Wednesday, December 08, 2010

Wednesday, December 8, 2010

Today’s Response
Middle Tennessee State University

As faculty members prepare for the holiday season, “Today’s Response” will go on hiatus following this edition. “Today’s Response” will return on Monday, January 17, 2011.

Too much of a good thing

A panel of experts at the Institute of Medicine now says that people are taking more Vitamin D and calcium supplements than they need. In light of this new research, how should people alter their diets? Dr. Janet Colson, human sciences, says, “Moderation is the key to nutrition. For the last 15 years or so, some studies (many sponsored by calcium manufacturers) have suggested that older women need 1,500 milligrams of calcium a day, higher than the 1,200 milligrams recommended by the established Dietary Reference Intakes. It has been well-established for many years that excessive calcium may result in kidney stones, which are typically made of calcium oxalate.”

Contact Colson at 615-898-2091.
jcolson@mtsu.edu

Don’t know much about history

Children in Israel and Palestine will not get to read a book titled Learning Each Other’s Historical Narrative. Israeli and Palestinian educators designed the book together. Dr. Rami Shapiro, adjunct professor of religious studies and an ordained rabbi, laments this development. Shapiro writes, “Of course, the leaders on both sides fear both empathy and dialogue, and so both have banned the book from public high school curriculums. How sad. On the other hand, it does show that the leader(s) of both sides are not really on opposite sides at all. They are on the same side: the side of fear and hatred that keeps them in power. Just as the Israelites could not enter the Promised Land until almost all of the older generation passed away, peace may not come to the region until all those currently in power pass away.”

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

Stocking up

Do you expect the stock market to be higher 12 months from now, lower, or remain about the same? When this question was put to respondents to MTSU’s Middle Tennessee Consumer Confidence Index, only 10 percent expected the stock market to decline in value in the next 12 months. Almost half (46 percent) expect the stock market to stay relatively level for the next 12 months. Dr. Tim Graeff, director of MTSU’s Office of Consumer Research, says, “The fact that relatively few consumers expect a decline in the stock market over the next 12 months is a positive indicator that consumers also do not foresee a sharp decline in the value of their savings and investments. This can provide a level of comfort that can lead to increased spending.”

Contact Dr. Tim Graeff at 615-898-5124.
tgraeff@mtsu.edu

TR EXTRA

HAPPY HOLIDAYS--It’s time again for “Operation Christmas Care,” the project that sends holiday cheer to wounded warriors. The service, which was started in 2006 by Lee Ann Newton, executive aide for the Tennessee Mathematics, Science and Technology Education Center, has sent more than 20,000 Christmas cards to hospitalized military personnel. “Unfortunately, our soldiers’ individual support systems often dwindle after the life-threatening danger has passed,” says Norton, “and yet their painful daily regiment toward recovery continues. E-mails are nice, and they’re appreciated, but a colorful card or letter with a heartfelt message of support and encouragement can beam from the walls of their hospital rooms until they leave.” Contact Newton at 615-904-8573 or lnewton@mtsu.edu.

Tuesday, December 07, 2010

Tuesday, December 7, 2010

Today’s Response
Middle Tennessee State University

Taking the lead


The MTSU Center for Organizational and Human Resource Effectiveness (COHRE) is taking the Foundational Leadership Academy it created three years ago to help Rutherford County employees and offering it to private businesses and organizations. The Foundational Leadership Academy conducts five half-day sessions once a month with county workers who have leadership potential. Up to 12 trainees and two primary trainers provide both individual attention and cover the issues business leaders constantly encounter. Dr. Patrick McCarthy, director of COHRE, says the academy was designed to be practical, rigorous, hands-on and affordable, is quite adaptable to private sector circumstances and is applicable in both large and small businesses.

Contact COHRE at 615-217-2084.

The needle and the damage done

The Tennessee Supreme Court last week stayed the scheduled execution of Stephen Michael West so that a trial court could test the constitutionality of the state’s lethal injection method. In so doing, three other planned executions were stayed. The trial court must rule within 90 days of the high court’s decision. Dr. Amy Sayward, chair of the MTSU Department of History, is co-editor of Tennessee’s New Abolitionists, a collection of essays about the history of the anti-capital punishment movement in Tennessee. She writes, “Historically, Tennesseans have been very ambivalent about executions and, throughout history, they have moved to ensure that executions have been carried out as humanely as possible. This was evident in the state’s move to have hangings occur behind the walls of the state prison (1883) rather than on public gallows in the county seats, which was the practice before the 20th century.”

Contact Sayward at 615-898-2569.
asayward@mtsu.edu

Out of sync, out of sorts, out of money, out of patience

Are Tennessee consumers more or less optimistic than consumers nationwide? According to the latest Middle Tennessee Consumer Confidence Index, seven percent of respondents believe “Business conditions in the U.S. are good” compared with eight percent across the country. Thirty-five percent of Middle Tennesseans think “Six months from now, business conditions in the U.S. will be better.” That’s true of only 17 percent of Americans as a whole. Forty percent responding to the MTSU survey said “In 12 months, my personal financial situation (income) will be better,” but only 11 percent nationwide feel that way. And 29 percent of Middle Tennesseans think “Six months from now, there will be more job openings,” compared with 16 percent across America.

Contact Dr. Tim Graeff at 615-898-5124.
tgraeff@mtsu.edu

TR EXTRA

HAPPY HOLIDAYS--It’s time again for “Operation Christmas Care,” the project that sends holiday cheer to wounded warriors. The service, which was started in 2006 by Lee Ann Newton, executive aide for the Tennessee Mathematics, Science and Technology Education Center, has sent more than 20,000 Christmas cards to hospitalized military personnel. “Unfortunately, our soldiers’ individual support systems often dwindle after the life-threatening danger has passed,” says Norton, “and yet their painful daily regiment toward recovery continues. E-mails are nice, and they’re appreciated, but a colorful card or letter with a heartfelt message of support and encouragement can beam from the walls of their hospital rooms until they leave.” Contact Newton at 615-904-8573 or lnewton@mtsu.edu.

Monday, December 06, 2010

Monday, December 6, 2010

Today’s Response
Middle Tennessee State University

CamScam

The NCAA ruled last week that Auburn quarterback Cam Newton would be eligible to play in the SEC Championship Game (Auburn routed South Carolina 56-17 on Saturday on the strength of a tour de force performance by Newton.) since the association has no evidence that he or Auburn knew about his father’s efforts to shop his son around to schools in apparent violation of NCAA standards. However, the younger Newton, the lead contender for the Heisman Trophy, is not totally in the clear. The Mississippi Secretary of State’s office will question former Mississippi State player Kenny Rogers on Thursday, Dec. 9, about Rogers’ role as the alleged middleman in the scheme. Dr. Colby Jubenville, health and human performance, says, “Though he is young and mistake-prone, ignorance will not be considered a defense. If Cam wants to clear his name, it’s not up to Auburn, the head coach, the SEC, the NCAA or his dad. It’s up to Cam Newton to clear Cam Newton.”

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

The booby trap

School officials in several states are prohibiting students from wearing “I (Heart) Boobies!” bracelets to raise awareness of breast cancer. But David Hudson, adjunct political science professor and First Amendment Center scholar, says those school officials’ actions are unconstitutional. “The bracelets are entitled to the same free-speech protection as the black peace armbands that the U.S. Supreme Court ruled middle-school and high-school students in Des Moines had a First Amendment right to wear to school in Tinker v. Des Moines Independent Community School District (1969),” says Hudson. “The lesson of Tinker is that school officials can’t ban ‘booby’ bracelets simply because they don’t like them or fear that a few people might be made uncomfortable by them.”

Contact Hudson at 615-727-1342.
dhudson@fac.org

A penny saved is a penny burned.

How much of a hit have savings accounts in Tennessee taken due to the recession? You might be surprised to learn that 26 percent of respondents in the latest Middle Tennessee Consumer Confidence Index say they are saving more now than prior to the recession. However, 38 percent say they are saving less. Dr. Tim Graeff, director of MTSU’s Office of Consumer Research, says, “Consumers were also asked to look ahead and predict their level of saving after the current recession ends and the economy strengthens. More than half (54 percent) expect to save more of their income than they are currently saving. Very few (5 percent) expect to decrease their level of saving. This suggests that some consumers who would like to be able to save a greater amount of their income are currently unable to do so.”

Contact Graeff at 615-898-5124.
tgraeff@mtsu.edu

TR EXTRA

HAPPY HOLIDAYS--It’s time again for “Operation Christmas Care,” the project that sends holiday cheer to wounded warriors. The service, which was started in 2006 by Lee Ann Newton, executive aide for the Tennessee Mathematics, Science and Technology Education Center, has sent more than 20,000 Christmas cards to hospitalized military personnel. “Unfortunately, our soldiers’ individual support systems often dwindle after the life-threatening danger has passed,” says Norton, “and yet their painful daily regiment toward recovery continues. E-mails are nice, and they’re appreciated, but a colorful card or letter with a heartfelt message of support and encouragement can beam from the walls of their hospital rooms until they leave.” Contact Newton at 615-904-8573 or lnewton@mtsu.edu.

Wednesday, December 01, 2010

Wednesday, December 1

Today’s Response
Middle Tennessee State University

It’s all New Madrid’s fault!


Emergency management officials met in Nashville yesterday to determine how to allocate resources in the event of an earthquake. The New Madrid Seismic Zone, named for the New Madrid Fault, crosses five state lines. The New Madrid Fault poses the highest earthquake risk in the United States outside the West Coast, according to the U.S. Geological Society. Dr. Mark Abolins, geosciences, says, “The threat of earthquakes in the Mississippi River Valley and adjoining areas is very real. Something like the 1989 Loma Prieta, Cal. quake or the 1994 Northridge, Cal. quake (or even a far worse earthquake) could happen to Memphis and surrounding areas at any time. That part of the state has just been lucky—so far.” However, Abolins adds, “The threat of widespread devastation and mass casualties in Nashville and Murfreesboro is almost non-existent.”

Contact Abolins at 615-594-4210.
mabolins@mtsu.edu

An incumbent office-holder reduction plan

The deficit reduction commission led by former U.S. Sen. Alan Simpson and former Clinton Administration Chief-of-Staff Erskine Bowles released its final report today, Dec. 1. The full panel is slated to vote Friday, Dec. 3, on whether to approve it. The recommendations include raising the retirement age, cutting farm subsidies, capping discretionary spending and reducing tax rates. Dr. Martin Kennedy, economics and finance, says, “You can see why a commission was appointed. This is the stuff that costs elected officials votes. Better from their perspective to have to make an up-or-down vote and later argue to angry constituencies that they, too opposed cutting this or that, but had not opportunity to amend what the commission put forth.”

Contact Kennedy at 615-494-8679.
mdkenned@mtsu.edu

The one test you can’t afford to fail

Today, Dec. 1, is World AIDS Day as designated by the World Health Organization in 1988. A report released last week by UNAIDS indicates that HIV infections are going down in many of the most affected countries. Dr. Jo Edwards, holder of the Adams Chair of Excellence in Health Care Services at MTSU, says, “In the U.S., an estimated 1.1 million people are living with HIV and as many as one in five don’t know they are infected. About 55 percent of adults aged 18-64 have never been tested for HIV. Even among people at higher risk for HIV infection, 28 percent have never been tested. The CDC (Centers for Disease Control and Protection) recommends routine HIV testing in health care settings.”

Contact Edwards at 615-898-2905.
mjedward@mtsu.edu

TR EXTRA

EXPLORE THE WAR--After two excursions to the South Pacific to expose students to some of the critical sites of World War II, an MTSU historian prepares to embark on a tour of some of the pivotal sites of the European Theater of Operations for his “Warfare and Public Memory in Western Europe” class (HIST 3070). Dr. Derek Frisby, associate professor of history, will escort students across the continent May 19-June 3, 2011, in tracing the war’s “Great Crusade.” The 16-day tour will include an examination of Normandy; Bastogne; Dachau; Operation Market Garden, a campaign fought in Germany and the Netherlands; and the “Eagle’s Nest,” Nazi dictator Adolf Hitler’s retreat in the mountains above Berchtesgarden. Students also will follow the route of the 101st Airborne Division’s “Band of Brothers.” Tours of Omaha and Utah beaches, Arnhem and the “Battle of the Bulge” site are on the itinerary, as well as the Bayeaux Tapestry, Paris, Verdun and Waterloo. For more information, contact Frisby at 615-904-8097 or dfrisby@mtsu.edu. Financial aid is available. Apply as soon as possible. Contact the Office of Education Abroad and Student Exchange (MT Abroad) at 615-898-5179 or mtabroad@mtsu.edu.

TOTAL ECLIPSE OF THE FACULTY--The Pink Floyd tribute band “Us & Them” returns to The Blue Rooster on Murfreesboro’s Public Square Friday, Dec. 3, to perform the best-selling album “Dark Side of the Moon” and other Pink Floyd classics. “Us & Them” includes MTSU recording-industry professors Bill Crabtree, Cosette Collier and Dale Brown and computer information systems professor Amy Hennington as part of a 10-piece band. The event, which costs $9 per person, begins at 9:15 p.m. A portion of the proceeds will benefit scholarships for MTSU’s recording industry program. For more information, contact Steve Holeman at 615-995-6013 or steve@steveholeman.com.

SOMETHING IN THE AIR--MTSU’s Department of Aerospace will serve as host for the first National Conference on General Aviation Trends in China, set for today, Dec. 1, and tomorrow, Dec. 2, in the Donald McDonald Hangar inside the university’s Flight Operations Center at Murfreesboro Airport. “We’re extremely excited about this conference, as it is one of the first in the United States that will have members of one of the largest universities in China here to learn about U.S. general aviation,” says Dr. Wayne Dornan, chair of the department. “We have a distinguished list of U.S. speakers that will lend their expertise to the Chinese officials. … I am unaware of any such gathering that has taken place in the United States were high-ranking officials from both countries interact on aviation.” The conference is closed to the general public, but media are welcomed. Contact Randy Weiler in the MTSU Office of News and Public Affairs at 615-898-5616 or jweiler@mtsu.edu.

CANDY CANES AND LICORICE STICKS--The MTSU Clarinet Choir is slated to conduct a free, fun-filled Christmas concert at 6 p.m. tonight, Dec. 1, in Hinton Hall of the Wright Music Building on the MTSU campus. The tunes will include “Dance of the Shepherds,” “Eine Kleine Nachmusik,” “Deck the Halls,” “Up on the Rooftop,” “Carol of the Bells,” “Still, Still, Still,” “Trepak” from “The Nutcracker,” “Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas,” and “A Christmas Festival.” For more information, call 615-898-2493 or visit the “Concert Calendar” link at www.mtsumusic.com.

DON’T LET YOUR FELLOWSHIP SAIL WITHOUT YOU.--Qualified high-school seniors interested in applying for the Buchanan Fellowships at MTSU must meet a deadline of today, Dec. 1, in order to be considered. The fellowship pays full tuition (up to 16 hours a semester) and most fees for four years of eligibility as well as an annual book allowance of $1,000 and other perks such as early registration and study-abroad opportunities. Students interested in securing applications for Buchanan Fellowships should go online to mtsu.edu/honors/scholarships.html. The fellowships are limited to 20 students per year. The fellowship is named in honor of Dr. James M. Buchanan (Class of 1940), a Nobel Prize-winning alumnus. Contact Dr. John Vile, dean of the University Honors College, at 615-898-2596 or jvile@mtsu.edu.

HAPPY HOLIDAYS--It’s time again for “Operation Christmas Care,” the project that sends holiday cheer to wounded warriors. The service, which was started in 2006 by Lee Ann Newton, executive aide for the Tennessee Mathematics, Science and Technology Education Center, has sent more than 20,000 Christmas cards to hospitalized military personnel. “Unfortunately, our soldiers’ individual support systems often dwindle after the life-threatening danger has passed,” says Norton, “and yet their painful daily regiment toward recovery continues. E-mails are nice, and they’re appreciated, but a colorful card or letter with a heartfelt message of support and encouragement can beam from the walls of their hospital rooms until they leave.” Contact Newton at 615-904-8573 or lnewton@mtsu.edu.