campus and guarantee that the commissions would be as great as they were last year with Coke.”

Contact Tom Tozer in the Office of News and Public Affairs at 615-898-2919.
ttozer@mtsu.edu

“Do the right thing. It will gratify some people and astonish the rest.”—Mark Twain

With a lifetime in academic achievement, Dr. Bob Glenn, outgoing vice president of student affairs and vice provost for enrollment management, knows the importance of integrity at the highest levels of university administration. “Integrity is central to any kind of leadership, and the reason for that is because people will not follow you if they can’t trust you,” Glenn says. For example, he notes, what or whom you choose to laugh at is a telltale sign of character or lack of same. Another factor is how you treat people who are not in a position to help you. “You look in any culture, Christian or non-Christian, you’ll find a version of the Golden Rule because it is a universal truth and is core to integrity,” Glenn says. “Look at how people treat someone who can’t do anything for them.” (Beginning Aug. 1, Glenn will take over the presidency of Athens State University in Alabama.)

Contact Glenn at 615-898-2440.
rglenn@mtsu.edu

TR EXTRA

WAR AND REMEMBRANCE--An MTSU history professor will accompany students and members of the community on an exploration of the Central Pacific World War II battlefields of Guam, Iwo Jima and Pelelieu in the Spring 2009 semester. Dr. Derek Frisby, who is a veteran of Operation Desert Storm, says the trip is part of MTSU’s Study Abroad program (MT Abroad) and will offer students college credit for studying in international settings. Participants will study the World War II Pacific campaigns in the presence of surviving American and Japanese veterans. They will tour the War in the Pacific National Historical Park, hike through the jungles of Pelelieu and meet on Guam with American and Japanese historians and Iwo Jima veterans. Participants who choose not to enroll in the course may still join the expedition. Additional information can be found at http://www.mtsu.edu/~dfrisby. Contact Frisby at 615-494-8620 or
dfrisby@mtsu.edu.

TOWER OF EMPOWERMENT--An educational video produced for a program administered through MTSU’s Center for Environmental Education has won a coveted Silver Telly Award. “The Empower Hour” was made for WaterWorks!, a program designed to educate the public about how to protect water quality. The 13-minute video featured students from Brentwood High School and the Nashville School for the Arts. It was distributed to high schools, public access channels, and other outlets to enlighten viewers about the environmental impact of automotive fluids and the proper ways to recycle or dispose of them. The video was chosen from among approximately 13,500 entries and judged by more than 40 video, advertising and TV industry professionals. Broadcast Media Group of Starkville, Miss., produced it in conjunction with Nashville-based Bill Hudson & Associates. For more information about WaterWorks!, call 615-898-2660 or visit http://www.tennesseewaterworks.com.

HOMETOWN HEROES--“Revisiting and Re-visioning the Hometown” is a unique opportunity for MTSU Honors students to learn more about the history, people, traditions, and future of their respective hometowns. The class, which is scheduled for Mondays and Wednesdays in the Fall 2008 semester, will require students to write journal entries and finished essays. They will make contacts in their communities, forming partnerships with schools, senior centers and other socially important groups or entities. Under the guidance of Dr. Ron Kates, English, each student will synthesize what he or she has learned in other classes to create a suitable and effective approach to the topic. Participants will create and refine the history-making and re-visioning processes as they learn while teaching others. Contact Kates at 615-898-2595 or rkates@mtsu.edu.

“A POLITICIAN IS A STATESMAN WHO APPROACHES EVERY QUESTION WITH AN OPEN MOUTH.”—ADLAI STEVENSON--Has a particular turn of phrase in a politician’s speech caught your ear and made you wonder why he or she chose those particular words? What is the speaker really saying? How do the candidates get their messages across to the voters? To figure all this out in this presidential election year, students can sign up for “Political Communication,” a class to be taught this fall at MTSU by Dr. Russell Church, speech and theatre professor. Participants will take on questions of whether race and gender are still issues, who votes and why, whether candidates are now more important than parties, whether the media now call all the shots, the power of interest groups, and how parties can increase turnout. The class will take place on Mondays and Wednesdays from 2:20 p.m. to 3:45 p.m. Contact Church at 615-494-7958 or rchurch@mtsu.edu.

TO THE “NTH” DEGREE—A projected 832 degree candidates will graduate during the 96th annual summer commencement ceremony at MTSU. The single-ceremony graduation will begin at 10 a.m. Saturday, Aug. 9, in Murphy Center with Dr. Kevin E. Smith, professor for the Department of Sociology and Anthropology and the current MTSU representative of the Tennessee Board of Regents’ Faculty Subcouncil, delivering the commencement address. At 8:30 a.m., Aug. 9, Murphy Center doors will open for the commencement ceremony. Candidates are expected to be in their assigned areas, dressed in their caps and gowns, no later than 9 a.m. Officials report that students who are not in their assigned places at the proper times will not be allowed to participate in the ceremony. Because commencement rehearsals are no longer conducted, timely attendance is mandatory for students to receive important instructions. Contact the Records Office at 615-898-2600 or go to http://www.mtsu.edu/~records/grad.htm.

THE SOUNDS OF SYRIA AND SAUDI ARABIA (AND MORE) --You can be transported to fascinating locales this fall without ever leaving home. Explore the fascinating, diverse “Music of the Middle East” in a new course at MTSU. Dr. David B. Pruett will take you on a “trip” through various Middle Eastern cultural soundscapes, including the relationship between folk, classical and popular musical traditions. Students also will examine music’s role in religious expression in the region. The class will take place from 6-9 p.m. on Mondays in Room 205 of the Saunders Fine Arts Building. Contact Pruett at 615-904-8354 or dpruett@mtsu.edu.

STAND AND DELIVER--The ninth annual MTSU McNair Symposium will be held from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday, July 30 and 31, in the Tom H. Jackson Building. The McNair Program is designed to give low-income/first-generation and under-represented undergraduate students the support they need to prepare for and successfully complete a doctorate degree in their chosen fields. McNair scholars will make oral presentations of their 2008 summer research. Their research posters also will be on display. Topics to be addressed by the scholars include “A Mystery on Our Plate: Beliefs about Agriculture from a College Peer Group;” “Benefits of Physical Therapy from the Patients’ Perspective;” “Perceptions of Campus Crime Prevention Activities;” and “From Fright to Fight: The Evolution of the Female Action Hero.” Contact Cindy Howell at 615-904-8462 or chowell@mtsu.edu.

Friday, July 25, 2008

Friday, July 25, 2008

Today’s Response
Middle Tennessee State University

Climbing your family tree


Dr. Lorne McWatters, history professor, will teach a class titled “Genealogy and Documentary Film: Doing Your Own Family History in Film” to undergraduates for the first time at MTSU this fall. “The fall class will have 15 studnets, and each student will make a film about 10 minutes long on either some aspect of his/her family (genealogy) or some aspect of the history of MTSU,” McWatters says. “In speaking to students about the class, I found the undergraduates to be very enthusiastic, much more so than the graduate students, in general.” To hear more about this innovative way to spark interest in history at a very personal level, tune in to “MTSU on the Record” with host Gina Logue at 7 a.m. this Sunday, July 27, on WMOT-FM (89.5 and wmot.org).

For more information on “MTSU on the Record,” contact Gina Logue in the Office of News and Public Affairs at 615-898-5081 or WMOT-FM at 615-898-2800.
Contact McWatters at 615-898-5805 or dmcwatte@mtsu.edu.

Update your bio

Biofuel is the buzzword of the current energy crisis. The MTSU Department of Chemistry has received funding from the Tennessee Department of Environment and Conservation to find ways to improve the quality of biodiesel. One drawback to biodiesel is that current production methods require large amounts of water to wash away the residual salts and glycerol byproduct created through the use of corrosive chemicals such as sodium hydroxide or sulfuric acid. Dr. Ngee Chong, associate professor of chemistry, says, “MTSU biodiesel research will focus on identifying and characterizing catalysts that may overcome these drawbacks, including development of a chemical process to permit the recovery of glycerol—a valuable byproduct that sells for about 50 cents per pound ($3.50 per gallon) if it is kosher or pharmaceutical grade—and methods for converting glycerol into valuable and high-volume chemicals.”

Contact Chong at 615-898-5487.
nchong@mtsu.edu

The gift that keeps on giving

Gift cards have become a convenient way for shoppers to give birthday, anniversary and other presents without worrying about buying something the recipient won’t like. However, a lot of those gift cards go at least partially unused. Dr. Charles Kile, assistant professor of accounting, says, “Perhaps the greatest benefit to retailers—and one that has distinct accounting implications—is that historical consumer behavior trends show that a portion of many gift card purchases will never be redeemed. The retail and banking industries recognize the tendency of consumers to leave gift card balances unused and refer to the unspent balance of a gift card as breakage. Reported estimates of breakage by consumer research groups vary from 10% to 19%.”

Contact Kile at 615-898-2354.
ckile@mtsu.edu

TR EXTRA

WAR AND REMEMBRANCE--An MTSU history professor will accompany students and members of the community on an exploration of the Central Pacific World War II battlefields of Guam, Iwo Jima and Pelelieu in the Spring 2009 semester. Dr. Derek Frisby, who is a veteran of Operation Desert Storm, says the trip is part of MTSU’s Study Abroad program (MT Abroad) and will offer students college credit for studying in international settings. Participants will study the World War II Pacific campaigns in the presence of surviving American and Japanese veterans. They will tour the War in the Pacific National Historical Park, hike through the jungles of Pelelieu and meet on Guam with American and Japanese historians and Iwo Jima veterans. Participants who choose not to enroll in the course may still join the expedition. Additional information can be found at http://www.mtsu.edu/~dfrisby. Contact Frisby at 615-494-8620 or
dfrisby@mtsu.edu.

TOWER OF EMPOWERMENT--An educational video produced for a program administered through MTSU’s Center for Environmental Education has won a coveted Silver Telly Award. “The Empower Hour” was made for WaterWorks!, a program designed to educate the public about how to protect water quality. The 13-minute video featured students from Brentwood High School and the Nashville School for the Arts. It was distributed to high schools, public access channels, and other outlets to enlighten viewers about the environmental impact of automotive fluids and the proper ways to recycle or dispose of them. The video was chosen from among approximately 13,500 entries and judged by more than 40 video, advertising and TV industry professionals. Broadcast Media Group of Starkville, Miss., produced it in conjunction with Nashville-based Bill Hudson & Associates. For more information about WaterWorks!, call 615-898-2660 or visit http://www.tennesseewaterworks.com/.

HOMETOWN HEROES--“Revisiting and Re-visioning the Hometown” is a unique opportunity for MTSU Honors students to learn more about the history, people, traditions, and future of their respective hometowns. The class, which is scheduled for Mondays and Wednesdays in the Fall 2008 semester, will require students to write journal entries and finished essays. They will make contacts in their communities, forming partnerships with schools, senior centers and other socially important groups or entities. Under the guidance of Dr. Ron Kates, English, each student will synthesize what he or she has learned in other classes to create a suitable and effective approach to the topic. Participants will create and refine the history-making and re-visioning processes as they learn while teaching others. Contact Kates at 615-898-2595 or rkates@mtsu.edu.

“A POLITICIAN IS A STATESMAN WHO APPROACHES EVERY QUESTION WITH AN OPEN MOUTH.”—ADLAI STEVENSON--Has a particular turn of phrase in a politician’s speech caught your ear and made you wonder why he or she chose those particular words? What is the speaker really saying? How do the candidates get their messages across to the voters? To figure all this out in this presidential election year, students can sign up for “Political Communication,” a class to be taught this fall at MTSU by Dr. Russell Church, speech and theatre professor. Participants will take on questions of whether race and gender are still issues, who votes and why, whether candidates are now more important than parties, whether the media now call all the shots, the power of interest groups, and how parties can increase turnout. The class will take place on Mondays and Wednesdays from 2:20 p.m. to 3:45 p.m. Contact Church at 615-494-7958 or rchurch@mtsu.edu.

TO THE “NTH” DEGREE—A projected 832 degree candidates will graduate during the 96th annual summer commencement ceremony at MTSU. The single-ceremony graduation will begin at 10 a.m. Saturday, Aug. 9, in Murphy Center with Dr. Kevin E. Smith, professor for the Department of Sociology and Anthropology and the current MTSU representative of the Tennessee Board of Regents’ Faculty Subcouncil, delivering the commencement address. At 8:30 a.m., Aug. 9, Murphy Center doors will open for the commencement ceremony. Candidates are expected to be in their assigned areas, dressed in their caps and gowns, no later than 9 a.m. Officials report that students who are not in their assigned places at the proper times will not be allowed to participate in the ceremony. Because commencement rehearsals are no longer conducted, timely attendance is mandatory for students to receive important instructions. Contact the Records Office at 615-898-2600 or go to http://www.mtsu.edu/~records/grad.htm.

THE SOUNDS OF SYRIA AND SAUDI ARABIA (AND MORE) --You can be transported to fascinating locales this fall without ever leaving home. Explore the fascinating, diverse “Music of the Middle East” in a new course at MTSU. Dr. David B. Pruett will take you on a “trip” through various Middle Eastern cultural soundscapes, including the relationship between folk, classical and popular musical traditions. Students also will examine music’s role in religious expression in the region. The class will take place from 6-9 p.m. on Mondays in Room 205 of the Saunders Fine Arts Building. Contact Pruett at 615-904-8354 or dpruett@mtsu.edu.

STAND AND DELIVER--The ninth annual MTSU McNair Symposium will be held from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday, July 30 and 31, in the Tom H. Jackson Building. The McNair Program is designed to give low-income/first-generation and under-represented undergraduate students the support they need to prepare for and successfully complete a doctorate degree in their chosen fields. McNair scholars will make oral presentations of their 2008 summer research. Their research posters also will be on display. Topics to be addressed by the scholars include “A Mystery on Our Plate: Beliefs about Agriculture from a College Peer Group;” “Benefits of Physical Therapy from the Patients’ Perspective;” “Perceptions of Campus Crime Prevention Activities;” and “From Fright to Fight: The Evolution of the Female Action Hero.” Contact Cindy Howell at 615-904-8462 or chowell@mtsu.edu.

Thursday, July 24, 2008

Thursday, July 24, 2008

Today’s Response
Middle Tennessee State University

“Can’t anybody here play this game?”—Casey Stengel

Sometimes the federal government actually can spring into action in a timely manner in response to a national crisis and ultimately be effective, even after a false start—honest! Consider the Cold War space race with the Soviet Union, for example. Dr. Preston MacDougall, chemistry, says, “The first thing the U.S. government did after Sputnik orbited Earth, beeping all the way, was to rush the launch of the Navy’s Vanguard rocket and satellite. Unfortunately, the televised projectile dysfunction on the launch pad only made things worse. After this military failure, President Eisenhower, who was a former five-star Army General, had the foresight to put the nation’s space program into a civilian branch of the government. NASA was created by legislation within one year of the Sputnik surprise.”

Contact MacDougall at 615-898-5265.
pmacdoug@mtsu.edu

Stand and deliver

The ninth annual MTSU McNair Symposium will be held from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday, July 30 and 31, in the Tom H. Jackson Building. The McNair Program is designed to give low-income/first-generation and under-represented undergraduate students the support they need to prepare for and successfully complete a doctorate degree in their chosen fields. McNair scholars will make oral presentations of their 2008 summer research. Their research posters also will be on display. Topics to be addressed by the scholars include “A Mystery on Our Plate: Beliefs about Agriculture from a College Peer Group;” “Benefits of Physical Therapy from the Patients’ Perspective;” “Perceptions of Campus Crime Prevention Activities;” and “From Fright to Fight: The Evolution of the Female Action Hero.”

Contact Cindy Howell at 615-904-8462.
chowell@mtsu.edu

Get plugged in

With gas prices at record highs, Detroit is scrambling to get serious about alternative means of motoring. One appealing notion is the electric car that could be plugged in and recharged by the consumer each night. Dr. Charles Perry, who holds the Russell Chair in Manufacturing Excellence at MTSU, writes in Tennessee’s Business, “Plug-in hybrid operation is receiving increasing attention for two reasons: energy generated for the power grid is 40 percent less polluting than automobile emissions, and combining energy from the grid with energy from oil to power a vehicle reduces total energy costs by approximately 50 percent during hybrid operation … However, development time will delay high-volume availability of new automotive platforms compatible with plug-in hybrid operation until 2010 or 2011. Even when available, the percentage of plug-in hybrids on the road will remain relatively small as the purchase of new vehicles with this capability slowly increases.”

Contact Perry at 615-898-5683.
chperry@mtsu.edu

TR EXTRA

WAR AND REMEMBRANCE--An MTSU history professor will accompany students and members of the community on an exploration of the Central Pacific World War II battlefields of Guam, Iwo Jima and Pelelieu in the Spring 2009 semester. Dr. Derek Frisby, who is a veteran of Operation Desert Storm, says the trip is part of MTSU’s Study Abroad program (MT Abroad) and will offer students college credit for studying in international settings. Participants will study the World War II Pacific campaigns in the presence of surviving American and Japanese veterans. They will tour the War in the Pacific National Historical Park, hike through the jungles of Pelelieu and meet on Guam with American and Japanese historians and Iwo Jima veterans. Participants who choose not to enroll in the course may still join the expedition. Additional information can be found at http://www.mtsu.edu/~dfrisby. Contact Frisby at 615-494-8620 or
dfrisby@mtsu.edu.

TOWER OF EMPOWERMENT--An educational video produced for a program administered through MTSU’s Center for Environmental Education has won a coveted Silver Telly Award. “The Empower Hour” was made for WaterWorks!, a program designed to educate the public about how to protect water quality. The 13-minute video featured students from Brentwood High School and the Nashville School for the Arts. It was distributed to high schools, public access channels, and other outlets to enlighten viewers about the environmental impact of automotive fluids and the proper ways to recycle or dispose of them. The video was chosen from among approximately 13,500 entries and judged by more than 40 video, advertising and TV industry professionals. Broadcast Media Group of Starkville, Miss., produced it in conjunction with Nashville-based Bill Hudson & Associates. For more information about WaterWorks!, call 615-898-2660 or visit http://www.tennesseewaterworks.com.

HOMETOWN HEROES--“Revisiting and Re-visioning the Hometown” is a unique opportunity for MTSU Honors students to learn more about the history, people, traditions, and future of their respective hometowns. The class, which is scheduled for Mondays and Wednesdays in the Fall 2008 semester, will require students to write journal entries and finished essays. They will make contacts in their communities, forming partnerships with schools, senior centers and other socially important groups or entities. Under the guidance of Dr. Ron Kates, English, each student will synthesize what he or she has learned in other classes to create a suitable and effective approach to the topic. Participants will create and refine the history-making and re-visioning processes as they learn while teaching others. Contact Kates at 615-898-2595 or rkates@mtsu.edu.

“A POLITICIAN IS A STATESMAN WHO APPROACHES EVERY QUESTION WITH AN OPEN MOUTH.”—ADLAI STEVENSON--Has a particular turn of phrase in a politician’s speech caught your ear and made you wonder why he or she chose those particular words? What is the speaker really saying? How do the candidates get their messages across to the voters? To figure all this out in this presidential election year, students can sign up for “Political Communication,” a class to be taught this fall at MTSU by Dr. Russell Church, speech and theatre professor. Participants will take on questions of whether race and gender are still issues, who votes and why, whether candidates are now more important than parties, whether the media now call all the shots, the power of interest groups, and how parties can increase turnout. The class will take place on Mondays and Wednesdays from 2:20 p.m. to 3:45 p.m. Contact Church at 615-494-7958 or rchurch@mtsu.edu.

TO THE “NTH” DEGREE—A projected 832 degree candidates will graduate during the 96th annual summer commencement ceremony at MTSU. The single-ceremony graduation will begin at 10 a.m. Saturday, Aug. 9, in Murphy Center with Dr. Kevin E. Smith, professor for the Department of Sociology and Anthropology and the current MTSU representative of the Tennessee Board of Regents’ Faculty Subcouncil, delivering the commencement address. At 8:30 a.m., Aug. 9, Murphy Center doors will open for the commencement ceremony. Candidates are expected to be in their assigned areas, dressed in their caps and gowns, no later than 9 a.m. Officials report that students who are not in their assigned places at the proper times will not be allowed to participate in the ceremony. Because commencement rehearsals are no longer conducted, timely attendance is mandatory for students to receive important instructions. Contact the Records Office at 615-898-2600 or go to http://www.mtsu.edu/~records/grad.htm.

THE SOUNDS OF SYRIA AND SAUDI ARABIA (AND MORE) --You can be transported to fascinating locales this fall without ever leaving home. Explore the fascinating, diverse “Music of the Middle East” in a new course at MTSU. Dr. David B. Pruett will take you on a “trip” through various Middle Eastern cultural soundscapes, including the relationship between folk, classical and popular musical traditions. Students also will examine music’s role in religious expression in the region. The class will take place from 6-9 p.m. on Mondays in Room 205 of the Saunders Fine Arts Building. Contact Pruett at 615-904-8354 or dpruett@mtsu.edu.

Wednesday, July 23, 2008

Wednesday, July 23, 2008

Today’s Response
Middle Tennessee State University

“A politician is a statesman who approaches every question with an open mouth.”—Adlai Stevenson

Has a particular turn of phrase in a politician’s speech caught your ear and made you wonder why he or she chose those particular words? What is the speaker really saying? How do the candidates get their messages across to the voters? To figure all this out in this presidential election year, students can sign up for “Political Communication,” a class to be taught this fall at MTSU by Dr. Russell Church, speech and theatre professor. Participants will take on questions of whether race and gender are still issues, who votes and why, whether candidates are now more important than parties, whether the media now call all the shots, the power of interest groups, and how parties can increase turnout. The class will take place on Mondays and Wednesdays from 2:20 p.m. to 3:45 p.m.

Contact Church at 615-494-7958.
rchurch@mtsu.edu

To the “nth” degree

A projected 832 degree candidates will graduate during the 96th annual summer commencement ceremony at MTSU. The single-ceremony graduation will begin at 10 a.m. Saturday, Aug. 9, in Murphy Center with Dr. Kevin E. Smith, professor for the Department of Sociology and Anthropology and the current MTSU representative of the Tennessee Board of Regents’ Faculty Subcouncil, delivering the commencement address. At 8:30 a.m., Aug. 9, Murphy Center doors will open for the commencement ceremony. Candidates are expected to be in their assigned areas, dressed in their caps and gowns, no later than 9 a.m. Officials report that students who are not in their assigned places at the proper times will not be allowed to participate in the ceremony. Because commencement rehearsals are no longer conducted, timely attendance is mandatory for students to receive important instructions.

Contact the Records Office at 615-898-2600 or go to http://www.mtsu.edu/~records/grad.htm.

The sounds of Syria and Saudi Arabia (and more)

You can be transported to fascinating locales this fall without ever leaving home. Explore the fascinating, diverse “Music of the Middle East” in a new course at MTSU. Dr. David B. Pruett will take you on a “trip” through various Middle Eastern cultural soundscapes, including the relationship between folk, classical and popular musical traditions. Students also will examine music’s role in religious expression in the region. The class will take place from 6-9 p.m. on Mondays in Room 205 of the Saunders Fine Arts Building.

Contact Pruett at 615-904-8354.
dpruett@mtsu.edu

TR EXTRA

WAR AND REMEMBRANCE--An MTSU history professor will accompany students and members of the community on an exploration of the Central Pacific World War II battlefields of Guam, Iwo Jima and Pelelieu in the Spring 2009 semester. Dr. Derek Frisby, who is a veteran of Operation Desert Storm, says the trip is part of MTSU’s Study Abroad program (MT Abroad) and will offer students college credit for studying in international settings. Participants will study the World War II Pacific campaigns in the presence of surviving American and Japanese veterans. They will tour the War in the Pacific National Historical Park, hike through the jungles of Pelelieu and meet on Guam with American and Japanese historians and Iwo Jima veterans. Participants who choose not to enroll in the course may still join the expedition. Additional information can be found at http://www.mtsu.edu/~dfrisby. Contact Frisby at 615-494-8620 or
dfrisby@mtsu.edu.

TOWER OF EMPOWERMENT--An educational video produced for a program administered through MTSU’s Center for Environmental Education has won a coveted Silver Telly Award. “The Empower Hour” was made for WaterWorks!, a program designed to educate the public about how to protect water quality. The 13-minute video featured students from Brentwood High School and the Nashville School for the Arts. It was distributed to high schools, public access channels, and other outlets to enlighten viewers about the environmental impact of automotive fluids and the proper ways to recycle or dispose of them. The video was chosen from among approximately 13,500 entries and judged by more than 40 video, advertising and TV industry professionals. Broadcast Media Group of Starkville, Miss., produced it in conjunction with Nashville-based Bill Hudson & Associates. For more information about WaterWorks!, call 615-898-2660 or visit http://www.tennesseewaterworks.com.

HOMETOWN HEROES--“Revisiting and Re-visioning the Hometown” is a unique opportunity for MTSU Honors students to learn more about the history, people, traditions, and future of their respective hometowns. The class, which is scheduled for Mondays and Wednesdays in the Fall 2008 semester, will require students to write journal entries and finished essays. They will make contacts in their communities, forming partnerships with schools, senior centers and other socially important groups or entities. Under the guidance of Dr. Ron Kates, English, each student will synthesize what he or she has learned in other classes to create a suitable and effective approach to the topic. Participants will create and refine the history-making and re-visioning processes as they learn while teaching others. Contact Kates at 615-898-2595 or rkates@mtsu.edu.

Tuesday, July 22, 2008

Tuesday, July 22, 2008

Today’s Response
Middle Tennessee State University

The best and the brightest


Dr. Debra Sells, associate vice provost for Academic Support Services, has been appointed interim vice president for the Division of Student Affairs, effective Aug. 1. She replaces Dr. Bob Glenn, who has accepted the position of president at Athens (Ala.) State University. Sells says she sees her greatest challenge as being able to prioritize and figure out which areas need the most attention. She says her management style is simply to hire the very best people and give them the support and direction they need to do what they do well. “Hiring the very best people for each job is one of our most important responsibilities,” Sells says. “I want to hire the smartest, most highly qualified people we can attract to MTSU.”

Contact Tom Tozer in the Office of News and Public Affairs at 615-898-2919.
ttozer@mtsu.edu

Do clothes make the mandate?

In May, a federal appellate court upheld a lower court decision in Jacobs v. Clark County School District. Several students who had been suspended for violating the dress code filed suit, claiming their free speech rights had been violated, but the courts have sided largely with the school system. David Hudson, adjunct political science professor and First Amendment Center scholar, says civil libertarians are concerned that this flies in the face of the 1969 ruling in Tinker v. Des Moines Independent Community School District. “In Tinker, the court ruled that public school officials violated the … rights of several students when they suspended them for wearing black armbands,” Hudson says. “The court in Tinker created the standard that public school officials cannot censor student expression unless they can reasonably forecast that the student expression will create a substantial disruption of school activities or invade the rights of others.”

Contact Hudson at 615-727-1600.
dhudson@fac.org

Recovering relics in Rebel country

After a lot of hard work under the brutal summer sun, the volunteers involved in the Harding House Civil War History Survey hopes that they will be allowed to return to the site after construction crews begin grading the area for development. On July 19-20, the team under the supervision of Dr. Tom Nolan and Zada Law, geosciences professors, recovered a Civil War-period spur with a silver rowel. Nolan says, “It even had the chain and buckle that had held it on (its owner’s boot) … and you could see how it had been lost because one of the attachments on it broke.” The Harding House site is reported to be the venue of heavy fighting during the initial Confederate attack on Stones River Battlefield. Nolan says the small amounts of ammunition and other artifacts found there will help historians better pinpoint the location of the troops on the first day of the Stones River conflict.

To request interviews, contact Lisa L. Rollins in the Office of News and Public Affairs at 615-898-2919.
lrollins@mtsu.edu

TR EXTRA

WAR AND REMEMBRANCE--An MTSU history professor will accompany students and members of the community on an exploration of the Central Pacific World War II battlefields of Guam, Iwo Jima and Pelelieu in the Spring 2009 semester. Dr. Derek Frisby, who is a veteran of Operation Desert Storm, says the trip is part of MTSU’s Study Abroad program (MT Abroad) and will offer students college credit for studying in international settings. Participants will study the World War II Pacific campaigns in the presence of surviving American and Japanese veterans. They will tour the War in the Pacific National Historical Park, hike through the jungles of Pelelieu and meet on Guam with American and Japanese historians and Iwo Jima veterans. Participants who choose not to enroll in the course may still join the expedition. Additional information can be found at http://www.mtsu.edu/~dfrisby. Contact Frisby at 615-494-8620 or
dfrisby@mtsu.edu.

TOWER OF EMPOWERMENT--An educational video produced for a program administered through MTSU’s Center for Environmental Education has won a coveted Silver Telly Award. “The Empower Hour” was made for WaterWorks!, a program designed to educate the public about how to protect water quality. The 13-minute video featured students from Brentwood High School and the Nashville School for the Arts. It was distributed to high schools, public access channels, and other outlets to enlighten viewers about the environmental impact of automotive fluids and the proper ways to recycle or dispose of them. The video was chosen from among approximately 13,500 entries and judged by more than 40 video, advertising and TV industry professionals. Broadcast Media Group of Starkville, Miss., produced it in conjunction with Nashville-based Bill Hudson & Associates. For more information about WaterWorks!, call 615-898-2660 or visit http://www.tennesseewaterworks.com.

HOMETOWN HEROES--“Revisiting and Re-visioning the Hometown” is a unique opportunity for MTSU Honors students to learn more about the history, people, traditions, and future of their respective hometowns. The class, which is scheduled for Mondays and Wednesdays in the Fall 2008 semester, will require students to write journal entries and finished essays. They will make contacts in their communities, forming partnerships with schools, senior centers and other socially important groups or entities. Under the guidance of Dr. Ron Kates, English, each student will synthesize what he or she has learned in other classes to create a suitable and effective approach to the topic. Participants will create and refine the history-making and re-visioning processes as they learn while teaching others. Contact Kates at 615-898-2595 or rkates@mtsu.edu.

Monday, July 21, 2008

Monday, July 21, 2008

Today’s Response
Middle Tennessee State University

The troll under the digital bridge


That guy who hung out under a bridge and harassed the three billy goats walking over it in the popular fairy tale may be the most famous troll in history. But he's not the only "troll" out there. A "troll," in Internet-speak, is someone who posts something provocative online just for the sake of baiting other users or to get attention. Dr. John Maynor, political science, says these users and others who post vulgar, irrelevant or obnoxious comments are making it difficult for the blogosphere to gain credibility as a place for serious public discourse. "At times, the language of blogging can be said to lie far outside of the norms of civility as the words idiot, cretin, stupid, and, of course, other more obscene uses of language regularly appear on many blogs," Maynor says. "The upshot is that incivility is threatening the emergence of a useful and meaningful new area of public space that can help encourage and transform political engagement."

Contact Maynor at 615-898-2708.
jmaynor@mtsu.edu

Got any Edison phonograph cylinders?

If you have audio, video or pictorial keepsakes you’d like to pass on to your descendants, make sure you keep preserving them in whatever the latest format happens to be. Dr. Larry Burriss, journalist, warns, “Did you know that some linguists and symbologists are trying to figure out what kinds of signage to put on nuclear waste repositories so people will know what they are several thousand years from now? If you think that’s silly, remember that until the 1800s, it was impossible for anyone to read hieroglyphics. The meanings of the symbols had been completely forgotten after only a couple of thousand years.” So it will be with 8-track tapes, beta videotapes, reel-to-reel tapes, CDs and USB drives one day.

Contact Burriss at 615-898-2983.
lburriss@mtsu.edu

It’s the real thing.

Consumers still need gasoline and food even though prices are rising. Dr. Don Roy, management and marketing, is not so sure that all consumers will bite the bullet when the largest producer of Coca-Cola products in the U.S. raises prices after Labor Day. He thinks consumers will opt for lower-priced carbonated beverages, cut back on consumption or stop drinking soft drinks altogether. “I don't fault Coca-Cola for seeking to cover its costs, but Coke is accepting a risk that its sales will take a hit,” Roy says. “A situation like this is precisely why companies need to avoid a reliance on selling price-sensitive products. If Coca-Cola can deliver innovative, unique products, it would have a chance to realize higher profit margins that the commoditized standard cola product cannot deliver.”

Contact Roy at 615-904-8564.
droy@mtsu.edu

TR EXTRA

WAR AND REMEMBRANCE--An MTSU history professor will accompany students and members of the community on an exploration of the Central Pacific World War II battlefields of Guam, Iwo Jima and Pelelieu in the Spring 2009 semester. Dr. Derek Frisby, who is a veteran of Operation Desert Storm, says the trip is part of MTSU’s Study Abroad program (MT Abroad) and will offer students college credit for studying in international settings. Participants will study the World War II Pacific campaigns in the presence of surviving American and Japanese veterans. They will tour the War in the Pacific National Historical Park, hike through the jungles of Pelelieu and meet on Guam with American and Japanese historians and Iwo Jima veterans. Participants who choose not to enroll in the course may still join the expedition. Additional information can be found at http://www.mtsu.edu/~dfrisby. Contact Frisby at 615-494-8620 or
dfrisby@mtsu.edu.

LEND A HAND--Have you checked out the new gizmo in the MTSU ID office? It utilizes hand-geometry technology in bringing identification cards up to date. When you get a new ID, you place your hand into the outline on the hand scanner, which reads your own distinctive silhouette (not fingerprints or palm prints). The device turns the silhouette into an alphanumeric template, which will be linked in the system to an “M” number. That’s a personalized ID number that will be used instead of a Social Security number. Hand readers also will be installed on the turnstiles at the Campus Recreation Center, which will help folks who forget their ID cards. By this fall, each student, faculty and staff member will have a new BlueID and a “Hand Reader” scan in the system. Contact the BlueID office at 615-898-5523. If you want to know more about hand-geometry technology, visit www.biometrics.gov/Documents/HandGeometry.pdf.

TOWER OF EMPOWERMENT--An educational video produced for a program administered through MTSU’s Center for Environmental Education has won a coveted Silver Telly Award. “The Empower Hour” was made for WaterWorks!, a program designed to educate the public about how to protect water quality. The 13-minute video featured students from Brentwood High School and the Nashville School for the Arts. It was distributed to high schools, public access channels, and other outlets to enlighten viewers about the environmental impact of automotive fluids and the proper ways to recycle or dispose of them. The video was chosen from among approximately 13,500 entries and judged by more than 40 video, advertising and TV industry professionals. Broadcast Media Group of Starkville, Miss., produced it in conjunction with Nashville-based Bill Hudson & Associates. For more information about WaterWorks!, call 615-898-2660 or visit http://www.tennesseewaterworks.com.

HOMETOWN HEROES--“Revisiting and Re-visioning the Hometown” is a unique opportunity for MTSU Honors students to learn more about the history, people, traditions, and future of their respective hometowns. The class, which is scheduled for Mondays and Wednesdays in the Fall 2008 semester, will require students to write journal entries and finished essays. They will make contacts in their communities, forming partnerships with schools, senior centers and other socially important groups or entities. Under the guidance of Dr. Ron Kates, English, each student will synthesize what he or she has learned in other classes to create a suitable and effective approach to the topic. Participants will create and refine the history-making and re-visioning processes as they learn while teaching others. Contact Kates at 615-898-2595 or rkates@mtsu.edu.

THE NAME GAME--Place Names of Rutherford County, the newest exhibit at the Heritage Center of Murfreesboro and Rutherford County, explores the history and folklore of how communities and geographic landmarks earned their names. The exhibit provides information on topics such as who Walter Hill was and why Murfreesboro’s major river is called the Stones River. Melissa Zimmerman, heritage programming specialist for the center, says, “Rutherford County has a rich and diverse history, and its place names serve as markers for the people who passed through or settled in the area.” MTSU students Heather Bailey and Kevin Cason, both Ph.D. candidates in the university’s public history program, created the exhibit. Contact the center at 615-217-8013. To request interviews, contact Lisa L. Rollins in the Office of News and Public Affairs at 615-898-2919 or lrollins@mtsu.edu.

BLAST FROM THE PAST--Some 40-50 artifacts were recovered July 12 near the Stones River Battlefield on the first day of the Harding House Civil War History Survey, a geospatial/archaeological project that is being conducted this month on land slated for development this summer. Dr. Tom Nolan, director of MTSU’s Laboratory for Spatial Technology, along with archaeologist Zada Law, led the all-volunteer team on its first day of the survey, which yielded Civil War-era artifact finds such as lead shot, a minie ball and a canister shot, among other battle-related discoveries. “Once the area is developed, this historic record will be gone for good so it’s vital that we work to recover historically significant artifacts and identify the location of the Harding house and any outbuildings to further an existing GIS study on regimental positions and movements during the Battle of Stones River,” Nolan says. To request interviews, contact Lisa L. Rollins at 615-494-8857 and lrollins@mtsu.edu.

Friday, July 18, 2008

Friday, July 18, 2008

Today’s Response
Middle Tennessee State University

Long live rock!

The sixth annual Southern Girls Rock & Roll Camp will present its showcase concert at 7 p.m. tomorrow, July 19, in Tucker Theatre in MTSU’s Boutwell Dramatic Arts Building. The girls, ages 10-17, have been honing their musical skills all this week, receiving instruction in guitar, keyboards, drums, bass, vocals, hip-hop and electronic music. They will form nearly 20 bands and show off their talents. In addition, they learned about songwriting, recording, music “herstory,” DIY arts and crafts and zine making in workshops. Admission to the Saturday night showcase is $8 per person. Doors open at 6 p.m. The camp is a flagship program of Youth Empowerment through Arts and Humanities, a nonprofit organization dedicated to creating and supporting programs that encourage young people’s involvement in and appreciation of the arts.

Contact the camp office at 615-849-8140.
sgrrc05@gmail.com

A different approach to the war on drugs

Government policy on illegal drugs continues to be a hot button issue with many people. Dr. Preston MacDougall, chemistry, advocates a re-examination of the current drug laws. He says, “First, I value all personal freedoms, even though I would not choose to use drugs that are currently illegal. Secondly, I have faith in education. If students can be taught the quantum mechanical mechanisms by which CO2 absorbs and emits radiation, then they can be taught not to abuse drugs.” MacDougall also explains that a Tennessee State Trooper, the husband of one of his former students, was killed by drug dealers on their way to make a deal in Nashville. “In the carbon wars, whether our target is carbon dioxide or psycho-active carbon-containing compounds, instead of demonizing inanimate molecules, let’s tax them,” he says.

Contact MacDougall at 615-898-5265.
pmacdoug@mtsu.edu

This land is your land.

Property owners sometimes set aside tracts of land for conservation easements, transferring certain property rights to nonprofit groups or government agencies without giving up legal title. For example, owners can enter into easement agreements to prevent the land from being developed, thereby preserving the environmental or historic value of their property. In a paper printed in Real Estate Issues, Dr. Doug Timmons, economics and finance, and Dr. Lara Daniel, business law, note that there is a price to pay. They write, “You and I as taxpayers, and therefore government at all levels, should care about how conservation easements are created and managed. Although most easements are donated by private landowners to private land trusts, they almost always result in public subsidies in the form of income tax deductions to the easement donors. Also in many cases, a further subsidy comes in the form of reduced estate and property taxes. Additionally, much of the funding used to purchase conservation easements is increasingly coming from public money.”

Contact Timmons at 615-898-5750.
jtimmons@mtsu.edu
Contact Daniel at 615-898-2439.
lwdaniel@mtsu.edu

TR EXTRA

BOB GOES BACK TO ‘BAMA--After nine years at MTSU, Dr. Bob Glenn, vice president for student affairs and vice provost for enrollment management, is leaving to assume the presidency of Athens State University in northern Alabama. As an administrator, Dr. Glenn led MTSU through a period of tremendous growth,” MTSU President Dr. Sidney A. McPhee notes. “Through his able leadership and management of that growth, the needs of the students remained priority number one, and the quality of our programs and integrity of the university’s mission were never compromised.” Glenn will reflect on his years at MTSU and look to the future on “MTSU On the Record” with host Gina Logue at 7 a.m. this Sunday, July 20, on WMOT-FM (89.5 and at www.wmot.org.) Contact Glenn at 615-898-2440 or rglenn@mtsu.edu. To find out more about “MTSU On the Record,” contact Gina Logue at 615-898-5081 or WMOT-FM at 615-898-2800.

WAR AND REMEMBRANCE--An MTSU history professor will accompany students and members of the community on an exploration of the Central Pacific World War II battlefields of Guam, Iwo Jima and Pelelieu in the Spring 2009 semester. Dr. Derek Frisby, who is a veteran of Operation Desert Storm, says the trip is part of MTSU’s Study Abroad program (MT Abroad) and will offer students college credit for studying in international settings. Participants will study the World War II Pacific campaigns in the presence of surviving American and Japanese veterans. They will tour the War in the Pacific National Historical Park, hike through the jungles of Pelelieu and meet on Guam with American and Japanese historians and Iwo Jima veterans. Participants who choose not to enroll in the course may still join the expedition. Additional information can be found at http://www.mtsu.edu/~dfrisby. Contact Frisby at 615-494-8620 or
dfrisby@mtsu.edu.

LEND A HAND--Have you checked out the new gizmo in the MTSU ID office? It utilizes hand-geometry technology in bringing identification cards up to date. When you get a new ID, you place your hand into the outline on the hand scanner, which reads your own distinctive silhouette (not fingerprints or palm prints). The device turns the silhouette into an alphanumeric template, which will be linked in the system to an “M” number. That’s a personalized ID number that will be used instead of a Social Security number. Hand readers also will be installed on the turnstiles at the Campus Recreation Center, which will help folks who forget their ID cards. By this fall, each student, faculty and staff member will have a new BlueID and a “Hand Reader” scan in the system. Contact the BlueID office at 615-898-5523. If you want to know more about hand-geometry technology, visit www.biometrics.gov/Documents/HandGeometry.pdf.

TOWER OF EMPOWERMENT--An educational video produced for a program administered through MTSU’s Center for Environmental Education has won a coveted Silver Telly Award. “The Empower Hour” was made for WaterWorks!, a program designed to educate the public about how to protect water quality. The 13-minute video featured students from Brentwood High School and the Nashville School for the Arts. It was distributed to high schools, public access channels, and other outlets to enlighten viewers about the environmental impact of automotive fluids and the proper ways to recycle or dispose of them. The video was chosen from among approximately 13,500 entries and judged by more than 40 video, advertising and TV industry professionals. Broadcast Media Group of Starkville, Miss., produced it in conjunction with Nashville-based Bill Hudson & Associates. For more information about WaterWorks!, call 615-898-2660 or visit http://www.tennesseewaterworks.com.

HOMETOWN HEROES--“Revisiting and Re-visioning the Hometown” is a unique opportunity for MTSU Honors students to learn more about the history, people, traditions, and future of their respective hometowns. The class, which is scheduled for Mondays and Wednesdays in the Fall 2008 semester, will require students to write journal entries and finished essays. They will make contacts in their communities, forming partnerships with schools, senior centers and other socially important groups or entities. Under the guidance of Dr. Ron Kates, English, each student will synthesize what he or she has learned in other classes to create a suitable and effective approach to the topic. Participants will create and refine the history-making and re-visioning processes as they learn while teaching others. Contact Kates at 615-898-2595 or rkates@mtsu.edu.

THE NAME GAME--Place Names of Rutherford County, the newest exhibit at the Heritage Center of Murfreesboro and Rutherford County, explores the history and folklore of how communities and geographic landmarks earned their names. The exhibit provides information on topics such as who Walter Hill was and why Murfreesboro’s major river is called the Stones River. Melissa Zimmerman, heritage programming specialist for the center, says, “Rutherford County has a rich and diverse history, and its place names serve as markers for the people who passed through or settled in the area.” MTSU students Heather Bailey and Kevin Cason, both Ph.D. candidates in the university’s public history program, created the exhibit. Contact the center at 615-217-8013. To request interviews, contact Lisa L. Rollins in the Office of News and Public Affairs at 615-898-2919 or lrollins@mtsu.edu.

BLAST FROM THE PAST--Some 40-50 artifacts were recovered July 12 near the Stones River Battlefield on the first day of the Harding House Civil War History Survey, a geospatial/archaeological project that is being conducted this month on land slated for development this summer. Dr. Tom Nolan, director of MTSU’s Laboratory for Spatial Technology, along with archaeologist Zada Law, led the all-volunteer team on its first day of the survey, which yielded Civil War-era artifact finds such as lead shot, a minie ball and a canister shot, among other battle-related discoveries. “Once the area is developed, this historic record will be gone for good so it’s vital that we work to recover historically significant artifacts and identify the location of the Harding house and any outbuildings to further an existing GIS study on regimental positions and movements during the Battle of Stones River,” Nolan says. To request interviews, contact Lisa L. Rollins at 615-494-8857 and lrollins@mtsu.edu.

Thursday, July 17, 2008

Thursday, July 17, 2008

Today’s Response
Middle Tennessee State University

Blast from the past

Some 40-50 artifacts were recovered July 12 near the Stones River Battlefield on the first day of the Harding House Civil War History Survey, a geospatial/archaeological project that is being conducted this month on land slated for development this summer. Dr. Tom Nolan, director of MTSU’s Laboratory for Spatial Technology, along with archaeologist Zada Law, led the all-volunteer team on its first day of the survey, which yielded Civil War-era artifact finds such as lead shot, a minie ball and a canister shot, among other battle-related discoveries. “Once the area is developed, this historic record will be gone for good so it’s vital that we work to recover historically significant artifacts and identify the location of the Harding house and any outbuildings to further an existing GIS study on regimental positions and movements during the Battle of Stones River,” Nolan says.

To request interviews, contact Lisa L. Rollins at 615-494-8857.
lrollins@mtsu.edu

Bob goes back to ‘Bama.

After nine years at MTSU, Dr. Bob Glenn, vice president for student affairs and vice provost for enrollment management, is leaving to assume the presidency of Athens State University in northern Alabama. As an administrator, Dr. Glenn led MTSU through a period of tremendous growth,” MTSU President Dr. Sidney A. McPhee notes. “Through his able leadership and management of that growth, the needs of the students remained priority number one, and the quality of our programs and integrity of the university’s mission were never compromised.” Glenn will reflect on his years at MTSU and look to the future on “MTSU On the Record” with host Gina Logue at 7 a.m. this Sunday, July 20, on WMOT-FM (89.5 and at www.wmot.org.)

Contact Glenn at 615-898-2440.
rglenn@mtsu.edu
To find out more about “MTSU On the Record,” contact Gina Logue at 615-898-5081 or WMOT-FM at 615-898-2800.

Science that makes sense

Drs. Martha “Mari” Weller and Judith Iriarte-Gross have been elected 2008-09 SENCER Leadership Fellows. SENCER, or Science Education for New Civic Engagements and Responsibilities, is governed by the National Center for Science and Civic Engagement. Fellowships honor educators for their exemplary leadership and commitment to the improvement of science, technology, engineering and mathematics education. Weller, professor in physics and astronomy, says, “I think we make a difference with some students every semester. Some students go out and do things differently … evidence that our course is making an impact.” Iriarte-Gross, chemistry professor, says, “We show students how science is not just in the classroom or lab and science is not just one semester, but that science will have an impact on their lives as members of the MTSU community.”

Contact Weller by calling the Department of Physics and Astronomy at 615-898-2130.
mweller@mtsu.edu
Contact Iriarte-Gross at 615-904-8253.
jiriarte@mtsu.edu

TR EXTRA

GOING STRAIGHT TO THE SOURCE--A grant of $300,000 to the MTSU Center for Historic Preservation will provide Tennessee educators with opportunities to access some of the most important historical documents of the American experience. The money comes from the Library of Congress through its Teaching with Primary Sources program. Some of the primary sources available through the Library of Congress include the complete papers of Abraham Lincoln and the complete papers of Thomas Jefferson. The Age of Jackson, the Civil War and Reconstruction period, the Depression Decade and World War II, and the Civil Rights Movement will be the first four eras on which the center will focus, says Dr. Stacey Graham, research professor at the Center for Historic Preservation and project coordinator. “Those are points in Tennessee history that are also important in American history,” Graham says. Contact Graham at 615-494-8783 or sgraham@mtsu.edu.

THE LAND OF ENCHANTMENT--You can spend part of your summer examining the fascinating Native American history and prehistory of the Southwest and get geography or history credit for it at MTSU! The class is titled “Geography of Native Americans” and will be conducted for the 15th consecutive year by Dr. Doug Heffington, professor of historical geography and director of the Global Studies Program. “The class focuses on the examination of the human/land relationships between the native peoples of New Mexico and their natural environment,” Heffington says. “Most of our base camp is in the small colonial village of Truchas, which dates to the mid-1700s with its blend of Genizaro, Mestizo and Hispano cultures. The trip/course starts July 21st and takes about nine days to complete.” The cost is approximately $400 per student and includes transportation, two meals a day, lodging and entry fees. Contact Heffington at 615-898-5978 or jheffing@mtsu.edu.

DAD, TAKE THE LAMPSHADE OFF YOUR HEAD WHILE THE CAMERA’S ROLLING!--Working with perhaps the most technology-savvy generation of young adults ever, Dr. Lorne McWatters, history, will teach a class titled “Genealogy and Documentary Film: Doing Your Own Family History in Film” to undergraduates for the first time at MTSU this fall. “The fall class will have 15 students, and each student will make a film about 10 minutes long on either some aspect of his/her family (genealogy) or some aspect of the history of MTSU,” McWatters says. “In speaking to students about the class, I found the undergraduates to be very enthusiastic, much more so than the graduate students, in general.” Contact McWatters at 615-898-5805 or dmcwatte@mtsu.edu.

ROCK THE HOUSE!--Bolstered by an all-time record enrollment of 90 participants, the sixth annual Southern Girls Rock & Roll Camp will shake up the MTSU campus this week. As usual, the camp will culminate in a powerful showcase concert when the girls will form nearly 20 bands and show off their talents at 7 p.m. Saturday, July 19, in the Boutwell Dramatic Arts Building. Girls ages 10-17 will receive instruction in guitar, keyboards, drums, bass, vocals, hip-hop and electronic music. In addition, they will learn about songwriting, recording, music “herstory,” DIY arts and crafts and zine making in workshops. Independent female performers slated to lend their expertise include Michelle Malone, Anne McCue, Kelly Shay Hicks and Caitlin Rose. Admission to the Saturday night showcase is $8 per person. Doors open at 6 p.m. Concert begins at 7 p.m. The camp is a flagship program of Youth Empowerment through Arts and Humanities, a nonprofit organization. Contact the camp office at 615-849-8140 or
sgrrc05@gmail.com.

WAR AND REMEMBRANCE--An MTSU history professor will accompany students and members of the community on an exploration of the Central Pacific World War II battlefields of Guam, Iwo Jima and Pelelieu in the Spring 2009 semester. Dr. Derek Frisby, who is a veteran of Operation Desert Storm, says the trip is part of MTSU’s Study Abroad program (MT Abroad) and will offer students college credit for studying in international settings. Participants will study the World War II Pacific campaigns in the presence of surviving American and Japanese veterans. They will tour the War in the Pacific National Historical Park, hike through the jungles of Pelelieu and meet on Guam with American and Japanese historians and Iwo Jima veterans. Participants who choose not to enroll in the course may still join the expedition. Additional information can be found at http://www.mtsu.edu/~dfrisby. Contact Frisby at 615-494-8620 or
dfrisby@mtsu.edu.

ON THE TUBE--The July installment of “Middle Tennessee Record,” a monthly TV magazine produced by MTSU’s Office of News and Public Affairs, will feature Dr. Bob Pondillo, professor of electronic media communication, who discusses his latest independent movie. Student entrepreneur Chris Purifoy unveils a new social networking Website designed especially for the music industry. With the Summer Olympics in Beijing on the horizon, Dr. Andrew Owusu, assistant professor of health and human performance, reflects on his experience as an Olympic athlete and introduces us to MTSU track star Sarah Nambawa. Dr. Kim Sadler, director of the Center for Cedar Glades Studies, takes us on a tour of a globally unique ecological habitat. “Middle Tennessee Record airs on Rutherford County cable channel 9 daily at 7:30 a.m. and 5:30 p.m. Central time and on NewsChannel5+ Sundays at 1:30 p.m. Central time. For a complete schedule, go to http://www.mtsunews.com/. For more information, contact John Lynch, producer, at 615-898-5591 or jlynch@mtsu.edu.

READ MAN WALKING--A partnership among MTSU, the Tennessee Department of Correction and the Great Books Foundation, enabled prisoners at three area lockups a chance to participate in a nine-week program titled “Great Books in Middle Tennessee Prisons.” The program’s weekly book discussions, which began in late March, were conducted at Riverbend Maximum Security Institution, the Lois M. DeBerry Special Needs Facility and the Tennessee Prison for Women. Dr. Philip E. Phillips, associate professor of English, and other English faculty volunteers, guided the inmates through readings by such authors as Ralph Waldo Emerson, Walt Whitman, Frederick Douglass, Alexis de Tocqueville and Joseph Conrad, among others. Phillips says, “My colleagues and I were very much impressed with the dedication and interest demonstrated by all our students.” To request an interview with MTSU faculty who participated in the Great Books program in Tennessee prisons, contact Lisa L. Rollins in the Office of News and Public Affairs at 615-898-2919 or lrollins@mtsu.edu.

LEND A HAND--Have you checked out the new gizmo in the MTSU ID office? It utilizes hand-geometry technology in bringing identification cards up to date. When you get a new ID, you place your hand into the outline on the hand scanner, which reads your own distinctive silhouette (not fingerprints or palm prints). The device turns the silhouette into an alphanumeric template, which will be linked in the system to an “M” number. That’s a personalized ID number that will be used instead of a Social Security number. Hand readers also will be installed on the turnstiles at the Campus Recreation Center, which will help folks who forget their ID cards. By this fall, each student, faculty and staff member will have a new BlueID and a “Hand Reader” scan in the system. Contact the BlueID office at 615-898-5523. If you want to know more about hand-geometry technology, visit www.biometrics.gov/Documents/HandGeometry.pdf.

TOWER OF EMPOWERMENT--An educational video produced for a program administered through MTSU’s Center for Environmental Education has won a coveted Silver Telly Award. “The Empower Hour” was made for WaterWorks!, a program designed to educate the public about how to protect water quality. The 13-minute video featured students from Brentwood High School and the Nashville School for the Arts. It was distributed to high schools, public access channels, and other outlets to enlighten viewers about the environmental impact of automotive fluids and the proper ways to recycle or dispose of them. The video was chosen from among approximately 13,500 entries and judged by more than 40 video, advertising and TV industry professionals. Broadcast Media Group of Starkville, Miss., produced it in conjunction with Nashville-based Bill Hudson & Associates. For more information about WaterWorks!, call 615-898-2660 or visit http://www.tennesseewaterworks.com/.

HOMETOWN HEROES--“Revisiting and Re-visioning the Hometown” is a unique opportunity for MTSU Honors students to learn more about the history, people, traditions, and future of their respective hometowns. The class, which is scheduled for Mondays and Wednesdays in the Fall 2008 semester, will require students to write journal entries and finished essays. They will make contacts in their communities, forming partnerships with schools, senior centers and other socially important groups or entities. Under the guidance of Dr. Ron Kates, English, each student will synthesize what he or she has learned in other classes to create a suitable and effective approach to the topic. Participants will create and refine the history-making and re-visioning processes as they learn while teaching others. Contact Kates at 615-898-2595 or rkates@mtsu.edu.

HELP FOR THE HELPERS--Project HELP will hold its annual fundraiser at 6:30 p.m. tonight, July 17, at MTSU’s Floyd Stadium Tower Club Level. Each $50 ticket entitles the contributor to a barbecue dinner and a drink. Music will be performed by the group Absolution. A silent auction also is slated. Project HELP is a nonprofit organization that helps children with developmental delays and their loved ones by providing early intervention and family support services. Project HELP’s preservice training program prepares MTSU students to work with students who have special needs. MTSU also supports Project HELP by maintaining the facility at 206 N. Baird Lane in Murfreesboro. For more information, call Project HELP at 615-898-2458 or projhelp@mtsu.edu.

THE NAME GAME--Place Names of Rutherford County, the newest exhibit at the Heritage Center of Murfreesboro and Rutherford County, explores the history and folklore of how communities and geographic landmarks earned their names. The exhibit provides information on topics such as who Walter Hill was and why Murfreesboro’s major river is called the Stones River. Melissa Zimmerman, heritage programming specialist for the center, says, “Rutherford County has a rich and diverse history, and its place names serve as markers for the people who passed through or settled in the area.” MTSU students Heather Bailey and Kevin Cason, both Ph.D. candidates in the university’s public history program, created the exhibit. Contact the center at 615-217-8013. To request interviews, contact Lisa L. Rollins in the Office of News and Public Affairs at 615-898-2919 or lrollins@mtsu.edu.