Friday, May 28, 2010

Friday, May 28, 2010

Today’s Response
Middle Tennessee State University

The blue and the not-so-gray

Bitterly Divided: The South’s Inner Civil War by David Williams asserts that Southerners themselves were largely responsible for defeating the Confederacy. It is Williams’ contention that divisions within the South were the key to the South’s demise. Dr. Derek Frisby, history, says, “The real questions are why so many Southerners seemingly supported secession and how the South thought they could prevail in any conflict with the North. Many secessionist leaders knew of the significant numbers of ‘unionists’ in their states, particularly those of the Upper south like Tennessee, and created elaborate political machinations to coax or coerce their constituents to support secession in sham conventions or elections.”

Contact Frisby at 615-494-8856.
dfrisby@mtsu.edu

What do they want from us?

The nature of the products Tennessee exports to China has changed in recent years. MTSU’s Dr. Steven Livingston, editor of Global Commerce, writes, “The one constant is that China buys raw and intermediate goods. The state’s largest exports have consistently been in these goods. The most important have been materials for apparels: artificial filament tow and cotton. The former has been among the state’s top exports all decade long. Cotton shipments grew dramatically by mid-decade but have fallen back since then. Chemicals and plastics form a second sizable cluster of exported goods. Exports of metals, including aluminum, iron, and copper, often as scrap, have been increasing throughout the decade. Medical instrument sales have also grown over the years.”

Contact Livingston at 615-898-2720.
slivings@mtsu.edu

The sporting life

The second edition of the Journal of Sport Administration and Supervision is available on the Web at http://www.jsasonline.org/. The current issue includes articles on the influence of the BCS on the competitive balance in college football; the effect of NCAA championships on college admissions; marketing intercollegiate athletics at the Division III level; ways to increase fan involvement; attitudes toward endorsements by sports celebrities in the U.S. and China; the implications of allowing the fans to tear down the goalposts in college football; a comparison of players’ and parents’ perspectives on youth sports; and an excerpt from Mark Hyman’s new book Until It Hurts, which examines the country’s obsession with youth sports and the impact it has on the nation’s children.

Contact Dr. Colby Jubenville at 615-898-2909.
jubenvil@mtsu.edu

TR EXTRA

L’CHAIM! (TO LIFE!)--Dr. Phil Oliver, professor of philosophy, will discuss his new fall 2010 course, “The Future of Life,” on the next edition of “MTSU on the Record” with host Gina Logue at 8 a.m. this Sunday, May 30, on WMOT-FM (89.5 and wmot.org). Oliver will integrate themes from two previous courses that focused on biomedical ethics and biotechnology with an examination of the sustainability of life on Earth, genetic engineering and humanity’s evolutionary prospects. He cites a question from Pragmatism by William James as a starting point for discussion: “The really vital question for us all is, ‘What is this world going to be? What is life eventually to make of itself?’” To listen to last week’s program about international education at MSTU, go to http://www.mtsu.edu/news/podcast/podcast2010.shtml and click on “May 23, 2010.” Contact Logue at 615-898-5081 or WMOT-FM at 615-898-2800.

MAKE GREENERY PART OF YOUR SCENERY.--The MTSU Plant and Soil Science Club will start its Student Farmers Market from 1-4 p.m. today, May 28, at the MTSU Horticulture Center off Blue Raider Drive on the campus. This week’s fresh garden produce includes several different types of lettuce, spinach, yellow squash, green onions, collard greens, kale, kohlrabi, Swiss chard, mustard greens, and possibly broccoli. The nursery has been expanded with a lot more plants available at great prices. These include boxwoods, forsythia, several different spireas, baptisia, penstemons, sedums, sand cherry, Manhattan euonymus, Blue Pacific junipers, hostas, daylilies, monkey grass and more. All proceeds benefit the Plant and Soil Science Club. Contact Dr. Nate Phillips at 615-494-8985 or nphillip@mtsu.edu.

FULL SPEED AHEAD!--MTSU strength and conditioning coaches are again offering Speed School, a camp for male and female athletes between the ages of 10 and 18 who could benefit from being faster or quicker in their sports. Students will receive instruction from the Middle Tennessee Speed and Strength staff and learn the same drills the blue Raiders use to optimize their speed and quickness. The first set is slated for June 9, 16, and 23. The second set is slated for July 14, 21, and 28. All sessions are on Wednesdays at 5:30 p.m. The cost is $30 per date, $75 per set, or $130 for all six sessions. For more information, go to http://www.goblueraiders.com/ and click on “Camps,” or call Matt Riley at 615-904-8196 or Russell Patterson at 615-898-2428.

BE A GOOD SPORT.--Youth Sports Camp at MTSU Campus Recreation is a great opportunity for children to learn a variety of sport, leisure and fitness activities that emphasize some crucial life skills including teamwork, sportsmanship and the value of regular exercise. Activities include swimming, basketball, soccer, flag football, racquetball, whiffle ball, kickball, capture the flag, dodgeball and ping-pong, among others. There are 10 week-long sessions meeting Monday through Friday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. beginning June 1. Drop-off begins at 7:30 a.m. and pick-up ends at 5:30 p.m. The camp is open to boys and girls ages 7-13. There is a nonrefundable deposit of $25 for each session, and tuition for each session is $150 with lunch provided. Children must have received all school-required shots, and proof of family medical insurance also must be provided. For more information, contact Campus Rec at 615-898-2104 or go to www.mtsu.edu/~camprec.

ROLL OUT THOSE LAZY, HAZY, CRAZY DAYS OF SUMMER.--Saturday, June 12, will be MTSU Alumni & Friends Day at Nashville Shores, 4001 Bell Rd. in Nashville. Registration will be from 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Lunch will be served from 12 p.m.-2 p.m. Nashville Shores opens at 10 a.m. and closes at 6 p.m. The price is $20 per person, which covers admission into the park and lunch. Children under age two are admitted free of charge. The park has a brand new lazy river and wave pool for more fun in the water. This even is pre-pay only. The deadline to register is Wednesday, June 9. Call the Alumni Relations office at 1-800-533-6878, go online at http://www.mtalumni.com/, or send an e-mail to alumni@mtsu.edu.

I’M PLAYING WITH MY BOOKS, MOMMY.--“Books and Children in the 19th Century: A Small Portrait” is the theme of an exhibit on display now and throughout this summer in the fourth floor Special Collections area of MTSU’s James E. Walker Library. The purpose is to show the variety of ways children and the adults around them engaged with books in the 1800s and early 1900s. The works available for viewing are indicative of the children’s book as an object of moral and educational value. The idea behind the books is to teach values and build character. Entertainment techniques are employed strictly to attract the children and hold their interest. Highlights include several movable books, which are books that contain text or illustrations that the child can manipulate. Pop-up books are one such type of movable book. Many items in the display have never been exhibited previously. Call the James E. Walker Library at 615-898-2772.

SING A SUMMERTIME SONG--The theme of the third annual Alumni Summer College is “A Song’s Life.” From June 23-25, MTSU alumni are invited to learn how a song is written, recorded, produced, performed and managed during three fun-filled days of music and camaraderie. Alumni Summer College is an opportunity to expand one’s knowledge of interesting subjects and with a curriculum that combines innovative classes and entertaining tours specifically created with MTSU alumni in mind. Highlights of this year’s event include songwriters in the round at the “Jack and Diane” show, a studio recording session, a songwriter “show-and-tell” session, Vince Gill at the Ryman Auditorium, the Country Music Hall of Fame, RCA Studio B, the Wildhorse Saloon and Jack’s Barbeque. Tuition is $205 per person. The registration deadline is Tuesday, June 1. For more information and to register, go to http://www.mtalumni.com/.

ADOPT A VET--The Albert Gore Research Center is an official partner in the Library of Congress Veterans History Project. The center participates as part of its public service mission. Currently, the Gore Center has about 50 veterans of World War II and Korea on its list of those willing to be interviewed for the Veterans History Project at MTSU, but these vets are in their 80s and 90s. It is urgent that the Gore Center have funds in hand to record their stories in 2010. With each tax-deductible contribution of only $50, the Gore Center can fund one interview with a WWII, Korean War, Vietnam War, Persian Gulf War or Iraq/Afghanistan veteran, or a civilian who supported the war effort by working in war industries or volunteering for the USO, Red Cross or other support organizations. Your donation will pay for tapes and other supplies, transcription, permanent archiving and posting of the materials on a website. For more information, go to http://gorecenter.mtsu.edu/adoptvet.hem.

APRENDA CON ME--The University School of Nashville is hosting MTSU’s 2010 Summer Language Institute, where you can learn Spanish in a fun, low-stress environment. The methods employed are Total Physical Response (TPR) and Teaching Proficiency through Reading and Storytelling (TPRS). These methods mimic the way you learned your first language. Movement, games, songs and storytelling are all part of the instruction. Brian Roberts will teach Spanish I for ages 16 and up from July 19-23 at the University School and from Aug. 2-6 at the O’More School of Design in Franklin. Jason Fritze will teach Spanish II for ages 16 and up from July 19-23 at the University School. The cost for all language classes is $350 with a $20 materials fee due on the first day of class. Contact Dr. Shelley Thomas at 615-898-5757 or shthomas@mtsu.edu.

Thursday, May 27, 2010

Thursday, May 27, 2010

Today’s Response
Middle Tennessee State University


L’Chaim! (To life!)

Dr. Phil Oliver, professor of philosophy, will discuss his new fall 2010 course, “The Future of Life,” on the next edition of “MTSU on the Record” with host Gina Logue at 8 a.m. this Sunday, May 30, on WMOT-FM (89.5 and wmot.org). Oliver will integrate themes from two previous courses that focused on biomedical ethics and biotechnology with an examination of the sustainability of life on Earth, genetic engineering and humanity’s evolutionary prospects. He cites a question from Pragmatism by William James as a starting point for discussion: “The really vital question for us all is, ‘What is this world going to be? What is life eventually to make of itself?’” To listen to last week’s program about international education at MSTU, go to http://www.mtsu.edu/news/podcast/podcast2010.shtml and click on “May 23, 2010.”

Contact Logue at 615-898-5081 or WMOT-FM at 615-898-2800.

Make greenery part of your scenery.

The MTSU Plant and Soil Science Club will start its Student Farmers Market from 1-4 p.m. tomorrow, May 28, at the MTSU Horticulture Center off Blue Raider Drive on the campus. This week’s fresh garden produce includes several different types of lettuce, spinach, yellow squash, green onions, collard greens, kale, kohlrabi, Swiss chard, mustard greens, and possibly broccoli. The nursery has been expanded with a lot more plants available at great prices. These include boxwoods, forsythia, several different spireas, baptisia, penstemons, sedums, sand cherry, Manhattan euonymus, Blue Pacific junipers, hostas, daylilies, monkey grass and more. All proceeds benefit the Plant and Soil Science Club.

Contact Dr. Nate Phillips at 615-494-8985.
nphillip@mtsu.edu

Brand new or Brand X?

Have you stopped buying your favorite brands in favor of lower-priced brands or generics to save money because of the recession? A recent study by comScore finds that most consumers have done just that. How can manufacturers promote greater brand loyalty? Dr. Don Roy, management and marketing, says, “A return to branding basics seems to be in order. Trust is the foundation of relationships between buyers and sellers; it is no different than a personal relationship. Conducting business in a way that shows concern for customers, care for the community and commitment to the well-being of stakeholder groups are ways to develop and solidify trust. … Going forward, brand loyalty is more likely to be secured by demonstrating genuine concern for customers than dazzling them with product features or an aspirational image.”

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

TR EXTRA

FULL SPEED AHEAD!--MTSU strength and conditioning coaches are again offering Speed School, a camp for male and female athletes between the ages of 10 and 18 who could benefit from being faster or quicker in their sports. Students will receive instruction from the Middle Tennessee Speed and Strength staff and learn the same drills the blue Raiders use to optimize their speed and quickness. The first set is slated for June 9, 16, and 23. The second set is slated for July 14, 21, and 28. All sessions are on Wednesdays at 5:30 p.m. The cost is $30 per date, $75 per set, or $130 for all six sessions. For more information, go to http://www.goblueraiders.com/ and click on “Camps,” or call Matt Riley at 615-904-8196 or Russell Patterson at 615-898-2428.

BE A GOOD SPORT.--Youth Sports Camp at MTSU Campus Recreation is a great opportunity for children to learn a variety of sport, leisure and fitness activities that emphasize some crucial life skills including teamwork, sportsmanship and the value of regular exercise. Activities include swimming, basketball, soccer, flag football, racquetball, whiffle ball, kickball, capture the flag, dodgeball and ping-pong, among others. There are 10 week-long sessions meeting Monday through Friday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. beginning June 1. Drop-off begins at 7:30 a.m. and pick-up ends at 5:30 p.m. The camp is open to boys and girls ages 7-13. There is a nonrefundable deposit of $25 for each session, and tuition for each session is $150 with lunch provided. Children must have received all school-required shots, and proof of family medical insurance also must be provided. For more information, contact Campus Rec at 615-898-2104 or go to www.mtsu.edu/~camprec.

ROLL OUT THOSE LAZY, HAZY, CRAZY DAYS OF SUMMER.--Saturday, June 12, will be MTSU Alumni & Friends Day at Nashville Shores, 4001 Bell Rd. in Nashville. Registration will be from 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Lunch will be served from 12 p.m.-2 p.m. Nashville Shores opens at 10 a.m. and closes at 6 p.m. The price is $20 per person, which covers admission into the park and lunch. Children under age two are admitted free of charge. The park has a brand new lazy river and wave pool for more fun in the water. This even is pre-pay only. The deadline to register is Wednesday, June 9. Call the Alumni Relations office at 1-800-533-6878, go online at http://www.mtalumni.com/, or send an e-mail to alumni@mtsu.edu.

I’M PLAYING WITH MY BOOKS, MOMMY.--“Books and Children in the 19th Century: A Small Portrait” is the theme of an exhibit on display now and throughout this summer in the fourth floor Special Collections area of MTSU’s James E. Walker Library. The purpose is to show the variety of ways children and the adults around them engaged with books in the 1800s and early 1900s. The works available for viewing are indicative of the children’s book as an object of moral and educational value. The idea behind the books is to teach values and build character. Entertainment techniques are employed strictly to attract the children and hold their interest. Highlights include several movable books, which are books that contain text or illustrations that the child can manipulate. Pop-up books are one such type of movable book. Many items in the display have never been exhibited previously. Call the James E. Walker Library at 615-898-2772.

SING A SUMMERTIME SONG--The theme of the third annual Alumni Summer College is “A Song’s Life.” From June 23-25, MTSU alumni are invited to learn how a song is written, recorded, produced, performed and managed during three fun-filled days of music and camaraderie. Alumni Summer College is an opportunity to expand one’s knowledge of interesting subjects and with a curriculum that combines innovative classes and entertaining tours specifically created with MTSU alumni in mind. Highlights of this year’s event include songwriters in the round at the “Jack and Diane” show, a studio recording session, a songwriter “show-and-tell” session, Vince Gill at the Ryman Auditorium, the Country Music Hall of Fame, RCA Studio B, the Wildhorse Saloon and Jack’s Barbeque. Tuition is $205 per person. The registration deadline is Tuesday, June 1. For more information and to register, go to http://www.mtalumni.com/.

ADOPT A VET--The Albert Gore Research Center is an official partner in the Library of Congress Veterans History Project. The center participates as part of its public service mission. Currently, the Gore Center has about 50 veterans of World War II and Korea on its list of those willing to be interviewed for the Veterans History Project at MTSU, but these vets are in their 80s and 90s. It is urgent that the Gore Center have funds in hand to record their stories in 2010. With each tax-deductible contribution of only $50, the Gore Center can fund one interview with a WWII, Korean War, Vietnam War, Persian Gulf War or Iraq/Afghanistan veteran, or a civilian who supported the war effort by working in war industries or volunteering for the USO, Red Cross or other support organizations. Your donation will pay for tapes and other supplies, transcription, permanent archiving and posting of the materials on a website. For more information, go to http://gorecenter.mtsu.edu/adoptvet.hem.

APRENDA CON ME--The University School of Nashville is hosting MTSU’s 2010 Summer Language Institute, where you can learn Spanish in a fun, low-stress environment. The methods employed are Total Physical Response (TPR) and Teaching Proficiency through Reading and Storytelling (TPRS). These methods mimic the way you learned your first language. Movement, games, songs and storytelling are all part of the instruction. Brian Roberts will teach Spanish I for ages 16 and up from July 19-23 at the University School and from Aug. 2-6 at the O’More School of Design in Franklin. Jason Fritze will teach Spanish II for ages 16 and up from July 19-23 at the University School. The cost for all language classes is $350 with a $20 materials fee due on the first day of class. Contact Dr. Shelley Thomas at 615-898-5757 or shthomas@mtsu.edu.

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

Today’s Response
Middle Tennessee State University

The big picture

Overall, the national recovery is starting to bear fruit in Tennessee. According to Tennessee Housing Market, a publication of MTSU’s Business and Economic Research Center, the first quarter was marked by “steady payroll employment, job gains in the services sector, and a steady, but high, unemployment rate. The first quarter will likely set the stage for gradual improvement in coming quarters. Although the first quarter was kinder for the labor market, that was not the case for the housing market. Poor weather and market distortions from the home buyer tax credit caused home sales to fall significantly. Permits issued for single-family construction rose somewhat, but multifamily permits rebounded sharply. Once the effect of the home buyer tax credit is behind us, we may expect a more gradual improvement in the housing market.”

Contact the BERC at 615-898-2610.

Full speed ahead!

MTSU strength and conditioning coaches are again offering Speed School, a camp for male and female athletes between the ages of 10 and 18 who could benefit from being faster or quicker in their sports. Students will receive instruction from the Middle Tennessee Speed and Strength staff and learn the same drills the blue Raiders use to optimize their speed and quickness. The first set is slated for June 9, 16, and 23. The second set is slated for July 14, 21, and 28. All sessions are on Wednesdays at 5:30 p.m. The cost is $30 per date, $75 per set, or $130 for all six sessions.

For more information, go to http://www.goblueraiders.com/ and click on “Camps,” or call Matt Riley at 615-904-8196 or Russell Patterson at 615-898-2428.

Good neighbor policy

What does China want from us? In terms of trade with the U.S., it wants soybeans. We send more than $9 billion in soybeans to China each year, according to Global Commerce, edited by MTSU’s Dr. Steven Livingston. He writes, “A surprising number of Tennessee goods depend on China. For 15 of the top 100 products exported by the state, 20 percent of the shipments or more are to China. … These products are concentrated in metals and chemicals. But sections of the computer and industrial machinery sectors are increasingly reliant on China as well.”

Contact Livingston at 615-898-2720.
slivings@mtsu.edu

TR EXTRA

BE A GOOD SPORT.--Youth Sports Camp at MTSU Campus Recreation is a great opportunity for children to learn a variety of sport, leisure and fitness activities that emphasize some crucial life skills including teamwork, sportsmanship and the value of regular exercise. Activities include swimming, basketball, soccer, flag football, racquetball, whiffle ball, kickball, capture the flag, dodgeball and ping-pong, among others. There are 10 week-long sessions meeting Monday through Friday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. beginning June 1. Drop-off begins at 7:30 a.m. and pick-up ends at 5:30 p.m. The camp is open to boys and girls ages 7-13. There is a nonrefundable deposit of $25 for each session, and tuition for each session is $150 with lunch provided. Children must have received all school-required shots, and proof of family medical insurance also must be provided. For more information, contact Campus Rec at 615-898-2104 or go to www.mtsu.edu/~camprec.

ROLL OUT THOSE LAZY, HAZY, CRAZY DAYS OF SUMMER.--Saturday, June 12, will be MTSU Alumni & Friends Day at Nashville Shores, 4001 Bell Rd. in Nashville. Registration will be from 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Lunch will be served from 12 p.m.-2 p.m. Nashville Shores opens at 10 a.m. and closes at 6 p.m. The price is $20 per person, which covers admission into the park and lunch. Children under age two are admitted free of charge. The park has a brand new lazy river and wave pool for more fun in the water. This even is pre-pay only. The deadline to register is Wednesday, June 9. Call the Alumni Relations office at 1-800-533-6878, go online at http://www.mtalumni.com/, or send an e-mail to alumni@mtsu.edu.

I’M PLAYING WITH MY BOOKS, MOMMY.--“Books and Children in the 19th Century: A Small Portrait” is the theme of an exhibit on display now and throughout this summer in the fourth floor Special Collections area of MTSU’s James E. Walker Library. The purpose is to show the variety of ways children and the adults around them engaged with books in the 1800s and early 1900s. The works available for viewing are indicative of the children’s book as an object of moral and educational value. The idea behind the books is to teach values and build character. Entertainment techniques are employed strictly to attract the children and hold their interest. Highlights include several movable books, which are books that contain text or illustrations that the child can manipulate. Pop-up books are one such type of movable book. Many items in the display have never been exhibited previously. Call the James E. Walker Library at 615-898-2772.

SING A SUMMERTIME SONG--The theme of the third annual Alumni Summer College is “A Song’s Life.” From June 23-25, MTSU alumni are invited to learn how a song is written, recorded, produced, performed and managed during three fun-filled days of music and camaraderie. Alumni Summer College is an opportunity to expand one’s knowledge of interesting subjects and with a curriculum that combines innovative classes and entertaining tours specifically created with MTSU alumni in mind. Highlights of this year’s event include songwriters in the round at the “Jack and Diane” show, a studio recording session, a songwriter “show-and-tell” session, Vince Gill at the Ryman Auditorium, the Country Music Hall of Fame, RCA Studio B, the Wildhorse Saloon and Jack’s Barbeque. Tuition is $205 per person. The registration deadline is Tuesday, June 1. For more information and to register, go to http://www.mtalumni.com/.

GOING THROUGH CUSTOMS--CUSTOMS orientation at MTSU will get underway today, May 26, and run through late July. Two-day sessions will acquaint students with what will be their academic and social home for the next four years. Admissions, Financial Aid, Housing and Residential Life, advising and other departments will be involved with the orientation process that will integrate new students into the intellectual, cultural and social climate of the university. Gina Poff, director of New Student and Family Programs, says organizers “are adding orientation leaders to work specifically with parents” this year. The general assembly portion of CUSTOMS will move to Murphy Center since Tucker Theatre is under renovation. CUSTOMS participants will be taken onto the field at Floyd Stadium at the beginning of the morning for a video message from head football coach Rick Stockstill. For more information, call 615-898-2454 or visit www.mtsu.edu/customs.

ADOPT A VET--The Albert Gore Research Center is an official partner in the Library of Congress Veterans History Project. The center participates as part of its public service mission. Currently, the Gore Center has about 50 veterans of World War II and Korea on its list of those willing to be interviewed for the Veterans History Project at MTSU, but these vets are in their 80s and 90s. It is urgent that the Gore Center have funds in hand to record their stories in 2010. With each tax-deductible contribution of only $50, the Gore Center can fund one interview with a WWII, Korean War, Vietnam War, Persian Gulf War or Iraq/Afghanistan veteran, or a civilian who supported the war effort by working in war industries or volunteering for the USO, Red Cross or other support organizations. Your donation will pay for tapes and other supplies, transcription, permanent archiving and posting of the materials on a website. For more information, go to http://gorecenter.mtsu.edu/adoptvet.hem.

APRENDA CON ME--The University School of Nashville is hosting MTSU’s 2010 Summer Language Institute, where you can learn Spanish in a fun, low-stress environment. The methods employed are Total Physical Response (TPR) and Teaching Proficiency through Reading and Storytelling (TPRS). These methods mimic the way you learned your first language. Movement, games, songs and storytelling are all part of the instruction. Brian Roberts will teach Spanish I for ages 16 and up from July 19-23 at the University School and from Aug. 2-6 at the O’More School of Design in Franklin. Jason Fritze will teach Spanish II for ages 16 and up from July 19-23 at the University School. The cost for all language classes is $350 with a $20 materials fee due on the first day of class. Contact Dr. Shelley Thomas at 615-898-5757 or shthomas@mtsu.edu.

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

Today’s Response
Middle Tennessee State University

Welcome to the working week.

The first quarter unemployment rate for Tennessee was the same as it was in the previous quarter—10.7 percent. According to Tennessee Housing Market, a publication of MTSU’s Business and Economic Research Center, “While some job gains did occur, they were offset by an increase in the number of persons searching for work. Another relatively positive sign is that job losses in manufacturing slowed to a trickle during the first quarter, suggesting that job growth may well turn positive during the second quarter. Nationally, manufacturing has experienced expansion for nine consecutive months, according to the Purchasing Managers Index. In addition, automakers are regaining their footing—good new news for auto parts suppliers in Tennessee.”

Contact the BERC at 615-898-2610.

Be a good sport.

Youth Sports Camp at MTSU Campus Recreation is a great opportunity for children to learn a variety of sport, leisure and fitness activities that emphasize some crucial life skills including teamwork, sportsmanship and the value of regular exercise. Activities include swimming, basketball, soccer, flag football, racquetball, whiffle ball, kickball, capture the flag, dodgeball and ping-pong, among others. There are 10 week-long sessions meeting Monday through Friday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. beginning June 1. Drop-off begins at 7:30 a.m. and pick-up ends at 5:30 p.m. The camp is open to boys and girls ages 7-13. There is a nonrefundable deposit of $25 for each session, and tuition for each session is $150 with lunch provided. Children must have received all school-required shots, and proof of family medical insurance also must be provided.

For more information, contact Campus Rec at 615-898-2104 or go to www.mtsu.edu/~camprec.

Roll out those lazy, hazy, crazy days of summer.

Saturday, June 12, will be MTSU Alumni & Friends Day at Nashville Shores, 4001 Bell Rd. in Nashville. Registration will be from 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Lunch will be served from 12 p.m.-2 p.m. Nashville Shores opens at 10 a.m. and closes at 6 p.m. The price is $20 per person, which covers admission into the park and lunch. Children under age two are admitted free of charge. The park has a brand new lazy river and wave pool for more fun in the water. This even is pre-pay only. The deadline to register is Wednesday, June 9.

Call the Alumni Relations office at 1-800-533-6878, go online at www.mtalumni.com, or send an e-mail to alumni@mtsu.edu.

TR EXTRA

I’M PLAYING WITH MY BOOKS, MOMMY.--“Books and Children in the 19th Century: A Small Portrait” is the theme of an exhibit on display now and throughout this summer in the fourth floor Special Collections area of MTSU’s James E. Walker Library. The purpose is to show the variety of ways children and the adults around them engaged with books in the 1800s and early 1900s. The works available for viewing are indicative of the children’s book as an object of moral and educational value. The idea behind the books is to teach values and build character. Entertainment techniques are employed strictly to attract the children and hold their interest. Highlights include several movable books, which are books that contain text or illustrations that the child can manipulate. Pop-up books are one such type of movable book. Many items in the display have never been exhibited previously. Call the James E. Walker Library at 615-898-2772.

SING A SUMMERTIME SONG--The theme of the third annual Alumni Summer College is “A Song’s Life.” From June 23-25, MTSU alumni are invited to learn how a song is written, recorded, produced, performed and managed during three fun-filled days of music and camaraderie. Alumni Summer College is an opportunity to expand one’s knowledge of interesting subjects and with a curriculum that combines innovative classes and entertaining tours specifically created with MTSU alumni in mind. Highlights of this year’s event include songwriters in the round at the “Jack and Diane” show, a studio recording session, a songwriter “show-and-tell” session, Vince Gill at the Ryman Auditorium, the Country Music Hall of Fame, RCA Studio B, the Wildhorse Saloon and Jack’s Barbeque. Tuition is $205 per person. The registration deadline is Tuesday, June 1. For more information and to register, go to www.mtalumni.com.

GOING THROUGH CUSTOMS--CUSTOMS orientation at MTSU will get underway Wednesday, May 26, and run through late July. Two-day sessions will acquaint students with what will be their academic and social home for the next four years. Admissions, Financial Aid, Housing and Residential Life, advising and other departments will be involved with the orientation process that will integrate new students into the intellectual, cultural and social climate of the university. Gina Poff, director of New Student and Family Programs, says organizers “are adding orientation leaders to work specifically with parents” this year. The general assembly portion of CUSTOMS will move to Murphy Center since Tucker Theatre is under renovation. CUSTOMS participants will be taken onto the field at Floyd Stadium at the beginning of the morning for a video message from head football coach Rick Stockstill. For more information, call 615-898-2454 or visit www.mtsu.edu/customs.

ADOPT A VET--The Albert Gore Research Center is an official partner in the Library of Congress Veterans History Project. The center participates as part of its public service mission. Currently, the Gore Center has about 50 veterans of World War II and Korea on its list of those willing to be interviewed for the Veterans History Project at MTSU, but these vets are in their 80s and 90s. It is urgent that the Gore Center have funds in hand to record their stories in 2010. With each tax-deductible contribution of only $50, the Gore Center can fund one interview with a WWII, Korean War, Vietnam War, Persian Gulf War or Iraq/Afghanistan veteran, or a civilian who supported the war effort by working in war industries or volunteering for the USO, Red Cross or other support organizations. Your donation will pay for tapes and other supplies, transcription, permanent archiving and posting of the materials on a website. For more information, go to http://gorecenter.mtsu.edu/adoptvet.hem.

APRENDA CON ME--The University School of Nashville is hosting MTSU’s 2010 Summer Language Institute, where you can learn Spanish in a fun, low-stress environment. The methods employed are Total Physical Response (TPR) and Teaching Proficiency through Reading and Storytelling (TPRS). These methods mimic the way you learned your first language. Movement, games, songs and storytelling are all part of the instruction. Brian Roberts will teach Spanish I for ages 16 and up from July 19-23 at the University School and from Aug. 2-6 at the O’More School of Design in Franklin. Jason Fritze will teach Spanish II for ages 16 and up from July 19-23 at the University School. The cost for all language classes is $350 with a $20 materials fee due on the first day of class. Contact Dr. Shelley Thomas at 615-898-5757 or shthomas@mtsu.edu.

Monday, May 24, 2010

Monday, May 24, 2010

Today’s Response
Middle Tennessee State University

Building blocks


During the first quarter of 2010, housing construction in Tennessee rose mostly due to gains in multifamily building. According to the latest edition of Tennessee Housing Market, a publication of MTSU’s Business and Economic Research Center, “Single-family construction, the core of the housing market, increased for the fifth consecutive quarter, but the gain was modest, up just 2.5 percent from the fourth quarter, climbing to 13,700 units. Multifamily permits, on the other hand, experienced a large increase to 6,000 units, returning to pre-recession (2007) levels of activity. Tennessee experienced much more construction activity compared with the South and U.S. markets during the first quarter, again solely due to multifamily activity. Single-family permits lagged behind the South and the U.S. during the first quarter.”

Contact the BERC at 615-898-2610.

“I’m angry. I don’t want to lose it.”—Marsha Mason in “The Goodbye Girl”

Sometimes indignation or even anger can be useful. Dr. Barbara Haskew, distinguished professor of economics, says it can work when questioning bias. “I remember a consultant from New York who was hired by a group of large customers of TVA to question the utility’s rate structures,” says Haskew, who has been nominated to the TVA Board of Directors pending U.S. Senate approval. “While presenting his findings he said, ‘Even people in the South are smart enough to understand this!’ I jumped out of my chair and demanded with indignation and some anger, ‘What do you mean even people in the South?’ All the folks representing large customers, as well as the TVA personnel in the room, were from the South. All were offended by his obviously biased comment about Southerners’ intelligence, and everyone exited the room.”

Contact Haskew at 615-898-5578.
bhaskew@mtsu.edu

I’m playing with my books, Mommy.

“Books and Children in the 19th Century: A Small Portrait” is the theme of an exhibit on display now and throughout this summer in the fourth floor Special Collections area of MTSU’s James E. Walker Library. The purpose is to show the variety of ways children and the adults around them engaged with books in the 1800s and early 1900s. The works available for viewing are indicative of the children’s book as an object of moral and educational value. The idea behind the books is to teach values and build character. Entertainment techniques are employed strictly to attract the children and hold their interest. Highlights include several movable books, which are books that contain text or illustrations that the child can manipulate. Pop-up books are one such type of movable book. Many items in the display have never been exhibited previously.

Call the James E. Walker Library at 615-898-2772.

TR EXTRA

SING A SUMMERTIME SONG--The theme of the third annual Alumni Summer College is “A Song’s Life.” From June 23-25, MTSU alumni are invited to learn how a song is written, recorded, produced, performed and managed during three fun-filled days of music and camaraderie. Alumni Summer College is an opportunity to expand one’s knowledge of interesting subjects and with a curriculum that combines innovative classes and entertaining tours specifically created with MTSU alumni in mind. Highlights of this year’s event include songwriters in the round at the “Jack and Diane” show, a studio recording session, a songwriter “show-and-tell” session, Vince Gill at the Ryman Auditorium, the Country Music Hall of Fame, RCA Studio B, the Wildhorse Saloon and Jack’s Barbeque. Tuition is $205 per person. The registration deadline is Tuesday, June 1. For more information and to register, go to www.mtalumni.com.

GOING THROUGH CUSTOMS--CUSTOMS orientation at MTSU will get underway Wednesday, May 26, and run through late July. Two-day sessions will acquaint students with what will be their academic and social home for the next four years. Admissions, Financial Aid, Housing and Residential Life, advising and other departments will be involved with the orientation process that will integrate new students into the intellectual, cultural and social climate of the university. Gina Poff, director of New Student and Family Programs, says organizers “are adding orientation leaders to work specifically with parents” this year. The general assembly portion of CUSTOMS will move to Murphy Center since Tucker Theatre is under renovation. CUSTOMS participants will be taken onto the field at Floyd Stadium at the beginning of the morning for a video message from head football coach Rick Stockstill. For more information, call 615-898-2454 or visit www.mtsu.edu/customs.

ADOPT A VET--The Albert Gore Research Center is an official partner in the Library of Congress Veterans History Project. The center participates as part of its public service mission. Currently, the Gore Center has about 50 veterans of World War II and Korea on its list of those willing to be interviewed for the Veterans History Project at MTSU, but these vets are in their 80s and 90s. It is urgent that the Gore Center have funds in hand to record their stories in 2010. With each tax-deductible contribution of only $50, the Gore Center can fund one interview with a WWII, Korean War, Vietnam War, Persian Gulf War or Iraq/Afghanistan veteran, or a civilian who supported the war effort by working in war industries or volunteering for the USO, Red Cross or other support organizations. Your donation will pay for tapes and other supplies, transcription, permanent archiving and posting of the materials on a website. For more information, go to http://gorecenter.mtsu.edu/adoptvet.hem.

APRENDA CON ME--The University School of Nashville is hosting MTSU’s 2010 Summer Language Institute, where you can learn Spanish in a fun, low-stress environment. The methods employed are Total Physical Response (TPR) and Teaching Proficiency through Reading and Storytelling (TPRS). These methods mimic the way you learned your first language. Movement, games, songs and storytelling are all part of the instruction. Brian Roberts will teach Spanish I for ages 16 and up from July 19-23 at the University School and from Aug. 2-6 at the O’More School of Design in Franklin. Jason Fritze will teach Spanish II for ages 16 and up from July 19-23 at the University School. The cost for all language classes is $350 with a $20 materials fee due on the first day of class. Contact Dr. Shelley Thomas at 615-898-5757 or shthomas@mtsu.edu.

Friday, May 21, 2010

Friday, May 21, 2010

Today’s Response
Middle Tennessee State University

Tax trouble

When home sales drop, so do tax collections. According to the latest edition of Tennessee Housing Market, a publication of MTSU’s Business and Economic Research Center, “Mortgage tax collections resumed a declining trend (in the first quarter) after rising in the previous quarter. Falling real estate values combined with fewer transactions and lower mortgage rates are reasons for falling mortgage tax revenues. Real estate transfer tax collections fell 7.6 percent in the first quarter following gains in the previous two quarters. Poor weather may have been a contributing factor, along with falling real estate prices.”

Contact the BERC at 615-898-2610.

Sing a summertime song

The theme of the third annual Alumni Summer College is “A Song’s Life.” From June 23-25, MTSU alumni are invited to learn how a song is written, recorded, produced, performed and managed during three fun-filled days of music and camaraderie. Alumni Summer College is an opportunity to expand one’s knowledge of interesting subjects and with a curriculum that combines innovative classes and entertaining tours specifically created with MTSU alumni in mind. Highlights of this year’s event include songwriters in the round at the “Jack and Diane” show, a studio recording session, a songwriter “show-and-tell” session, Vince Gill at the Ryman Auditorium, the Country Music Hall of Fame, RCA Studio B, the Wildhorse Saloon and Jack’s Barbeque. Tuition is $205 per person. The registration deadline is Tuesday, June 1.

For more information and to register, go to www.mtalumni.com.

All around the world

Rong Wang, coordinator for international education at MTSU, will be the guest on the next edition of “MTSU on the Record” with host Gina Logue at 8 a.m. this Sunday, May 23, on WMOT-FM (89.5 and wmot.org). Wang will discuss the many aspects of internationalizing MTSU, including the Confucius Institute, networking with international universities, marketing for international student recruitment and facilitating conversations with international faculty members for the promotion of collaborative projects. To listen to last week’s program about Dr. Angela Mertig’s class on the role of animals in society, go to http://www.mtsu.edu/news/podcast/podcast2010.shtml and click on “May 16, 2010.”

Contact Logue at 615-898-5081 or WMOT-FM at 615-898-2800.

TR EXTRA

GOING THROUGH CUSTOMS--CUSTOMS orientation at MTSU will get underway Wednesday, May 26, and run through late July. Two-day sessions will acquaint students with what will be their academic and social home for the next four years. Admissions, Financial Aid, Housing and Residential Life, advising and other departments will be involved with the orientation process that will integrate new students into the intellectual, cultural and social climate of the university. Gina Poff, director of New Student and Family Programs, says organizers “are adding orientation leaders to work specifically with parents” this year. The general assembly portion of CUSTOMS will move to Murphy Center since Tucker Theatre is under renovation. CUSTOMS participants will be taken onto the field at Floyd Stadium at the beginning of the morning for a video message from head football coach Rick Stockstill. For more information, call 615-898-2454 or visit www.mtsu.edu/customs.

ADOPT A VET--The Albert Gore Research Center is an official partner in the Library of Congress Veterans History Project. The center participates as part of its public service mission. Currently, the Gore Center has about 50 veterans of World War II and Korea on its list of those willing to be interviewed for the Veterans History Project at MTSU, but these vets are in their 80s and 90s. It is urgent that the Gore Center have funds in hand to record their stories in 2010. With each tax-deductible contribution of only $50, the Gore Center can fund one interview with a WWII, Korean War, Vietnam War, Persian Gulf War or Iraq/Afghanistan veteran, or a civilian who supported the war effort by working in war industries or volunteering for the USO, Red Cross or other support organizations. Your donation will pay for tapes and other supplies, transcription, permanent archiving and posting of the materials on a website. For more information, go to http://gorecenter.mtsu.edu/adoptvet.hem.

APRENDA CON ME--The University School of Nashville is hosting MTSU’s 2010 Summer Language Institute, where you can learn Spanish in a fun, low-stress environment. The methods employed are Total Physical Response (TPR) and Teaching Proficiency through Reading and Storytelling (TPRS). These methods mimic the way you learned your first language. Movement, games, songs and storytelling are all part of the instruction. Brian Roberts will teach Spanish I for ages 16 and up from July 19-23 at the University School and from Aug. 2-6 at the O’More School of Design in Franklin. Jason Fritze will teach Spanish II for ages 16 and up from July 19-23 at the University School. The cost for all language classes is $350 with a $20 materials fee due on the first day of class. Contact Dr. Shelley Thomas at 615-898-5757 or shthomas@mtsu.edu.

Thursday, May 20, 2010

Thursday, May 20, 2010

Today’s Response
Middle Tennessee State University

Bleak house

Residential real estate markets were in a slump during the first quarter in Tennessee. According to the Tennessee Housing Market, a publication of MTSU’s Business and Economic Research Center, sales of single-family homes fell in Nashville, Knoxville and Memphis. The THM states, “The first quarter declines are out of step with the improving trend and may not be indicative of future sales in the short term. Two reasons may help explain the sudden decline. First, sales in October and November were undoubtedly boosted by the first round of the first-time home buyer tax credit that was slated to end at the end of November. The tax credit was renewed at the eleventh hour, expiring at the end of April 2010. But one could argue that much of the impact of the tax credit was front-loaded in the months of October and November with much less impact in the first quarter 2010.”

Contact the BERC at 615-898-2610.

It’s a mad, mad, mad, mad world.

When Hillary Clinton ran for president in 2008, a leading Republican described her as “too angry to be elected president.” (Clinton is now Secretary of State, which puts her in charge of American diplomats all over the world.) That prompted a Yale University study on the subject of anger in the workplace—who benefits and who loses. Participants conferred the most status on men who said they were angry and the least status on the women who said they were angry. Dr. Barbara Haskew, distinguished professor of economics, says, “As a labor arbitrator, I have witnessed over the last 10 years a diminishing tolerance for anger in the workplace. Many companies see this as possibly leading to violence. I find that more collective bargaining agreements contain stiffer penalties for those whose language and behavior is discourteous, angry or threatening to others in the workplace.”

Contact Haskew at 615-898-5578.
bhaskew@mtsu.edu

Rebels without a cause?

Historian David Williams’ book Bitterly Divided: The South’s Inner Civil War states that most Southerners didn’t even want to leave the union initially. In fact, Williams writes, about 300,000 Southern whites and almost 200,000 Southern blacks served in the Union Army. Dr. Derek Frisby, history, says, “Williams’ argument is the latest in a series of studies over the last few decades highlighting the failure of Confederate nationalism to unite the Southern populace. The persistence of the ‘united Confederacy’ in public memory is a testament to the perseverance of the secessionist leaders and soldiers who created the post-war ‘Lost Cause’ mythology to explain their defeat.”

Contact Frisby at 615-494-8856.
dfrisby@mtsu.edu

TR EXTRA

GOING THROUGH CUSTOMS--CUSTOMS orientation at MTSU will get underway Wednesday, May 26, and run through late July. Two-day sessions will acquaint students with what will be their academic and social home for the next four years. Admissions, Financial Aid, Housing and Residential Life, advising and other departments will be involved with the orientation process that will integrate new students into the intellectual, cultural and social climate of the university. Gina Poff, director of New Student and Family Programs, says organizers “are adding orientation leaders to work specifically with parents” this year. The general assembly portion of CUSTOMS will move to Murphy Center since Tucker Theatre is under renovation. CUSTOMS participants will be taken onto the field at Floyd Stadium at the beginning of the morning for a video message from head football coach Rick Stockstill. For more information, call 615-898-2454 or visit www.mtsu.edu/customs.

ADOPT A VET--The Albert Gore Research Center is an official partner in the Library of Congress Veterans History Project. The center participates as part of its public service mission. Currently, the Gore Center has about 50 veterans of World War II and Korea on its list of those willing to be interviewed for the Veterans History Project at MTSU, but these vets are in their 80s and 90s. It is urgent that the Gore Center have funds in hand to record their stories in 2010. With each tax-deductible contribution of only $50, the Gore Center can fund one interview with a WWII, Korean War, Vietnam War, Persian Gulf War or Iraq/Afghanistan veteran, or a civilian who supported the war effort by working in war industries or volunteering for the USO, Red Cross or other support organizations. Your donation will pay for tapes and other supplies, transcription, permanent archiving and posting of the materials on a website. For more information, go to http://gorecenter.mtsu.edu/adoptvet.hem.

APRENDA CON ME--The University School of Nashville is hosting MTSU’s 2010 Summer Language Institute, where you can learn Spanish in a fun, low-stress environment. The methods employed are Total Physical Response (TPR) and Teaching Proficiency through Reading and Storytelling (TPRS). These methods mimic the way you learned your first language. Movement, games, songs and storytelling are all part of the instruction. Brian Roberts will teach Spanish I for ages 16 and up from July 19-23 at the University School and from Aug. 2-6 at the O’More School of Design in Franklin. Jason Fritze will teach Spanish II for ages 16 and up from July 19-23 at the University School. The cost for all language classes is $350 with a $20 materials fee due on the first day of class. Contact Dr. Shelley Thomas at 615-898-5757 or shthomas@mtsu.edu.

Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Today’s Response
Middle Tennessee State University

Be it ever so humble


Home prices in Tennessee are still soft and getting softer, according to the latest edition of Tennessee Housing Market, a publication of MTSU’s Business and Economic Research Center. It cites the Housing Price Index (HPI) published by the Federal Housing Finance Agency. “The HPI is a repeat sales index, tracking price changes for repeat sales or refinancing for the same properties over time,” states THM. “The most recent figures for the fourth quarter 2009 show housing prices in Tennessee down 3.2 percent over the year compared with a 4.6 percent decline for the United States. Among the metropolitan areas tracked by this report, prices in Nashville are down 4.3 percent, while Memphis shows a decline of 3.4 percent and Knoxville a drop of 2.0 percent. Prices will continue to be soft as long as inventories of unsold homes remain high.”

Contact the BERC at 615-898-2610.

An angry word turns away sexists.

A study by a Yale University scholar involved three tests in which men and women randomly watched videos of a job interview and were asked to rate the applicant’s status. Participants conferred the most status on the man who said he was angry and the least status on the woman who said she was angry. The study concludes that men who get angry in the workplace might be admired for it, but women who get angry in the workplace will be seen as “out of control” and “incompetent.” Dr. Barbara Haskew, distinguished professor of economics, says, “I agree that the loss would likely be greater for women than for men because, at least for some older men, women are anticipated to be more emotional and, therefore, less able to control outbreaks of anger and distress. These men seeing women become angry or seeing them cry have their opinions, however biased, confirmed.”

Contact Haskew at 615-898-5578.
bhaskew@mtsu.edu

“I believe in the Church of Baseball.”—Susan Sarandon in “Bull Durham”

The history of baseball in America is a history of cultural self-creation, says Dr. Ron Bombardi, chair of the Department of Philosophy. Bombardi says baseball reflects and is reflected in the fabric of American culture “because, like life, baseball not only comprises both logical and mystical elements, but dynamically subjects both to mutual adjustment. It is this specific feature—of baseball’s having evolved historically according to a dynamic of mutual adjustment between logical knowledge and mystical experience that, I conclude, ultimately resolves all philosophical tension between the two.”

Contact Bombardi at 615-898-2049.
rbombard@mtsu.edu

TR EXTRA

GOING THROUGH CUSTOMS--CUSTOMS orientation at MTSU will get underway Wednesday, May 26, and run through late July. Two-day sessions will acquaint students with what will be their academic and social home for the next four years. Admissions, Financial Aid, Housing and Residential Life, advising and other departments will be involved with the orientation process that will integrate new students into the intellectual, cultural and social climate of the university. Gina Poff, director of New Student and Family Programs, says organizers “are adding orientation leaders to work specifically with parents” this year. The general assembly portion of CUSTOMS will move to Murphy Center since Tucker Theatre is under renovation. CUSTOMS participants will be taken onto the field at Floyd Stadium at the beginning of the morning for a video message from head football coach Rick Stockstill. For more information, call 615-898-2454 or visit www.mtsu.edu/customs.

ADOPT A VET--The Albert Gore Research Center is an official partner in the Library of Congress Veterans History Project. The center participates as part of its public service mission. Currently, the Gore Center has about 50 veterans of World War II and Korea on its list of those willing to be interviewed for the Veterans History Project at MTSU, but these vets are in their 80s and 90s. It is urgent that the Gore Center have funds in hand to record their stories in 2010. With each tax-deductible contribution of only $50, the Gore Center can fund one interview with a WWII, Korean War, Vietnam War, Persian Gulf War or Iraq/Afghanistan veteran, or a civilian who supported the war effort by working in war industries or volunteering for the USO, Red Cross or other support organizations. Your donation will pay for tapes and other supplies, transcription, permanent archiving and posting of the materials on a website. For more information, go to http://gorecenter.mtsu.edu/adoptvet.hem.

APRENDA CON ME--The University School of Nashville is hosting MTSU’s 2010 Summer Language Institute, where you can learn Spanish in a fun, low-stress environment. The methods employed are Total Physical Response (TPR) and Teaching Proficiency through Reading and Storytelling (TPRS). These methods mimic the way you learned your first language. Movement, games, songs and storytelling are all part of the instruction. Brian Roberts will teach Spanish I for ages 16 and up from July 19-23 at the University School and from Aug. 2-6 at the O’More School of Design in Franklin. Jason Fritze will teach Spanish II for ages 16 and up from July 19-23 at the University School. The cost for all language classes is $350 with a $20 materials fee due on the first day of class. Contact Dr. Shelley Thomas at 615-898-5757 or shthomas@mtsu.edu.

Tuesday, May 18, 2010

Tuesday, May 18, 2010

Today’s Response
Middle Tennessee State University

A ray of hope

The national recovery, which has been tiptoeing into view over the past few months, finally is beginning to make itself known in Tennessee. According to the first quarter edition of Tennessee Housing Market, a publication of MTSU’s Business and Economic Research Center (BERC), “Nonfarm employment, for example, was steady during the quarter, and employment in services-providing sectors posted a modest increase. However, even though some labor indicators improved, the housing market experienced setbacks. Initial claims for unemployment insurance in Tennessee remained unchanged in the first quarter following several quarters of improvement. ‘Initial claims’ is the number of newly laid-off payroll workers, considered an indicator of the future path for the unemployment rate. The current level of initial claims is consistent with job growth, but we are not yet experiencing net employment increases.”

Contact the BERC at 615-898-2610.

Fighting words

The North Dakota Supreme Court has ruled that a teenager’s racial slur does not constitute protected speech. The juvenile, who was charged with disorderly conduct, allegedly yelled “stupid n-----“ at an African-American girl outside a teen center while also circling around her with other teens. The trial court rejected the alleged perpetrator’s First Amendment-based defense, and the high court agreed on appeal May 11. David Hudson, adjunct political science professor and First Amendment Center scholar, says, “The decisions from the North Dakota high court show that a court may take pains to find that speech constitutes fighting words if the expression is offensive enough. Courts often will look to see if there is any accompanying conduct that can tip the balance toward a disorderly conduct conviction or adjudication.”

Contact Hudson at 615-741-1342.
dhudson@fac.org

Picture this!

When Tennessee House Speaker Kent Williams fainted during a floor session last week, Associated Press reporter Erik Schelzig took photographs. Now State Rep. Joe Towns (D-Memphis) has introduced a resolution to revoke Schelzig’s press credentials. Dr. Larry Burriss, journalism professor and First Amendment expert, calls this “another cheap shot by a politician trying to make a name for himself.” Burriss points out, “Towns may think the photographs are distasteful, but it’s not his job to decide which news events the public needs to know about. Every state official takes an oath to support the Constitution of the United States. That means he and every other public official have to support the notion of a free and open press and the corollary about the public’s right to know.”

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

TR EXTRA

GOING THROUGH CUSTOMS--CUSTOMS orientation at MTSU will get underway Wednesday, May 26, and run through late July. Two-day sessions will acquaint students with what will be their academic and social home for the next four years. Admissions, Financial Aid, Housing and Residential Life, advising and other departments will be involved with the orientation process that will integrate new students into the intellectual, cultural and social climate of the university. Gina Poff, director of New Student and Family Programs, says organizers “are adding orientation leaders to work specifically with parents” this year. The general assembly portion of CUSTOMS will move to Murphy Center since Tucker Theatre is under renovation. CUSTOMS participants will be taken onto the field at Floyd Stadium at the beginning of the morning for a video message from head football coach Rick Stockstill. For more information, call 615-898-2454 or visit www.mtsu.edu/customs.

ADOPT A VET--The Albert Gore Research Center is an official partner in the Library of Congress Veterans History Project. The center participates as part of its public service mission. Currently, the Gore Center has about 50 veterans of World War II and Korea on its list of those willing to be interviewed for the Veterans History Project at MTSU, but these vets are in their 80s and 90s. It is urgent that the Gore Center have funds in hand to record their stories in 2010. With each tax-deductible contribution of only $50, the Gore Center can fund one interview with a WWII, Korean War, Vietnam War, Persian Gulf War or Iraq/Afghanistan veteran, or a civilian who supported the war effort by working in war industries or volunteering for the USO, Red Cross or other support organizations. Your donation will pay for tapes and other supplies, transcription, permanent archiving and posting of the materials on a website. For more information, go to http://gorecenter.mtsu.edu/adoptvet.hem.

APRENDA CON ME--The University School of Nashville is hosting MTSU’s 2010 Summer Language Institute, where you can learn Spanish in a fun, low-stress environment. The methods employed are Total Physical Response (TPR) and Teaching Proficiency through Reading and Storytelling (TPRS). These methods mimic the way you learned your first language. Movement, games, songs and storytelling are all part of the instruction. Brian Roberts will teach Spanish I for ages 16 and up from July 19-23 at the University School and from Aug. 2-6 at the O’More School of Design in Franklin. Jason Fritze will teach Spanish II for ages 16 and up from July 19-23 at the University School. The cost for all language classes is $350 with a $20 materials fee due on the first day of class. Contact Dr. Shelley Thomas at 615-898-5757 or shthomas@mtsu.edu.

Monday, May 17, 2010

Monday, May 17, 2010

Today’s Response
Middle Tennessee State University

Oil’s well that ends well.


As the massive BP spill in the Gulf of Mexico demonstrates, oil and water don’t mix. However, Dr. Preston MacDougall, chemistry, says there is a way to get oil and water to mix. “For instance, olive oil and vinegar, which is mostly water, form an emulsion when shaken vigorously,” he says. “If you let this mixture sit for awhile, it’ll separate into two liquids with the oil layer floating on top. To prevent this from happening or to stabilize the emulsion, surfactants are added to the mixture. This is the only purpose of many of the odd-sounding ingredients you see on a bottle of salad dressing or shampoo such as sodium lauryl sulfate. Without going into too much chemical engineering, these surfactant molecules like being at the interface of the two immiscible liquids, but try to keep their distance from each other.”

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

Grading trading

China and Tennessee have a trade relationship that has burgeoned enormously in the last decade. Dr. Steven Livingston, editor of Global Commerce, says, “Over the past 10 years, Tennessee exports to China have increased more than sevenfold. The Chinese market has grown roughly nine times as fast as the total world market. … Most of this tremendous growth actually came in the first part of the past decade. The Chinese market didn’t fare any better than anywhere else during the recent global showdown. … In 2000, (Tennessee) ranked 22nd among the states in the value of its exports to China. By 2009, it had risen to 14th. Its 10-year growth rate was the 11th best of the 50 states.”

Contact Livingston at 615-898-2720.
slivings@mtsu.edu

The drain of brains leads mainly to disdain.

Many Russian scientists who have left Russia are ready to return there or to cooperate with its scientific enters. However, they don’t think they’ll find conditions conducive to their academic activities, according to Dr. Andrei Korobkov, political science. “Of course,” he says, “the new leadership of Russia now actively suggests otherwise. … Conditions for classes of scientific activities in Russia remain, to put it mildly, complicated. This is confirmed by new polls that are conducted among serious scientists and researchers. … Approximately three-quarters of Russia’s professors of post-Soviet years left to work abroad from Moscow, St. Petersburg and Novosibirsk (from 1993-2007). And 28 percent of these people now reside in the United States.”

Contact Korobkov at 615-898-2945.
korobkov@mtsu.edu

TR EXTRA

GOING THROUGH CUSTOMS--CUSTOMS orientation at MTSU will get underway Wednesday, May 26, and run through late July. Two-day sessions will acquaint students with what will be their academic and social home for the next four years. Admissions, Financial Aid, Housing and Residential Life, advising and other departments will be involved with the orientation process that will integrate new students into the intellectual, cultural and social climate of the university. Gina Poff, director of New Student and Family Programs, says organizers “are adding orientation leaders to work specifically with parents” this year. The general assembly portion of CUSTOMS will move to Murphy Center since Tucker Theatre is under renovation. CUSTOMS participants will be taken onto the field at Floyd Stadium at the beginning of the morning for a video message from head football coach Rick Stockstill. For more information, call 615-898-2454 or visit www.mtsu.edu/customs.

ADOPT A VET--The Albert Gore Research Center is an official partner in the Library of Congress Veterans History Project. The center participates as part of its public service mission. Currently, the Gore Center has about 50 veterans of World War II and Korea on its list of those willing to be interviewed for the Veterans History Project at MTSU, but these vets are in their 80s and 90s. It is urgent that the Gore Center have funds in hand to record their stories in 2010. With each tax-deductible contribution of only $50, the Gore Center can fund one interview with a WWII, Korean War, Vietnam War, Persian Gulf War or Iraq/Afghanistan veteran, or a civilian who supported the war effort by working in war industries or volunteering for the USO, Red Cross or other support organizations. Your donation will pay for tapes and other supplies, transcription, permanent archiving and posting of the materials on a website. For more information, go to http://gorecenter.mtsu.edu/adoptvet.hem.

APRENDA CON ME--The University School of Nashville is hosting MTSU’s 2010 Summer Language Institute, where you can learn Spanish in a fun, low-stress environment. The methods employed are Total Physical Response (TPR) and Teaching Proficiency through Reading and Storytelling (TPRS). These methods mimic the way you learned your first language. Movement, games, songs and storytelling are all part of the instruction. Brian Roberts will teach Spanish I for ages 16 and up from July 19-23 at the University School and from Aug. 2-6 at the O’More School of Design in Franklin. Jason Fritze will teach Spanish II for ages 16 and up from July 19-23 at the University School. The cost for all language classes is $350 with a $20 materials fee due on the first day of class. Contact Dr. Shelley Thomas at 615-898-5757 or shthomas@mtsu.edu.

Friday, May 14, 2010

Friday, May 14, 2010

Today’s Response
Middle Tennessee State University

I feel you.

Some marketers don’t want to engage in “touchy-feely” promotion techniques. They think that facts and figures are all the public wants to hear when deciding whether to put their faith in a product or service. Dr. Don Roy, management and marketing, takes issue with that approach. In the midst of the recent flooding, one of Roy’s Facebook friends posted “I Love You Nashville” on his Facebook page. The comment “led me to ask myself how many students would say the same thing about my organization, Middle Tennessee State University,” says Roy. “Customers can develop feelings of attachment, commitment, and yes, love for your brands and company. They purchase your products loyally, eagerly tell others about you, and stick with you during tough times. What are you doing to build loving relationships with your customers?”

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

Tastes like chicken?

Food processing companies don’t always level with consumers. Some five to seven percent of the U.S. food supply is tainted by “food fraud,” according to a Michigan State University study. Examples include honey promoted as 100 percent pure when, in fact, it is diluted with sugar beets or corn syrup, and catfish filets sold as red snapper or grouper. Where are the federal regulators? Dr. Tony Johnston, agriculture and agriscience, says, “The beauty of our food system is that federal law puts the responsibility for producing safe and accurately labeled food products on the shoulders of the producers rather than the government. These laws have, in effect, made every food company a ‘police officer’ in the fight against food fraud. The federal government’s role is to provide guidance and enforce policy rather than screen our food and ensure its safety.”

Contact Johnston at 615-898-2421.
johnston@mtsu.edu

Going through CUSTOMS

CUSTOMS orientation at MTSU will get underway Wednesday, May 26, and run through late July. Two-day sessions will acquaint students with what will be their academic and social home for the next four years. Admissions, Financial Aid, Housing and Residential Life, advising and other departments will be involved with the orientation process that will integrate new students into the intellectual, cultural and social climate of the university. Gina Poff, director of New Student and Family Programs, says organizers “are adding orientation leaders to work specifically with parents” this year. The general assembly portion of CUSTOMS will move to Murphy Center since Tucker Theatre is under renovation. CUSTOMS participants will be taken onto the field at Floyd Stadium at the beginning of the morning for a video message from head football coach Rick Stockstill.

For more information, visit www.mtsu.edu/customs
or call 615-898-2454.

TR EXTRA

IF I COULD TALK TO THE ANIMALS--Dr. Angela Mertig, professor of sociology, will discuss her “Animals and Society” course at 8 a.m. this Sunday, May 16, on “MTSU on the Record” with host Gina Logue on WMOT-FM (89.5 and wmot.org). Students will examine the role that animals play in society, how animals have been viewed and treated by humans over time, and what it means to say that humans are animals. Mertig also will take a look at the purposes of the animal welfare movement and the animal rights movement and what sociology can tell us about the relationships among animals, people and society. The class is scheduled for May 17-June 5 Monday-Friday from 12:30-3:30 p.m. in Room 218 of Peck Hall on the MTSU campus. Contact Logue at 615-898-5081 or WMOT-FM at 615-898-2800.

ADOPT A VET--The Albert Gore Research Center is an official partner in the Library of Congress Veterans History Project. The center participates as part of its public service mission. Currently, the Gore Center has about 50 veterans of World War II and Korea on its list of those willing to be interviewed for the Veterans History Project at MTSU, but these vets are in their 80s and 90s. It is urgent that the Gore Center have funds in hand to record their stories in 2010. With each tax-deductible contribution of only $50, the Gore Center can fund one interview with a WWII, Korean War, Vietnam War, Persian Gulf War or Iraq/Afghanistan veteran, or a civilian who supported the war effort by working in war industries or volunteering for the USO, Red Cross or other support organizations. Your donation will pay for tapes and other supplies, transcription, permanent archiving and posting of the materials on a website. For more information, go to http://gorecenter.mtsu.edu/adoptvet.hem.

WORKING WOMEN--The June S. Anderson Foundation will present the foundation scholarships for the 2010-2011 academic year to Katherine Anderson of Manchester and Rhonda Davidson of Martin, at a luncheon at 12 p.m. today, May 14, at the MTSU Foundation House, 324 W. Thompson Lane in Murfreesboro. The foundation awards full tuition stipends annually to full-time MTSU undergraduate women who are 23 years of age or older and who are preparing for careers in nontraditional fields for women. Anderson (no relation to June Anderson) is pursuing an undergraduate degree in accounting and is on course to graduate in May 2011. From there, she plans to enter graduate school at MTSU and earn a master’s degree in business administration. Davidson, a 43-year-old single woman majoring in construction management, says she believes she will be able to find employment with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers when she completes her degree in 2012. For more information, go to the foundation website at http://frank.mtsu.edu/~jsa/.

APRENDA CON ME--The University School of Nashville is hosting MTSU’s 2010 Summer Language Institute, where you can learn Spanish in a fun, low-stress environment. The methods employed are Total Physical Response (TPR) and Teaching Proficiency through Reading and Storytelling (TPRS). These methods mimic the way you learned your first language. Movement, games, songs and storytelling are all part of the instruction. Brian Roberts will teach Spanish I for ages 16 and up from July 19-23 at the University School and from Aug. 2-6 at the O’More School of Design in Franklin. Jason Fritze will teach Spanish II for ages 16 and up from July 19-23 at the University School. The cost for all language classes is $350 with a $20 materials fee due on the first day of class. Contact Dr. Shelley Thomas at 615-898-5757 or shthomas@mtsu.edu.

Thursday, May 13, 2010

Thursday, May 13, 2010

Today’s Response
Middle Tennessee State University

“Let Creation reveal its secrets by and by.”—Jackson Browne from “Before the Deluge”

How is one to view the massive May flooding in Nashville and Middle Tennessee through the prism of one’s faith? Dr. Rami Shapiro, adjunct professor of religious studies and an ordained rabbi, says it’s a lesson in humility. Shapiro says, “Humility reminds us that we are in the dark as to why things happen—good things and bad things—all things arising from unknowing and dissolving into unknowing, and humility is the art of standing naked in the maddening whirlwind that is the Divine. Humility is the truth that arises when we admit we do not know and cannot know what will befall us or why. … The flooding of the Cumberland isn’t a gift, but we may choose to be gifted by it. The terrible loss of life and property is not a blessing, but we may choose to make it an opportunity for grace and goodness by allowing our brokenness and grief to lead us from passion to compassion.”

Read Shapiro’s blog at: http://rabbirami.blogspot.com.

Choosing what you chew

Is all the emphasis on vending machines in schools misplaced in the drive to lower childhood obesity? Kids don’t spend all their time at school, after all. Dr. Janet Colson, human sciences, agrees that banning candy and soda in schools is worthwhile, but, she says, “Parents are the ones who decide how much money a child has to spend on food at school. If parents send a snack (and no money) to school with the child, it won’t matter what foods are there. Some restaurants have a kid’s menus packed with only fried foods available for kids—or macaroni and cheese that has even more fat than chicken nuggets and fries. When you go into a convenience store and look for a healthy snack, they are often not to be found.”

Contact Colson at 615-898-2884.
jcolson@mtsu.edu

If I could talk to the animals

Dr. Angela Mertig, professor of sociology, will discuss her “Animals and Society” course at 8 a.m. this Sunday, May 16, on “MTSU on the Record” with host Gina Logue on WMOT-FM (89.5 and wmot.org). Students will examine the role that animals play in society, how animals have been viewed and treated by humans over time, and what it means to say that humans are animals. Mertig also will take a look at the purposes of the animal welfare movement and the animal rights movement and what sociology can tell us about the relationships among animals, people and society. The class is scheduled for May 17-June 5 Monday-Friday from 12:30-3:30 p.m. in Room 218 of Peck Hall on the MTSU campus.

Contact Logue at 615-898-5081 or WMOT-FM at 615-898-2800.

TR EXTRA

ADOPT A VET--The Albert Gore Research Center is an official partner in the Library of Congress Veterans History Project. The center participates as part of its public service mission. Currently, the Gore Center has about 50 veterans of World War II and Korea on its list of those willing to be interviewed for the Veterans History Project at MTSU, but these vets are in their 80s and 90s. It is urgent that the Gore Center have funds in hand to record their stories in 2010. With each tax-deductible contribution of only $50, the Gore Center can fund one interview with a WWII, Korean War, Vietnam War, Persian Gulf War or Iraq/Afghanistan veteran, or a civilian who supported the war effort by working in war industries or volunteering for the USO, Red Cross or other support organizations. Your donation will pay for tapes and other supplies, transcription, permanent archiving and posting of the materials on a website. For more information, go to http://gorecenter.mtsu.edu/adoptvet.hem.

WORKING WOMEN--The June S. Anderson Foundation will present the foundation scholarships for the 2010-2011 academic year to Katherine Anderson of Manchester and Rhonda Davidson of Martin, at a luncheon at 12 p.m. tomorrow, May 14, at the MTSU Foundation House, 324 W. Thompson Lane in Murfreesboro. The foundation awards full tuition stipends annually to full-time MTSU undergraduate women who are 23 years of age or older and who are preparing for careers in nontraditional fields for women. Anderson (no relation to June Anderson) is pursuing an undergraduate degree in accounting and is on course to graduate in May 2011. From there, she plans to enter graduate school at MTSU and earn a master’s degree in business administration. Davidson, a 43-year-old single woman majoring in construction management, says she believes she will be able to find employment with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers when she completes her degree in 2012. For more information, go to the foundation website at http://frank.mtsu.edu/~jsa/.

APRENDA CON ME--The University School of Nashville is hosting MTSU’s 2010 Summer Language Institute, where you can learn Spanish in a fun, low-stress environment. The methods employed are Total Physical Response (TPR) and Teaching Proficiency through Reading and Storytelling (TPRS). These methods mimic the way you learned your first language. Movement, games, songs and storytelling are all part of the instruction. Brian Roberts will teach Spanish I for ages 16 and up from July 19-23 at the University School and from Aug. 2-6 at the O’More School of Design in Franklin. Jason Fritze will teach Spanish II for ages 16 and up from July 19-23 at the University School. The cost for all language classes is $350 with a $20 materials fee due on the first day of class. Contact Dr. Shelley Thomas at 615-898-5757 or shthomas@mtsu.edu.

Wednesday, May 12, 2010

Wednesday, May 12, 2010

Today’s Response
Middle Tennessee State University

Improving with age

Christina Dawson of Murfreesboro and Shilo Rich-Johnson of Tullahoma are the winners of Enrichment Scholarships as Older Wiser Learners (OWLs), a student organization for nontraditional students. Dawson, the mother of a young son, majors in Spanish with minors in sociology and secondary education. Rich-Johnson, the mother of three children, majors in microbiology and minors in chemistry and criminology. Joni Maxwell, a nursing major from Murfreesboro, is the recipient of the Jane Nickell Taylor Scholarship. Dana LeGeune will receive the Joan Nickell Bailey Scholarship. LeGeune, the mother of two children and a Tullahoma resident, majors in business and minors in education. In addition, students from Murfreesboro, Woodbury, Rockvale, Antioch, La Vergne and Christiana are the recipients of 10 OWLs Academic Service scholarships.

To learn more about Older Wiser Learners, contact the Off-Campus Student Services office at 615-898-5989.

Adopt a vet

The Albert Gore Research Center is an official partner in the Library of Congress Veterans History Project. The center participates as part of its public service mission. Currently, the Gore Center has about 50 veterans of World War II and Korea on its list of those willing to be interviewed for the Veterans History Project at MTSU, but these vets are in their 80s and 90s. It is urgent that the Gore Center have funds in hand to record their stories in 2010. With each tax-deductible contribution of only $50, the Gore Center can fund one interview with a WWII, Korean War, Vietnam War, Persian Gulf War or Iraq/Afghanistan veteran, or a civilian who supported the war effort by working in war industries or volunteering for the USO, Red Cross or other support organizations. Your donation will pay for tapes and other supplies, transcription, permanent archiving and posting of the materials on a website.

For more information, go to http://gorecenter.mtsu.edu/adoptvet.hem.

Taking the interfering out of transferring

MTSU and Southwest Tennessee Community College in Memphis have signed a formal memorandum of understanding to streamline student transfers from Southwest to MTSU. Courses currently considered in the agreement are those transferable to the recording industry, business administration, education and aerospace programs at MTSU. Dr. Nathan L. Essex, president of STCC, says, “The obvious advantage is that our students are going to have increased access.” Dr. Sidney A. McPhee, MTSU president, says, “We are going to be looking at providing special scholarships for these students, connecting them to our Honors College (and) providing a better transition and taking the hassle out of the transfer process.”

Contact Tom Tozer in the MTSU Office of News and Public Affairs at 615-898-2919 or Brenda J. Rayner at STCC at 901-333-4247.

TR EXTRA

WORKING WOMEN--The June S. Anderson Foundation will present the foundation scholarships for the 2010-2011 academic year to Katherine Anderson of Manchester and Rhonda Davidson of Martin, at a luncheon at 12 p.m. on Friday, May 14, at the MTSU Foundation House, 324 W. Thompson Lane in Murfreesboro. The foundation awards full tuition stipends annually to full-time MTSU undergraduate women who are 23 years of age or older and who are preparing for careers in nontraditional fields for women. Anderson (no relation to June Anderson) is pursuing an undergraduate degree in accounting and is on course to graduate in May 2011. From there, she plans to enter graduate school at MTSU and earn a master’s degree in business administration. Davidson, a 43-year-old single woman majoring in construction management, says she believes she will be able to find employment with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers when she completes her degree in 2012. For more information, go to the foundation website at http://frank.mtsu.edu/~jsa/.

APRENDA CON ME--The University School of Nashville is hosting MTSU’s 2010 Summer Language Institute, where you can learn Spanish in a fun, low-stress environment. The methods employed are Total Physical Response (TPR) and Teaching Proficiency through Reading and Storytelling (TPRS). These methods mimic the way you learned your first language. Movement, games, songs and storytelling are all part of the instruction. Brian Roberts will teach Spanish I for ages 16 and up from July 19-23 at the University School and from Aug. 2-6 at the O’More School of Design in Franklin. Jason Fritze will teach Spanish II for ages 16 and up from July 19-23 at the University School. The cost for all language classes is $350 with a $20 materials fee due on the first day of class. Contact Dr. Shelley Thomas at 615-898-5757 or shthomas@mtsu.edu.

A FOREIGN AFFAIR--MTSU junior Aaron Shew will depart for Turkey around May 14 for study experiences that will enhance not only his education but his prestige and his portfolio. Shew, a double major in plant and soil science and international relations from Murfreesboro, will join students from other institutions in a conflict resolution course in Cyprus and Turkey at his own expense. Through June 9, Shew will question government diplomats on best practices for negotiating solutions to thorny issues between countries. From there, Shew will head back to Lucknow, India, where he studied in the summer of 2009 under a Critical Language Scholarship (CLS) from the U.S. Department of State, for extensive instruction in the Urdu language. His summer studies will be funded with another CLS. The 2010-2011 academic year is covered under a fully endowed fellowship from the American Institute of Indian Studies. For an interview with Shew, contact Gina Logue in the MTSU Office of News and Public Affairs at 615-898-5081 or gklogue@mtsu.edu.

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

Today’s Response
Middle Tennessee State University

Madame Justice Kagan?

President Obama has chosen Solicitor General Elena Kagan as his next nominee to the U.S. Supreme Court. Kagan, if confirmed by the Senate, would become the fourth woman in history on the high court and would bring the total number of women justices serving currently to three, the most ever at one time. The former dean of the Harvard Law School has no experience on the bench, but Dr. John Vile, dean of the University Honors College and Constitutional law scholar, says that’s not a dealbreaker. Vile says, “Academics have long argued as to whether Supreme Corut justices need prior judicial experience, but some of the nation’s most esteemed justices (including Chief Justices John Marshall and Earl Warren) had no such experience prior to being appointed to the Supreme Court.”

Contact Vile at 615-898-2596.
jvile@mtsu.edu

Blowing up in our faces?

Israeli Deputy Prime Minister Moshe Yaalon says the Israeli air force is primed for attacks on Iran, if necessary. Reuters reports that Yaalon told a conference of military officers and experts that the air force had acquired the expertise through attacks on guerrillas in Lebanon and in Palestinian territories. Some Americans think military action is the way to bring Iran around on the nuclear issue. Dr. Sean Foley, history, says, “Iran is the type of state that tends to bring out fears on both the left and the right (in America). Oftentimes, many on the left kind of treat Iran as the 51st ‘Red State’ in a lot of ways. In reality, it’s a lot more complicated issue. Bombing Iran, which a lot of people still want to call for, is a very dangerous option. The Iranians have multiple options they could do the next day. With anybody who advocates bombing Iran, the response is, ‘What happens the next day?’”

Contact Foley at 615-904-8294.
sfoley@mtsu.edu

“As you get older, it is harder to have heroes, but it is sort of necessary.”—Ernest Hemingway

Mark McGwire’s tear-stained admission in January 2010 that he used performance-enhancing drugs during his playing days with the St. Louis Cardinals was a blow to diehard, longtime Cards fans like Dr. Phil Oliver, philosophy, who grew up rooting for Redbirds players like Bob Gibson and Lou Brock. Oliver asks, “Were these guys really better heroes than the scandal-ridden Steroids Era players, McGwire and (Sammy) Sosa, et.al.? Or were we, are we—meaning we fans of many decades—just naïve? And does it matter? Can we appreciate athletic excellence for its own sake, on the field, without worrying about what kinds of persons, with what ‘enhancements,’ are wearing the uniforms? This mirrors an issue we raise in philosophy class: Does the character and the biography of the philosopher matter? Does it matter that Heidegger was a Nazi, that James was prone to depression, that Nietzsche had trouble relating to women?”

Contact Oliver at 615-898-2050.
poliver@mtsu.edu

TR EXTRA

WORKING WOMEN--The June S. Anderson Foundation will present the foundation scholarships for the 2010-2011 academic year to Katherine Anderson of Manchester and Rhonda Davidson of Martin, at a luncheon at 12 p.m. on Friday, May 14, at the MTSU Foundation House, 324 W. Thompson Lane in Murfreesboro. The foundation awards full tuition stipends annually to full-time MTSU undergraduate women who are 23 years of age or older and who are preparing for careers in nontraditional fields for women. Anderson (no relation to June Anderson) is pursuing an undergraduate degree in accounting and is on course to graduate in May 2011. From there, she plans to enter graduate school at MTSU and earn a master’s degree in business administration. Davidson, a 43-year-old single woman majoring in construction management, says she believes she will be able to find employment with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers when she completes her degree in 2012. For more information, go to the foundation website at http://frank.mtsu.edu/~jsa/.

APRENDA CON ME--The University School of Nashville is hosting MTSU’s 2010 Summer Language Institute, where you can learn Spanish in a fun, low-stress environment. The methods employed are Total Physical Response (TPR) and Teaching Proficiency through Reading and Storytelling (TPRS). These methods mimic the way you learned your first language. Movement, games, songs and storytelling are all part of the instruction. Brian Roberts will teach Spanish I for ages 16 and up from July 19-23 at the University School and from Aug. 2-6 at the O’More School of Design in Franklin. Jason Fritze will teach Spanish II for ages 16 and up from July 19-23 at the University School. The cost for all language classes is $350 with a $20 materials fee due on the first day of class. Contact Dr. Shelley Thomas at 615-898-5757 or shthomas@mtsu.edu.

A FOREIGN AFFAIR--MTSU junior Aaron Shew will depart for Turkey around May 14 for study experiences that will enhance not only his education but his prestige and his portfolio. Shew, a double major in plant and soil science and international relations from Murfreesboro, will join students from other institutions in a conflict resolution course in Cyprus and Turkey at his own expense. Through June 9, Shew will question government diplomats on best practices for negotiating solutions to thorny issues between countries. From there, Shew will head back to Lucknow, India, where he studied in the summer of 2009 under a Critical Language Scholarship (CLS) from the U.S. Department of State, for extensive instruction in the Urdu language. His summer studies will be funded with another CLS. The 2010-2011 academic year is covered under a fully endowed fellowship from the American Institute of Indian Studies. For an interview with Shew, contact Gina Logue in the MTSU Office of News and Public Affairs at 615-898-5081 or gklogue@mtsu.edu.