The Record, Nov. 1, 2010, V19.09
Read the PDF version here!
Serving,
saluting MTSU's veterans: Magazine names university as
'military-friendly'
by Leslie Lynn
MTSU has landed in the top 15 percent of military-friendly schools
in the United States, according to a recent survey by
G.I. Jobs magazine.
Tennessee's largest undergraduate university currently
enrolls nearly 1,000 veterans. MTSU originally saw an increase in
veteran students after the first G.I. Bill was passed in 1945. The
higher-education veterans' population doubled after passage
of the Post 9-11 G.I. Bill, which allowed virtually unlimited funds
for a veteran pursuing further education, said Dr. Derek Frisby,
assistant professor of history and a veterans' adviser at
MTSU.
MTSU's Military Center, established in 2009, is a major
reason for the university's top ranking in the
magazine's Military-Friendly Schools 2011 List.

Considered a "one-stop shop"; in the University College
for veteran students, its services help soldiers recall how to be
students and to make the transition into the classroom. The center
provides a support structure for veteran and military students and
aims to create a positive and successful experience at MTSU, said
Cathy Delametter, Military Center coordinator.
Some services offered to students are readjustment counseling,
career direction, the Blue Raider American Veteran Organization or
B.R.A.V.O., academic advising, assessment of military credit and
processing educational benefits.
Veterans can choose degrees that maximize their specialized
training. Students may choose beginning classes through veteran
learning communities, which Delametter said can give them a more
comfortable classroom setting and may increase their potential for
success.
"We process the G.I. educational benefits and work very
organized so that no one is forgotten in the filing process,";
said Veterans Affairs Coordinator Ray Howell, who works in
MTSU's Records Office. "We never handle paperwork
twice.";
Howell's office even contacts veteran students if they have
not confirmed their classes or paid fees by the purge date so they
don't have to go through the frustration of signing up for
classes again.
Delametter, who also is a member of the university's Military
Issues Committee, works with the students on the adult
degree-completion program.
"This is an appealing option for many family-oriented
students,"; Delametter said, explaining that veteran students
are placed with veteran advisers to help smooth the transition
process.
Veterans also can get involved in B.R.A.V.O., a student-run
organization providing veterans' services on campus.
Frisby said veteran students complete their degrees at a slightly
higher and faster rate than nonveterans, but he added that veterans
also have a higher dropout rate, possibly because of the demands of
their family lives.
"The high caliber of maturity in the military brings students
with experiences, diversity, leadership and different
perspectives,"; Frisby said.
The future of MTSU's Military Center depends on a pending
grant to fund a director's position and an adviser. For more
information, contact Delametter at
cdelamet@mtsu.edu or 615-494-8952, or visit
www.mtsu.edu/military
.
>>Top of Page
Nov. 13 planned as
day of Armed Services events
from Staff Reports
World War II veteran Charles A. Jones of McMinnville will be the
recipient of the 21st annual Joe Nunley Award on Saturday, Nov. 13,
at MTSU.
The presentation to Jones will be made during pregame picnic
festivities as part of the 29th annual Salute to Armed
Services/Veterans Day activities, said Maj. Chuck Giles, assistant
professor of military science. The events are a prelude to
MTSU's 2:30 p.m. Sun Belt Conference game against North
Texas.
Along with their family members, veterans and active-duty military
personnel from the Army, Navy, Air Force, Marines and Coast Guard
are welcome to participate, Giles said.
A Veterans' Memorial Service will be held outside the Tom H.
Jackson Building starting at 11:30 a.m. The catered picnic will
start at noon outside the Rose and Emmett Kennon Hall of Fame, and
the Nunley Award presentation will begin at 1 p.m. In case of
inclement weather, activities will be moved indoors.
Jones, born in 1923, is a native of McMinnville. He graduated from
McMinnville High School and attended Tennessee Technological
University in Cookeville.
Inducted into the U.S. Army at age 20 in 1943, Jones served until
December 1945, said Harriett L. Howard, a former nurse and veteran
and recipient of the Nunley Award in 1999. Jones served in the 88th
Infantry Division, known as the Blue Devils, which fought from
North Africa to Italy and to the Brenner Pass in Austria.
After the war, Jones was employed by First National Bank of
McMinnville for more than 20 years. In 1965, Jones was elected
state adjutant-quartermaster for the Veterans of Foreign Wars,
Department of Tennessee. In this role, he accounted for funds of
142 VFW posts from Kingsport to Memphis and served his fellow
veterans with distinction until retiring in 1988, Howard said.
Sixteen alumni officers also have been invited to be special guests
of university President Sidney A. McPhee and his wife, Liz, for the
day's events.
MT Athletics and the Department of Military Science are
collaborating on a number of other activities, including a possible
flyover by either National Guard or Air Force planes. Free game
tickets are being provided for veterans, active-duty personnel and
their families, and MTSU ROTC cadets will lead the veterans onto
Jones Field when the Band of Blue plays their branch's
official song during the patriotic halftime salute.
The Marine Corps once again will collect new toy donations at the
gate in the annual Toys for Tots drive.
Sponsors include State Farm Insurance, Barrett Firearms, the
National Guard and Dollar General.
For more information, contact Giles at 615-898-2470 or Brad Keen,
athletics marketing and promotions assistant director, at
615-494-7825.
The 16 alumni officers include retired Brig. Gens. Patrick W.
Harrison (Class of '51), Kenneth E. Wallace ('54),
Edward N. Fletcher ('55), Noah Daniel ('59), James P.
O'Neal ('69), Leslie L. Fuller ('73), Stan Lillie
('76) and Robert D. Ogg Jr. ('78); retired Lt. Gens.
George Stotser ('56) and Horace "Pete"; Taylor
('60); and retired Maj. Gens. Thomas D. Farmer ('58),
Charles R. Henry ('59) and James Myles ('74).
Active-duty Brig. Gens. William N. Phillips ('76), Max Haston
('79) and James B. Burton ('83) also are among those
invited to attend.
>>Top of Page
Campus can 'bleed
blue' to beat WKU, save lives
MTSU and Director of Athletics Chris Massaro have challenged
Western Kentucky University to a blood-donation drive to see whose
fans will lend a hand and hold out an arm.
The campaign, "Bleed Blue to Beat WKU,"; will be held
Nov. 15-18 leading up to the football game between the two schools
on Saturday, Nov. 20. Both universities have partnered with the
American Red Cross and plan to make this an annual event before the
MTSU-WKU gridiron clash.
The winner of the blood-drive challenge will be announced at
halftime of the Nov. 20 game in Bowling Green, Ky.
"This is an excellent opportunity to help the community and
save lives at the same time. It is even better when you can make it
a competition against your biggest rival,"; Massaro said.
"I hope Middle Tennessee and Western Kentucky can make this
event an annual success. I encourage all Blue Raider fans to come
help us with this noble cause.";

To be counted in the competition, all MTSU blood donations must be
collected at the Student Health Wellness and Recreation Center.
MTSU student-athletes, student ambassadors, fraternities and
sororities will check in donors and hand out juice and cookies
after donations have been made.
Donors must be 17 or older, weigh at least 110 pounds and be in
general good health. They also must provide identification. Blood
donors may park in the gravel lot on MTSU Boulevard or at the
Recreation Center.
Appointments aren't required, but donors can make an
appointment to donate by visiting
www.redcrossblood.org
, clicking on the dark-blue "Make a Blood Donation
Appointment"; box on the right and entering the sponsor code
of MTSU19. Appointments may be made until Sunday, Nov. 14, the day
before the competition begins.
The donation schedule is noon to 6 p.m. Monday, Nov. 15, and
Wednesday, Nov. 17; Tuesday, Nov. 16, 9 a.m.-7 p.m.; and 9
a.m.-6 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 18,
>>Top of Page
In Brief: RAD classes are
back!
A series of free Rape Aggression Defense classes will be offered
every Thursday through Dec. 2 from 6 to 8 p.m. in the MTSU Police
training room, 1412 E. Main St. The RAD class is open to all female
MTSU students, faculty and staff and the general public. Enrollment
is limited; for more information or to enroll, call MTSU RAD
Instructor David Smith at 615-692-2424.
>>Top of Page
For the Record:
Tanzania trip is unforgettable for senior ROTC cadet
by Erika Ortega
This past summer, I returned home from Tanzania, Africa, where I
volunteered for three weeks with 25 other cadets from schools all
over the nation, all paid by university Reserve Officer Training
Corps groups.
I saw a side of the world that maybe a quarter of Americans, if
that many, will ever experience. My volunteer work consisted of
teaching little children, ages 5 to 7, subjects such as math and
English and, most importantly, nursery rhymes.
Along with teaching, we were given opportunities to visit places
like the Ngorongoro Crater, The Serengeti ecosystem and
geographical region in northwest Tanzania, and the villages of the
ancient Masai tribe.
Let me tell you, seeing the Serengeti and the Ngorongoro Crater
live puts National Geographic to shame! Having been to these places
that are said to be "great"; and
"fantastic,"; I have learned that such adjectives are an
understatement. The sights were breathtaking.
Most people would be terrified to travel to Africa, but I saw this
as an opportunity for adventure and a new perspective. Best part of
the trip: It was free!
I couldn't explain in one article how magnificent this
country is and the amount of generosity I was shown by their
people, but I can say that I think about that place every day,
wondering what will be next for the Tanzanians.
Being in that country gave me the feeling that I had walked through
a time machine and landed where there were no washers and dryers,
no clean water and other luxuries we see as necessities, and I
think of how far the United States has come. I am and always will
be extremely grateful for the chance to have seen in person what I
have always seen on television.
Erika Ortega, 21, of Clarksville, Tenn., is president and
captain of the MTSU women's rugby team and an MS IV, or
senior military science, cadet. She plans to graduate in May 2011
with a global-studies degree and receive her commission. Because
her father, William, served in the military, she has been to
numerous countries, including Japan and Germany.
LEARNING AND LAUGHING—MTSU senior Erika Ortega, center right,
is joined by attentive Tanzanian children as she teaches math,
English and nursery rhymes during her summer 2010 volunteer trip to
the central east African nation.
photo courtesy of Erika Ortega
>>Top of Page
Chinese Film
Festival under way
MTSU's Sunday Night Chinese Film Festival is returning for
the fall semester with cinema guaranteed to intrigue, entertain and
educate, organizers say.
All movies in the series have English subtitles and are free and
open to the public.
Co-sponsored by the College of Mass Communication and the Confucius
Institute, the festival, now in its 11th semester, kicked off Oct.
24 and continues on Sunday, Nov. 7, with "Mountain
Patrol,"; the 2004 true story of volunteer rangers fighting to
save the endangered Tibetan antelope from a band of ruthless
poachers in the massive Kekexili wildlife reserve.

On Sunday, Nov. 14, "Riding Alone for Thousands of
Miles"; is the feature, directed by Yimou Zhang and telling
the 2005 tale of a Japanese fisherman battling language barriers
and government red tape to complete his dying son's
unfinished documentary.
And on Sunday, Nov. 21, the festival's fall 2010 semester
will conclude with "Go Lala Go!";, a 2010 romantic
comedy by actress/director/writer Xu Jinglei about a white-collar
worker's joys and pains as she grows from an office rookie
into a human resources manager.
Each movie will begin promptly at 6 p.m. in COMM 103. Following
each movie, Liu Jue, a master's degree candidate in the
College of Mass Communication, will lead a question-and-answer
session.

Founded in 2004, the Confucius Institute is a nonprofit
organization established to strengthen educational cooperation
between China and other countries TheConfucius Institute at
MTSU was established in partnership with Hangzhou Normal University
of China with thesponsorship and authorization ofthe
Office of Chinese Language Council International under the Chinese
Ministry of Education.
For more information about the film festival, call the Confucius
Institute at 615-494-8696 or Dr. Robert Spires, professor of
electronic media communication, at 615-898-2217.
>>Top of Page
Sign up for Breckenridge ski
trip
Have you been dreaming of a white Christmas? Sign up by Friday,
Nov. 19, for a Dec. 18-23 Skiing and Snowboarding Trip to
Breckenridge, Colo., with Campus Recreation.
This trip to Colorado's premiere resort will cost $825 for
each student, $850 for faculty and staff and $875 for each guest,
all with airfare included. If you have your own transportation, the
cost is $485 each for students, $510 for faculty and staff and $535
for guests.
Get your snowshoes on and don't miss out on this
once-in-a-lifetime experience! If you are not an experienced skier
or snowboarder, don't worry; instruction is available at the
resort.
For more information about the Skiing and Snowboarding Trip to
Breckenridge, contact Josh Stone at 615-898-2104 or visit
www.mtsu.edu/camprec
.
>>Top of Page
Distinguished Lecture deadline is
Nov. 19
The deadline to submit applications for money from MTSU's
Distinguished Lecture Fund for spring 2011 speakers is Friday, Nov.
19.
The Distinguished Lecture Committee seeks to promote appearances by
speakers who focus on regional, national and global issues in a
variety of fields. Through the Distinguished Lecture Fund, the
committee supports academic and other departments that wish to
bring recognized experts to the MTSU campus.
Preference will be given to funding visits from well-known speakers
who can bring educational excellence to campus. Speakers may
include authors, lecturers, politicians and other relevant
individuals. Programs generally should be open to students,
faculty, staff and community members without charge.
Apply online at
www.mtsu.edu/nsfp/fund_nsfp.shtml
. Applicants will receive an e-mail confirmation from
committee member Gina Poff within three working days, and the
Distinguished Lectures Committee will meet shortly after the
deadline to review the applications for funding.
For more information, visit the website or contact Poff via e-mail
at
ghpoff@mtsu.edu.
>>Top of Page
Make a
big blue difference by giving this year
The MTSU Employee Charitable Giving Campaign is now under way in
support of several local charities, said Dr. Gloria Bonner,
campaign chair.
"Make a Big Blue Difference" is the 2010 theme, and the goal is to
receive at least $85,000 in pledges this year. Pledge forms must be
turned in by Tuesday, Nov. 30.
With slightly more than 2,200 employees at MTSU, this goal can be
easily attained if each employee pledges $40 per year or just $3.33
per month. Brown-bagging your lunch for one workday a month can
help you make that simple gift!
"The need continues and gets greater from those who benefit
from our giving,"; MTSU President Sidney A. McPhee said.
"There are challenges every year, but we always step up to
meet them. What you give doesn't have to be a large gift;
just a dollar makes a difference in the lives of the people we
help.";

Gifts may be designated to any charitable organization from a list
of nine independent charities and three federated charitable
organizations, including Community Health Charities, Community
Shares and the local United Way.
The payroll-deduction option is provided and is a cost-effective
way of making a gift. Employees also have the option of writing a
personal check, made payable to "MTSU Employee Giving Campaign," as
a one-time payment method.
All campaign material, including the printable pledge form, is
online at
www.mtsu.edu/givemtsu
.
Submit pledge forms to your division's team captain:
- Academic Affairs—Dr. Hilary Stallings,
hstallin@mtsu.edu, MTSU Box 546 or 615-898-5039;
- Business and Finance—Janice Benson,
benson@mtsu.edu, Cope Administration Building Room 119
or 615-898-2852;
- Development and University Relations—Belinda Young,
byoung@mtsu.edu, Box 109 or 615-898-5014;
- Information Technology Division—Cassie Leyhew,
cleyhew@mtsu.edu, CAB 217 or 615-898-5570; or
- Student Affairs, Enrollment and Academic Services—Pat
Grimes,
pgrimes@mtsu.edu, Box 196 or 615-898-5342.
Team captains should submit all forms to Dr. Rosemary Owens in CAB
111 by Nov. 30, so employees should sign and submit their pledge
forms to their captains before that date.
For more information, contact Allison McGoffin at 615-898-2953.
>>Top of Page
Happy birthday!
SEE HOW WE'VE GROWN—MTSU Human Sciences Professor Nancy
Oxford, left, shows student work to State Sens. Bill Ketron,
center, and Jim Tracy during a tour of the Ellington Human Sciences
Building during an open house celebrating "100 Years of Human
Sciences"; on Oct. 14. The event also featured interactive
cooking demonstrations, student displays and a pumpkin-carving
contest. Students majoring in human sciences may choose emphases in
textiles, merchandising and design, family and consumer studies,
nutrition and food sciences, and interior design.Watch video from
the event by clicking the "Human Sciences Open House" link on the
upper-right column of this page.
MTSU Photographic Services photo by Andy Heidt
>>Top of Page
Counterinsurgency tactics by America are
speaker's topic
Dr. Conrad C. Crane, director of the U.S. Army Military History
Institute, will speak at MTSU on Tuesday, Nov. 2, on
"America's Counterinsurgency War: Iraq and
Afghanistan.";
Crane's address is scheduled to begin at 7 p.m. in the State
Farm Lecture Hall of MTSU's Business and Aerospace Building
(Room S102). The lecture is free and open to the public and will be
followed by a question-and-answer period.

Crane is the lead author of the current Army-U.S. Marine Corps
counterinsurgency field manual, released in December 2006. When the
manual was released, Crane told Military.com that warring nations
will continue resorting to insurgencies because they cannot take on
the U.S. military in conventional warfare. "Enemies will make
us fight these kinds of wars until we get them right,"; Crane
said. "Then they'll switch.";
A published author and veteran of 26 years of military service,
including nine years as a professor of history at the U.S. Military
Academy at West Point, Crane holds a bachelor's degree from
West Point and master's and doctoral degrees from Stanford
University.
Crane's lecture is part of the MTSU Distinguished Lecture
Series and is presented under the joint sponsorship of the
Departments of History and Political Science, the College of
Liberal Arts and the Society for Military History.
For more information about the lecture, contact Dr. Robert Hunt,
professor of history at MTSU, at 615-898-2536.
>>Top of Page
Associate VP
for marketing, communications named
Andrew Oppmann, president and publisher of
The Daily News Journal in Murfreesboro, will become
associate vice president of marketing and communications at MTSU,
President Sidney A. McPhee announced.
Oppmann will assume his new role in early November.
"We're pleased to have found a strong communicator with
national experience—but also so close to home—to lead
our efforts,"; McPhee said.

Oppmann's journalism career spans 25 years. He has been with
the
DNJ since 2007 and also served as a vice president at
The Tennessean. In 2008, he added
The Leaf-Chronicle in Clarksville to his responsibilities.
That same year, Gannett honored Oppmann as one of its top three
publishers for his work in Murfreesboro and Clarksville.
"It's been a wonderful ride, filled with great
memories, interesting people and daily doses of adrenaline,";
Oppmann said. "But I'm just as excited to begin this
new chapter of my life in service to an institution so vital to all
of Tennessee.";
The new associate vice president will oversee communications and
marketing as well as printing, publications and graphics, and Web
operations.
"We are excited to have Andrew on board,"; said Joe
Bales, vice president for the Division of Development and
University Relations. "This was a very competitive search,
and we feel very fortunate to have attracted someone with
Andrew's unique skill set.";
During Oppmann's tenure, the
DNJ received top honors from Gannett and the Tennessee
Press Association for its coverage of the 2009 Good Friday
tornadoes that struck Murfreesboro. He led efforts to build a
stronger multimedia operation at the 162-year-old newspaper, and
his formation of the DNJ Media Group expanded digital
communications and created several audience-targeted websites.
He is chairman-elect of the United Way of Rutherford and Cannon
Counties and led its $2.3 million fundraising effort in 2009.
Oppmann also serves on the advisory board for MTSU's College
of Mass Communication and on the board of the TPA, and he is a vice
president of the Middle Tennessee Council of the Boy Scouts of
America.
Oppmann, a University of Kentucky graduate and Hopkinsville, Ky.,
native, lives in Murfreesboro with his wife, Elise, and their three
daughters, Emily, 11; Sarah, 9; and Rachel. 5.
>>Top of Page
Honors
College publications earn national acclaim
Two University Honors College publications,
Honors Edition and
Collage: A Journal of Creative Expression, received awards
in September, Dean John Vile said.
Honors Edition, the Honors College newsletter/magazine,
earned second place in the National Collegiate Honors Council
Publications Board Newsletter Contest.
Honors Edition, which was one of 12 entries in the
Faculty/ Administrator/Student Published category, is a two-color
magazine. Regular features include honors faculty news and
profiles; student study-abroad stories, theses, student news,
Buchanan Fellowship updates and scholarship and award winners; and
alumni news and profiles. Marsha Powers serves as
Honors Edition editor.
Collage, the arts and literary magazine of the Honors
College, received an overall Gold Medalist Certificate, the highest
rating given by the Columbia Scholastic Press Association, a
program affiliated with the Graduate School of Journalism at
Columbia University in New York City.

The fall 2009 and spring 2010 issues of
Collage also received the Gold Medalist Certificate. The
magazine received All-Columbian Honors for special merit in the
organization and design categories. All-Columbian Honors are given
only when a publication is in the 95th percentile or higher in one
or more of three categories.
May 2010 honors graduate Jasmine Gray, who was selected for the
USA Today All-USA College Academic First Team, was editor
of the fall 2009 and spring 2010 issues of
Collage. Jennifer Johnson was assistant editor, and art
majors Danny McClain and Nathan Henris designed the fall and spring
issues.
Vile noted that honors publications continue to underscore the
excellence of MTSU's programs and that Powers has done an
extraordinary job supervising the publications. He added that the
college soon will be publishing
Scientia et Humanitas, a journal of undergraduate
research.
>>Top of Page
Students will walk
through WWII history next summer
by Gina K. Logue
After two excursions to the South Pacific to expose students to
some of the critical sites of World War II, an MTSU historian is
preparing 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.
Dr. Derek Frisby, an associate professor of history, will escort
students across the continent May 19-June 3, 2011, in tracing the
war's "Great Crusade"; for HIST 3070. The 16-day
tour will include an examination of Normandy, Bastogne and Dachau
as well as 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 Bayeux Tapestry, Paris, Verdun
and Waterloo.

"Being in Europe and so close to many other historical sites,
we're able to sprinkle in a broader type of conflict,";
says Frisby, a retired U.S. Marine and a veteran of Operations
Desert Shield and Desert Storm.
Frisby says he anticipates that a diverse mix of students will
accompany him on this study-abroad experience, including pre-law
and interior-design majors joining the expected history majors.
Students who went to Iwo Jima, Okinawa and Pelilieu with Frisby two
summers ago, while benefitting educationally, endured a grueling
physical experience marked by scorching heat, crawling through
caves, battling insects and discovering human remains and
explosives. He believes closer proximity to traditional Western
amenities will make the European excursion more attractive.
"We've begun to recruit some people who've never
seen the ocean before and yet are motivated enough by this trip to
go with us to Europe,"; Frisby says. "I think
we've got a much broader range of students lined up for the
European trip.";
Another difference in the Asian and European journeys is the
educational emphasis. Instead of just analyzing individual battles,
Frisby says students will be able to look at the fighting in the
larger context of a campaign and to dissect the nature and culture
of warfare itself, in addition to studying the way today's
Europeans frame the conflict for public consumption.
"Are they geared more toward American tourists?"; Frisby
says his students will be asking. "Are they geared to a
European perspective? How do the Europeans promote this as a
tourist industry?";
Frisby, who has performed painstaking research for MTSU's
Veterans Memorial Committee on students and employees who perished
in military conflict, plans to visit the sites of some fallen MTSU
alumni, including Robert J. Sarvis ('41). A Canadian attached
to the U.S. Army Air Corps in Europe, Sarvis was killed on July 25,
1944, when his B-25 bomber reportedly was strafed by a German
fighter near Carquebut, France.
"The village there has found wreckage over the years,
including the remains of Robert Sarvis,"; Frisby says.
"So even today, that incident continues to play a role in
that village's collective memory.";
Scholarships for up to 50 percent of the program cost will be
available through the MTSU Office of Education Abroad and Student
Exchange. Pell Grants and other financial aid also may be
available, and Honors College students may be eligible for
additional scholarships or grants.
MTSU alumni, history buffs and other interested people also may
join Frisby's group, but the course is limited to 20 people.
A 10 percent discount is available for those who make their final
payment before Jan. 20, 2011.
For more information, contact Frisby at 615-904-8097 or
dfrisby@mtsu.edu. To learn more about study-abroad
opportunities, contact the Office of Education Abroad and Student
Exchange (MT Abroad) at 615-898-5179 or
mtabroad@mtsu.edu.
>>Top of Page
Alumna Minter aims
to provide 'driven' lecture
Alumna Freneka F. Minter will return to MTSU Thursday, Nov. 4, for
a special lecture, an event organizer said.
Her talk, "DRIVEN—Motivated by Something,"; will
begin at 7 p.m. in Wiser-Patten Science Hall Room 102. It is free
and open to all students, faculty, staff and the public.

Minter's presentation, part of MTSU's Distinguished
Lecture Series, will be of particular interest to Women in Science,
Technology, Engineering and Math participants.
The Murfreesboro native now works for Oak Ridge Associated
Universities as a health-education specialist in the Health
Communications and Technical Training Department's Health and
Safety Training Group.
Minter's previous experience includes the Tennessee
Department of Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities'
Division for Alcohol and Drug Abuse and MTSU's Center for
Health and Human Services as well as work with local, state and
federal agencies on alcohol, tobacco and other drug-prevention
efforts and cancer, heart-disease and stroke prevention. Her
master's degree in health, physical education and recreation
and bachelor's degree in chemistry are from MTSU.
For more information, contact Dr. Judith Iriarte-Gross, chemistry
professor and WISTEM Center director, at 615-904-8253 or
jiriarte@mtsu.edu.
>>Top of Page
Helping hands
OFFERING GUIDANCE—MTSU student nurses helped emergency
personnel and staffers at Middle Tennessee Medical Center transfer
more than 100 patients Oct. 2 to its new facility on Medical Center
Parkway from the 83-year-old hospital at Bell and North Highland
Streets. Seniors Bethany Powell, right, and Whitney Cottingham,
center right, help EMT Shelby Stewart and MTMC surgical services
nurse Elaine Gregory guide a patient's gurney into the new
hospital.
photo courtesy Titus Bartos/Made in Murfreesboro
Photography
>>Top of Page
'New Muslim
Cool' explores Islam through hip-hop
by Gina K. Logue
Journalist, activist and political analyst Bakari Kitwana will lead
a town hall meeting on the intersection of Islam, hip-hop and
identity among a new generation of American youth Wednesday, Nov.
10, in Room 221 of MTSU's Learning Resources Center.
The panel discussion and viewing of the documentary "The New
Muslim Cool"; will begin at 7 p.m.
The 2009 film, which has been screened at the Sundance Film
Festival and aired nationally on the Public Broadcasting System,
follows Puerto Rican rapper Hamza Perez as he steers away from his
former life as a drug dealer and embraces Islam.
As he rebuilt his life with a message of faith through hip-hop
music, the FBI raided Perez's mosque, challenging him to
embark on an even deeper exploration of his religion, profiling,
tolerance and American identity.

"New Muslim Cool"; was an Official Selection of the
Rooftop Film Festival and Lincoln Center Independents Night and the
winner of the Freedom Award at the Al Jazeera International Film
Festival.
Following the screening, Kitwana will moderate an interactive panel
discussion about the film with documentary subject Perez and
attorney Nura Maznavi of Muslim Advocates, a San Francisco-based
nonprofit sister organization of the National Association of Muslim
Lawyers and counsel for its Program to Combat Racial and Religious
Profiling.
Perez is an artist, community activist and educator who works for a
national nonprofit organization as a youth and jail counselor and
as the vice principal of a private Islamic elementary school. He
performs with his brother, Juan Suliman Perez, as part of the
hip-hop group M-Team and the interfaith poetry project Crossing
Limits.
Kitwana is senior media fellow at The Jamestown Project, a think
tank based at Harvard University Law School, and CEO of Rap
Sessions: Community Dialogues on Hip-Hop, which conducts town hall
meetings around the country on issues facing the hip-hop
generation.
The author of four books, Kitwana's most recent offering is
this year's
Hip-Hop Activism in the Obama Era (Third World Press). He
holds a bachelor's degree and master's degrees in
English and education from the University of Rochester.
This event is free and open to the public. It is co-sponsored by
the Center for Popular Music, the MTSU Department of History, the
Office of Intercultural and Diversity Affairs, the MTSU School of
Music and Student Programming.
For more information, contact Dr. Felicia Miyakawa at 615-904-8043
or
miyakawa@mtsu.edu.
>>Top of Page
Ensuring more scholars
INSURANCE SCHOLARSHIPS—MTSU professor Dr. Ken Hollman,
center, and two senior finance majors accept a $15,000 scholarship
donation from representatives of the Cumberland Chapter of RIMS,
the Risk and Insurance Management Society. The scholarships of
$1,500 each will serve 10 students in the Martin Chair of Insurance
program. Lori Jackson, second from left, of Auburntown and Patrick
Basile, far right, of Hendersonville are two of the recipients.
Joining the students and Hollman, who is the Martin Chair of
Insurance chairholder, for the check presentation are Cumberland
RIMS chapter participants David Dixon, Kevin Gabhart, Brian Spears
and Steve Heckle.
photo submitted
>>Top of Page
People
Around Campus: Senior's display seeks, shares cultural
heritage
by Gina K. Logue and Edgard Izaguirre
Laurence Tumpag, a Jackson, Tenn., native and a senior majoring in
social work, has been on a mission to embrace his Filipino heritage
and share it with his fellow students.
"The Filipino culture was first exposed to Americans in the
1904 World's Fair in St. Louis,"; Tumpag says.
Unfortunately, he adds, the people who participated in the event
were presented inhumanely, in human "zoos,"; and
subjected to harsh conditions and treatment, resulting in many
deaths.
In hopes of raising awareness of the Filipino culture, Tumpag has
set up a rotating display of Filipino ethnographic wares in Peck
Hall.

These dolls "represent the many tribes that existed and still
exist in the Philippines today,"; says Tumpag, adding that his
display also is in memory of his ancestors. Most importantly, he
says, the dolls are being used to represent the Filipino culture in
a positive light. (October is Filipino American Heritage Month.)
Tumpag, who is an American citizen, says he began collecting
Filipino cultural items such as ethnographic dolls as a means to
better understand and reconnect with his Filipino heritage. He felt
he had become estranged from his culture by living in the United
States, especially in the South.
Tumpag asked his family members for some items, bought others
online and began doing research to prepare for his display.
The Philippines, a Southeast Asian nation located in the western
Pacific Ocean, is made up of more than 7,000 islands. All of the
country's indigenous tribes originated from a single area and
eventually spread to islands, mountains and lowland areas. Water
separated most tribes, leading to change in dialects, cultural
traditions and beliefs.

Throughout the history of the Philippines, Tumpag explains, Spain,
the United States and other nations have colonized or occupied the
country. Also, several religions such as Islam and Christianity
have influenced different tribes in the country, making it the
diverse nation that it is today. A consequence to this rich
diversity, however, has been infighting and bloodshed.
Nevertheless, he says, the people of the Philippines continue to
strive toward a movement that promotes peace, co-existence and
unity.
As a social-work major, Tumpag says he feels it's his passion
and duty to advocate for the rights of all disenfranchised
individuals. As a history minor, he's also found great value
in and appreciation for the lessons humanity has taught us.
EDUCATIONAL DISPLAY—Dolls from the Philippines, reflecting
MTSU senior Laurence Tumpag's cultural heritage, are on
rotating display in Peck Hall.
photo submitted
>>Top of Page
Faculty/Staff
Update
Conferences
Lorie Krauss (social work) provided ethics
training for the Upper Cumberland Council for the Tennessee
Commission on Children and Youth at its annual networking
conference Sept. 17 at Nashville State Community College's
Cookeville campus.
Events
MTSU professors participating in the Southern Festival of Books in
Nashville Oct. 8-10 included
Dr. David Pierce (English), who has published two
successful children's books with his wife, comedian Chonda
Pierce, and read from his book
Don't Let Me Go: What My Daughter Taught Me About the
Journey Every Parent Must Make; and
Dr. Amy Sayward (history), author of two previous
books on economic development, who read from her new book,
Tennessee's New Abolitionists: The Fight to End the Death
Penalty in the Volunteer State, co-edited with Dr. Margaret
Vandiver (University of Memphis).
Dr. Reza Ordoubadian (English), who retired from
MTSU in 1989, read from
Sufi and Mystical Poems of Abu Sa'id, An 11th Century
Persian Poet and Divine, one of his five books, at the event.
Media
Dr. Mark Anshel (health and human performance) was
interviewed for the "Fitness Feature"; in the November
issue of
Self magazine. He answered the question "Do men
worry less than women about what others think of their
bodies?"; and discussed "body self-image"; and
"social physique anxiety.";
Drs. Ken Blake and
Jason Reineke (journalism, MTSU Poll) were guests
on "OpenLine"; on NewsChannel5+ Oct. 14. Blake and
Reineke also appeared on "This Week with Bob Mueller";
on WKRN-TV Oct. 17. This fall's MTSU Poll measured
Tennesseans' attitudes toward Muslims, the Tennessee
governor's race, the Tea Party movement and gun laws and
ownership.
Dr. Mark Frame's (psychology) research on
men and the glass ceiling is source material for a blog
posted—along with a mention of MTSU—on the
Harvard Business Review website.
Dr. Andrew Owusu (health and human performance)
was interviewed about bullying in African educational institutions
by Jackson Mvunganyi for the program "Up Front"; on the
Voice of America.
Publications
Dr. Wandi Ding (mathematical sciences) and Dr.
Suzanne Lenhart (University of Tennessee-Knoxville) published
"An Introduction to Optimal Control for Discrete Models with
an Application to Disease Modeling"; in
AMS-DIMACS Series on Discrete Mathematics and Theoretical
Computer Science, Vol. 75, 109-119, 2010.
Dr. Mark Doyle (history) published an article,
"The Sepoys of the Pound and Sandy Row: Empire and Identity
in Mid-Victorian Belfast,"; in
Journal of Urban History 36 (November 2010): 849-67.
Dr. Dennis R. Papini (psychology) co-authored
"The effect of life expectancy on aggression and
generativity: A life-history perspective"; in
Evolutionary Psychology 8(3), 492-505.
Get noticed in
The Record!
Submit your Faculty/Staff Update items and other news tips to
gfann@mtsu.edu by 3 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 3, for the Nov.
15 edition of
The Record or 3 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 16, for the Nov. 29
Record.
>>Top of Page
Campus Calendar Nov. 1-14,
2010
Please note: Event dates, times and locations may change after
press time. Please verify specifics when making plans.
TV Schedule: "MTSU: Out of the Blue";
Cable Channel 9: Monday-Sunday, 7 a.m., 5 p.m.
NewsChannel 5+: Sundays, 1:30 p.m.
Visit
www.mtsunews.com
for other cable-outlet airtimes or
www.youtube.com/mtsunews
for a complete show archive.
Radio Schedule: "MTSU On the Record";
8 a.m. Sundays, WMOT 89.5-FM
Podcasts available anytime at
www.mtsunews.com
.
Sports @ Home
Nov. 4: Women's Basketball vs. Lincoln
Memorial, 5:30 p.m.;
Men's Basketball vs. Lincoln Memorial, 7:30
p.m.
Nov. 5: Volleyball vs. South Alabama, 7 p.m.
Nov. 6: Volleyball vs. Troy, 7 p.m.
Nov. 9: Women's Basketball vs.
Alabama-Huntsville, 6:30 p.m.
Nov. 12: Men's Basketball vs. Tennessee
Temple, 7 p.m.
Nov. 13: Football vs. North Texas, 2:30 p.m.
For information, visit
www.goblueraiders.com
.
Through Nov. 2
"HYPE Design Show"; Graphic-Design Student Juried Art
Exhibition
8 a.m.-4:30 p.m., Todd Gallery
For information, visit
www.mtsu.edu/art
or contact: 615-898-2455.
Monday, Nov. 1
Fall Honors Lecture Series—Dr. Jun Da, "Language Policy
and Language Use in China";
3-3:55 p.m., Room 106, Honors Amphitheatre
For information, visit
www.mtsu.edu/~honors
or contact: 615-898-2152.
Faculty Voice Recital: Christine Poythress
8 p.m., Hinton Music Hall
For information, visit
www.mtsumusic.com
or contact: 615-898-2493.
Nov. 2-3
19th Annual Tennessee Undergraduate Social Science Symposium,
"Talking Trash: Garbage in Society and the
Environment";
Tennessee Room, James Union Building
For event details, visit
http://bit.ly/TrashSymposium
.
Tuesday, Nov. 2
General Elections
including gubernatorial, Congressional and state legislative races
For information, visit
www.rutherfordcountytn.gov/election
or contact: 615-898-7743.
Brown Bag Enrichment and Development Series: Dr. Judith
Iriarte-Gross, "Chocolate!";
Noon-1 p.m., Room N127 (SunTrust Room), Business and Aerospace
Building
For information, contact: 615-898-5989.
Nov. 3-4
Art Exhibit: Art Scholarship Seasonal Exhibit and Sale
9 a.m.-4 p.m., Todd Gallery
For information, visit
www.mtsu.edu/art
or contact: 615-898-2455.
Wednesday, Nov. 3
Faculty Trumpet Recital: Dan Whaley
8 p.m., Hinton Music Hall
For information, visit
www.mtsumusic.com
.
Thursday, Nov. 4
MTSU Jazz Ensemble I
7:30 p.m., Hinton Music Hall
For information, visit
www.mtsumusic.com
.
Friday, Nov. 5
Guest Artist Recital: Traverso Colore
6 p.m., Hinton Music Hall
For information, visit
www.mtsumusic.com
.
First Friday Star Party: Dr. Eric Klumpe, "The Cosmic
Microwave Background";
6:30 p.m. lecture, Room 102, Wiser-Patten Science Building;
followed by telescope viewing at the MTSU Observatory (weather
permitting)
For information, contact: 615-898-2483.
Guest Bassoon Recital: Jenny Mann
8 p.m., Hinton Music Hall
For information, visit
www.mtsumusic.com
.
Saturday, Nov. 6
MTSU School of Music "Evening of Swing";
6:15 p.m., Stones River Country Club, 1830 N.W. Broad St.
Tickets: $100 per person
For information, visit
http://bit.ly/MTSwing
or contact: 615-898-5924.
Sunday, Nov. 7
Daylight Savings Time ends (set clocks back one hour)
Nov. 8-12
Art Exhibit: Bachelor of Fine Arts Candidates—Studio
1
8 a.m.-4:30 p.m., Todd Gallery (opening reception 6-8 p.m. Monday,
Nov. 8)
For information, visit
www.mtsu.edu/art
or contact: 615-898-2455.
Monday, Nov. 8
Fall Honors Lecture Series—Steve Saunders, "The Effect
of China's Ascendancy on U.S. Foreign Policy";
3-3:55 p.m., HONR 106
For information, visit
www.mtsu.edu/~honors
.
Faculty Senate Meeting
4:30 p.m., JUB 100
For information, visit
www.mtsu.edu/facultysenate
or contact: 615-898-2582.
Wednesday, Nov. 10
Tornado Siren Test Date (no action needed)
11:15 a.m., campuswide
For information, contact: 615-898-2424.
Thursday, Nov. 11
Retired Faculty/Staff Coffee
9:30 a.m., Foundation House
For information, contact: 615-898-2922.
MTSU Jazz Artist Series: Trombonist Steve Davis
7:30 p.m., Hinton Music Hall
Tickets: $15 per person; students and staff free with ID
For information, visit
http://bit.ly/MTJazzSeries10
.
Nov. 12-13
MTSU Opera: "The Marriage of Figaro";
7:30 p.m., Hinton Music Hall
Tickets: $10 per person at door
For information, visit
www.mtsumusic.com
.
Sunday, Nov. 14
MTSU Opera: "The Marriage of Figaro";
3 p.m., Hinton Music Hall
Tickets: $10 per person at door
For information, visit
www.mtsumusic.com
.
Get noticed in
The Record!
Submit Campus Calendar items and other news tips to
gfann@mtsu.edu by 3 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 3, for the Nov.
15 edition of
The Record or 3 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 16, for the Nov. 29
Record. The final edition for fall 2010 is Dec. 13, so
submit your late December and early January 2011 items before 3
p.m. Wednesday, Dec. 1. Thanks!
>>Top of Page