The Record, March 28, 2011, V19.18
Read the PDF version here!
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Scholars
Week is April 4-8
by Randy Weiler
MTSU's growing research initiatives will be touted during the
annual Scholars Week, which will be held Monday, April 4, through
Friday, April 8, across campus.
Oral and multimedia presentations, posters, performances, a kickoff
luncheon, demonstrations and special speakers will lead to the
Universitywide Exposition from 12:40 until 2:45 p.m. April 8 on the
track level of Murphy Center.

Each of MTSU's colleges will have its own Scholars Day of
events during the week. The Jennings A. Jones College of Business
will celebrate on April 4, while the Colleges of Basic and Applied
Sciences and Behavioral and Health Sciences will be the focus on
April 5. The College of Liberal Arts Scholars Day is April 6, and
the Colleges of Mass Communication and Education will share April 7
as Scholars Day.
"Scholars Week is a celebration of excellence at MTSU and is
designed to highlight the core values of quality research by our
students and faculty,"; said Dr. Brad Bartel, provost and
executive chair of the 15-member Scholars Week Committee. "It
is a signature event for our institution.";
Author and blogger Meghan McCain, daughter of U.S. Sen. John McCain
and his wife, Cindy, will speak during the College of Liberal Arts
Day on Wednesday, April 6.
"A Conversation with Meghan McCain"; will start at 7
p.m. in Room 241 of the Ned McWherter Learning Resources Center. A
book signing will follow her talk.
Examples of the many planned Scholars Week activities include:
- thematic project presentations from interior-design classes
and theatre-scene design classes;
- presentations from Concrete Industry Management Program
students being mentored on industry and academic partnerships and
from graduate student Lauren Ingram and human-sciences faculty
mentor Dr. Sandra Poirier on undergraduates' work with
students in an after-school program at Patterson Community Center
in Murfreesboro;
- a report on the "Effect of Using Coping Skills and
Exercise on Changes in Stress and Energy Among Police
Officers"; from Chris Dickson, a graduate student in the
Department of Health and Human Performance, psychology professor
Dr. Thomas Brinthaupt and HHP professor Dr. Mark Anshel;
- showcases of the Department of Engineering Technology's
student experimental vehicles on April 5 outside the Keathley
University Center and on April 8 at Murphy Center, led by ET grad
student Bahir Alkadhimi and Dr. Saeed Foroudastan, mentor and
CBAS associate dean; and
- a project by economics and finance major Evan Totty and
faculty mentor Dr. Mark Owens, "Salary Caps and Competitive
Balance in Professional Sports,"; which looks at the issue
in light of U.S. sports and addresses whether Major League
Baseball should adopt a salary cap, too.
For a complete schedule of Scholars Week events, visit
http://bit.ly/MTScholarsWeek11
.
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MTSU lends a hand to
Japanese neighbors
by Gina K. Logue
From the moment the ground began to shift beneath the Japanese
people on March 11, the MTSU community began reaching across the
Pacific in both directions.
The temblor set in motion a deadly tripartite catastrophe—the
quake itself, the massive tsunami created by the quake and
radiation emissions following fires and explosions at a nuclear
facility in Fukushima. Rhonda Waller, director of MTSU Education
Abroad and Student Exchange, said she went to her computer
immediately upon hearing the news.
"I use Facebook, and it was remarkably effective in getting
hold of students,"; Waller said.
"Even if I didn't have a one-to-one interaction with
them, I could go to their (Facebook) walls. And most of them, by
the time I was looking, had posted a message saying, 'Hey,
this is going out to my friends and family. Don't worry about
me. I'm OK.'";
Waller said nine MTSU students were in Japan at the time of the
quake. Most have been studying at Kansai Gaidai University, Nagoya
Gakuin University, Saitama University and Seinan Gakuin University,
MTSU's institutional partners. Of those, Saitama is closest
to the quake's epicenter.
MTSU, like education-abroad colleagues at other U.S. universities,
began urging its students on March 17 to make immediate plans to
return to the United States.
Students in MTSU's Department of Foreign Languages and
Literature began collecting cash donations March 23 and 24 around
the Keathley University Center and Walker Library for the American
Red Cross disaster-relief efforts in Japan. The fundraising effort,
called "GENKI for Japan,"; was scheduled to continue
March 28 and 29 from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the same locations.
("Genki"; means "vigor and energy,";
according to Dr. Priya Anath, one of the professors organizing the
efforts.)
Megan Erickson of Thompson's Station, Tenn., a sophomore in
MTSU's Global Studies Program, was at Saitama when the quake
occurred.
"Almost all the international students … at Saitama
… have independently chosen to evacuate themselves from the
area and move to the Kansai (western) region of Japan or fly out to
their homelands,"; she said in an email.
Joe Plante, a junior international-relations major from La Vergne,
was studying in Tokyo, where there was less damage.
"People are still going to work and still doing their daily
things,"; he said. "There is a little apprehension about
even the smallest of tremors now, though. Despite that, I
don't feel at all unsafe being here.";
Another junior international-relations major, Nathan Ives of
Franklin, has been studying at Nagoya Gakuin.
"I, for one, am determined to weather the storm with the
Japanese,"; he wrote in an email. "If they deem it safe
for them to continue, I must, as well. In Japanese, there is a
phrase, 'gamman suru.' It basically means 'to
persist through hard times.'";
Eight Japanese students are enrolled at MTSU, where they are
keeping tabs on the calamity while trying to concentrate on their
classes.
Dr. Kiyoshi Kawahito, who has been the catalyst for solidifying
MTSU's strong ties to Japan for the last 30 years, was at a
conference in Tokyo when the shaking began.
"It was the biggest earthquake I had experienced in my
life,"; said Kawahito, professor emeritus of economics and
finance and adviser to the president and provost for Asian affairs.
He returned to the United States on March 14.
"I walked more than one hour to get back to my hotel. All
trains stopped running immediately, and inspection by respective
railway systems started. By 9 p.m., some of the subway lines
started running, partially.";
Reporters on the scene continued to marvel at the relative absence
of looting and the relative calm that people in Japan are
exhibiting under such extreme stress.
"Japanese people are drilled frequently for earthquakes in
schools and offices,"; Kawahito offered as explanation.
"They stayed cool, patient and cheerful … People helped
each other. For example, hotels offered any available space for
staying overnight on a cold and windy night.";
Dr. David A. Schmidt, who will become MTSU's vice provost for
international affairs on April 1, was born and reared in Japan and
is closely watching the nation's struggle.
"(Its) history is one of resilience and acceptance of natural
calamities,"; said Schmidt, who now lives in Stockton, Calif.
"I am certain they will maintain their poise and dignity as
they mourn during the aftermath and rebuild during the next few
months and years.";
Erickson added, "As I passed by the president of Saitama
University, we bowed to each other in greeting, and, after making
sure I was all right, he said in English, 'We are
tough!' I believe his words. Japan is a strong nation, even
after an earthquake brings it down. Japan will rise up once
more.";
HELPING HAND—A member of one of the first Japanese Red Cross
Society teams to enter a town devastated by the March 11 tsunami
radios for JRCS medical assistance. MTSU students are collecting
donations in a fundraiser called "GENKI for Japan"; to
aid the American Red Cross disaster-relief efforts.
Photo by Toshiharu Kato/Japanese Red Cross Society, via the
American Red Cross
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Professional
training
ONE CHANCE FOR FIRST IMPRESSIONS—MTSU School of Agribusiness
and Agriscience students participate in the third annual Ag Career
Day on March 16, starting with a Farm Credit Services-sponsored
Career Fair Workshop and Etiquette Dinner at B. McNeel's
Restaurant in downtown Murfreesboro. Speakers from the Rutherford
County Chamber of Commerce, MTSU Career Development Center and
Jennings A. Jones College of Business covered topics from
career-fair networking tips to the importance of job-interview
dining etiquette.
Shown in the top photo at the restaurant are, clockwise from left,
senior animal-science major Jenny Roth, Ashley Searles of event
sponsor Farm Credit Services, freshman nursing major Kristen
Earnest, senior agribusiness majors Laura Harrington and Andriana
Jones and senior animal-science major Kate Willoughby.
Shown below are, clockwise from left, agribusiness major Chad
Hardy, animal-science major Barron Russell, criminal-justice
administration major Noah Fitzpatrick and agribusiness major Heath
Evans, who are all seniors; junior geosciences major Josh Thigpen
and senior agribusiness major Blake Warren.
photos submitted
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In Brief: Lecture Fund
deadline
Submit applications to MTSU's Distinguished Lecture Fund to
bring fall 2011 speakers to campus by Friday, April 15. The
Distinguished Lecture Committee wants to promote appearances by
nationally and internationally known speakers discussing regional,
national and global issues in a variety of fields. Apply online at
www.mtsu.edu/nsfp/speakerapp.shtml
.
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For the Record: President
updates campus safety message
(Click the headline above for the story.)
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Midgetts pledge 1st Honors Centennial gift
(Click the headline above for the story.)
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New Saudi student group sets JUB
cultural-awareness event
MTSU's new Saudi Students Association will serve as host for
a special campus event, "Building Bridges,"; on Friday,
April 8, to encourage cultural awareness.
The free public gathering, set from 12:30 to 4 p.m. in the
Tennessee Room of the James Union Building, features a keynote
address from Patrick Ryan, president of the Tennessee World Affairs
Council and past president of the Cookeville Breakfast Rotary Club,
on Saudi Arabia's history and the Saudi-U.S. relationship.

Also included on the agenda are a photography gallery; discussions
on Saudi women, the nation's tourism, economy and foreign
investments; entertainment and traditional dancing; and an exhibit
and demonstration of the art of henna painting.
"The purpose of this club is to organize, promote and support
activities that allow an exchange of cultural, social and sports
activities between all its members, the campus and city
communities,"; said Abdullah Alkobraish, an MTSU graduate
student currently working toward his master's degree in
business administration and a native of Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, who
is co-founder and president of the new organization.
"The Saudi Students Association wants to help orient the new
Saudi students at Middle Tennessee State University and at the
English Language School to American culture. In addition, we will
serve the Murfreesboro community. We also would like to open our
doors for communication and dialogue in order to have a better
understanding of each other. We hope our friends here in town will
help us to build the bridges and find solid ground for a peaceful
world.";
The group is encouraging MTSU faculty and staff members to attend
the event and to bring their students to learn more about Saudi
Arabia, Alkobraish said.
For more information about the event, contact Alkobraish at
Ssa.mtsu@gmail.com.
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'Dr. G' plans
forensic-science lecture in Murphy Center
Dr. Jan Garavaglia, focus of The Discovery Health Channel's
award-winning "Dr. G: Medical Examiner"; show and a
renowned forensic pathologist, will visit MTSU on Tuesday, April
12, as the featured speaker of the William M. Bass Legends in
Forensic Science Lectureship.
Sponsored by the Forensic Institute for Research and Education, the
lecture series brings respected lecturers in forensic science to
MTSU each fall and spring, said Dr. Hugh Berryman, FIRE director.

Garavaglia, more commonly known as "Dr. G"; thanks to
her show's popularity, will deliver her free public lecture,
"Forensic Pathology: Fact and Fiction,"; at 7 p.m. in
Murphy Center.
She is the chief medical examiner for the District Nine
(Orange-Osceola) Medical Examiner's Office in Florida. A
graduate of the St. Louis University School of Medicine, Garavaglia
is a member of the National Association of Medical Examiners and
the American Academy of Forensic Sciences. Before joining the
Florida office, she was a medical examiner at the Bexar County
Forensic Science Center in San Antonio, Texas.
Among her prominent criminal investigations are the "Morning
Glory Funeral Home"; case in Jacksonville, Fla., where bodies
were improperly handled and buried at a mortuary, and the Caylee
Anthony child-homicide case. She's also the author of How Not
to Die, which educates readers to prevent avoidable death.
In addition to FIRE, Garavaglia's campus visit is sponsored
by the MTSU Distinguished Lectures Committee; the College of
Liberal Arts; the College of Basic and Applied Sciences;
MTSU's sociology and anthropology, biology and
criminal-justice departments; and Phillips Bookstore.
For more information, contact the FIRE offices at 615-494-7713
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Adding up to
success
A GREAT TEAM PLAYER—Tammie Dye, center, an information
research technician in the Payroll Services Department of
MTSU's Human Resource Services, displays her plaque as the
most recent Quarterly Secretarial/Clerical Award winner.
Celebrating with Dye are, from left, Joyce Reed and Betty Smithson,
members of the Employee Recognition Committee; Payroll Services
Supervisor Lisa Jones; and Michelle Blackwell, Employee Recognition
Committee chair. The ERC salutes staffers who make outstanding
contributions and demonstrate excellence in their roles. Winners of
the Employee of the Year Awards also receive cash awards from the
MTSU Foundation. To learn more about nominating a co-worker for
great job performance, go to
www.mtsu.edu/hrs/relations/recog.shtml
.
MTSU Photographic Services photo by J. Intintoli
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Pitcher turned kid-lit
author is conference's big hitter
by Gina K. Logue
Former major-league pitcher Jim Rooker, a member of the 1979 World
Series Champion Pittsburgh Pirates, will be the luncheon speaker
for the 16th Baseball in Literature and Culture Conference on
Friday, April 1, in the Tennessee Room of the James Union Building.
The lunch is slated to begin at 12:15 p.m. Rooker's address
is scheduled for 12:45 p.m. and will be followed by a book signing.
Rooker, who also pitched for the Detroit Tigers and Kansas City
Royals in a career that spanned 12 years from 1968 to 1980, was a
member of the Pirates' broadcast team from 1981 to 1993. He
also worked as a baseball analyst for ESPN for four years.
Always outspoken, Rooker was compelled to put his money where his
mouth was following a game between the Pirates and the Phillies in
Philadelphia on June 8, 1989. After Pittsburgh jumped out to a 10-0
lead in the first inning, Rooker said, on-air, "If we lose
this game, I'll walk home.";
Propelled by homers from Von Hayes and Steve Jeltz and Darren
Daulton's two-run single, the Phillies came back for a 15-11
victory. True to his word, Rooker conducted a 300-mile walk from
Philadelphia to Pittsburgh at season's end, raising more than
$100,000 for charity.
Beginning in 2008, Rooker turned his talents to writing
children's books. His three published volumes are
Matt the Bat, Kitt the Mitt and
Paul the Baseball.
"Baseball has been my passion since the time I started
playing the game as a child, and it remains that way today,
sixty-some years later,"; Booker writes on his website,
www.jimrookerbooks.com
. "I hope that the words contained in these books will
encourage youngsters everywhere to love the game as I did.";
The breakfast speaker for the conference will be Dr. Steven
Andrews, associate professor of English at Grinnell College in
Grinnell, Iowa. Andrews, who is scheduled to speak at 8:30 a.m., is
a distinguished scholar of American studies, and his interest in
baseball fiction is a focus within his greater specialization in
modern American literature. The topic of Andrews' talk will
be "Suicide Squeeze: Immigration and the Art of Stealing
Home.";
The Baseball in Literature and Culture Conference was held at
Indiana State University from 1995 to 2006, and MTSU has hosted the
gathering since 2006. In its five years on the Murfreesboro campus,
the conference has attracted speakers such as Bill
"Spaceman"; Lee, Denny McLain, Orestes Destrade, Jim
"Mudcat"; Grant and Ferguson Jenkins.
Embracing scholarly efforts in all fields except statistical
analysis, the conference attracts academics who want to express
perspectives on baseball's significant cultural impact in
numerous areas, including history, journalism, creative writing,
popular media, drama, economics and, of course, literature.
Some of the session topics include "Press-Box Populations and
Paradigm Shifts: Practicing Media Relations in a Culture of Media
Change,"; "Black Baseball and the Respectability
Project,"; "Smokey Joe Wood: The Legend That
Wouldn't Die"; and "Baseball, Ballet and Botox: An
Inquiry into the Ethics of Doping.";
Members of the MTSU community who are slated to present papers
include Drs. Warren Tormey, assistant professor of English; Crosby
Hunt, professor of speech and theatre; and Phil Oliver, professor
of philosophy; Professor Steven Walker, instructor of English; Dr.
Ron Bombardi, chair of the Department of Philosophy; and doctoral
student Michael Pagel of Johnson City.
Rooker's address and the conference sessions are free and
open to the public. Cost of the luncheon is $10 for MTSU students,
faculty, staff, alumni and visitors, but advance reservations are
requested.
For information on registration and fees, contact Tormey, the
conference coordinator, at 615-904-8585 or
tormey@mtsu.edu, or visit the conference website at
http://bit.ly/MTBaseballConf
.
GETTING PLENTY OF HITS—Former major-league pitcher Jim Rooker
of the Pittsburgh Pirates displays the fruit of his second career:
children's book author. He'll speak at MTSU's
Baseball in Literature and Culture Conference April 1.
photo submitted
>>Top of Page
Foster-care struggles
are lecture topic
Montreat College professor Dr. Paul Owen will discuss his book,
The Long Winter: One Man's Journey Through the Darkness
of Foster Care, on Monday, April 4, as part of MTSU's
Distinguished Lecture Series.
Owen's free public lecture is scheduled from 3 to 4 p.m.
April 4 in Rooms 109/111 of the Cason-Kennedy Nursing Building. A
reception is planned in the CKNB lobby after the presentation, and
copies of Owen's book will be available.

Owen is a professor of Greek and Bible studies at Montreat, which
is located just outside Asheville, N.C. His book details his
journey as an orphan through seven foster homes across three states
and encourages resilience to overcome difficult challenges.
The lecture is sponsored by MTSU's Division of Student
Affairs and the MTSU Distinguished Lecture Fund, the Adams Chair of
Excellence in Health Care Services, the Center for Health and Human
Services, the MTSU Department of Social Work and the Tennessee
Center for Child Welfare.
For more information, contact 615-898-2905.
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Grad student earns award
for thesis work
by Tom Tozer
Fengqing "Zoe"; Zhang, an MTSU graduate student who is
now pursuing her doctorate at Northwestern University, recently
received the Conference of Southern Graduate Schools 2011
Master's Thesis Award for work done for her Master of Science
degree in mathematics at MTSU.
The CSGS grants only three Master's Thesis Awards each year.
The award recognizes clarity of style and presentation,
scholarship, research methodology, contributions to the field and
innovative use of technology in the content presentation.
"Ms. Zhang's thesis demonstrates that she has excellent
skills in both mathematics and statistics,"; Dr. Michael
Allen, dean of MTSU's College of Graduate Studies, said in
his nomination letter. "She has made an important
contribution to the body of knowledge.";
Zhang's thesis, "Multivariate Analysis Methods for IMS
(Imaging Mass Spectroscopy) Data Biomarker Selection and
Classification,"; received accolades by reviewers, who called
it "cutting-edge"; because linking spectroscopy
technology and the applied- statistical method is relatively new
work.
"This makes her thesis even more impressive,"; Dr. Peter
Cunningham, associate dean of the College of Graduate Studies, said
of Zhang's new honor. "It is the type of thing you
would expect from an advanced doctoral student. Northwestern
recognized that and offered her a fellowship to go there to work on
her Ph.D.";
In his endorsement letter to the CSGS awards committee, Dr. Don
Hong, professor of mathematical sciences at MTSU, noted that from
more than a dozen graduate students he's supervised in the
last five years, "Zoe is the best student I ever had.";
Hong added that when Zhang was an undergraduate student at Beihang
University, which is listed as one of China's 15 best
colleges and universities, she was ranked third among 92 graduates
in her department.
"I am very impressed by her passion for mathematics and
statistics as well as her self-motivated learning, study skills and
hard-working attitude,"; Hong noted. "I believe she will
do excellent work in both courses and research projects at
Northwestern University. She has great potential.";
EFFORT PAYS OFF—Fengqing "Zoe"; Zhang, left, and
Dr. Peter Cunningham, associate dean of the College of Graduate
Studies at MTSU, display Zhang's Master's Thesis Award
from the Conference of Southern Graduate Schools.
photo courtesy of Dr. Don Hong
>>Top of Page
Team
prepares for All-East livestock judging
by Randy Weiler
Following its success at livestock-judging competitions earlier
this semester, MTSU's Livestock Judging Team will seek more
honors at the All-East Contest April 7-9 at Penn State University
in State College, Pa.
"You hope you improve in every contest,"; Coach Jessica
Carter said.
"Having competed in Texas and Mississippi already helps us to
prepare for the competition in Pennsylvania,"; added team
member Julie Ozburn, a junior majoring in agribusiness at MTSU.
"There will be some new (contest) additions, like measuring
their fat and how much muscle they have. It helps us to identify a
more market-acceptable animal.
"It also helps us to build our skills in public
speaking—to speak confidently—and grow in our
careers.";
In February, Carter's team—composed of sophomores Holly
Baggett, Lindsey Hodge, Sarah Norman and Samantha Southard, senior
Monica Wilmore and Ozburn—captured a first-place award in the
horse division of the Southwestern Exposition National Livestock
Judging Contest in Fort Worth, Texas.
They also finished fifth overall in the Dixie National Beef Judging
Contest in Jackson, Miss.
"We were surprised we brought home the horse trophy,";
Carter said. "We were up against some of the top teams in the
United States. We often compete against big land-grant schools. One
of those schools, Texas Tech, frequently has been national champion
the last couple of years.";
Carter said the national livestock judging contest will be held in
November.
All of the team members are students majoring in the School of
Agribusiness and Agriscience and also are members of the MTSU Block
and Bridle Club.
PICKING WINNERS—MTSU's Livestock Judging Team poses
with their recent awards. From left are sophomore agribusiness
major Lindsey Hodge, senior animal-science major Monica Wilmore,
sophomore animal-science major Sarah Norman, junior agribusiness
major Julie Ozburn, sophomore animal-science major Samantha
Southard, and team coach Dr. Jessica Carter. Not pictured is
sophomore agribusiness major Holly Baggett. The team competes in
Pennsylvania next month.
MTSU Photographic Services photo by J. Intintoli
>>Top of Page
Blue Raider
Battalion golf event set April 14 in Franklin
by Randy Weiler
MTSU's ROTC cadets and Department of Military Science will
serve as host for the Blue Raider Battalion Golf Fundraiser on
Thursday, April 14, at the Vanderbilt Legends Club in Franklin,
Tenn.
The event, a scramble tournament with four-member teams, will start
at 8 a.m.
"We are hoping to have more than 150 golfers participate in
the tournament,"; said MTSU Cadet Justin McQueen. "This
is an opportunity for avid golfers to play at a top-100 course in
the country at a very low price.";
The entry fee for individual golfers is $110 each. Entire foursomes
can play for $440. All proceeds will benefit student scholarships
for the Blue Raider Battalion.
"The MTSU Blue Raider Battalion is building solid citizens
and leaders for the future of the USA,"; said Leah Hulan, a
Blue Raider Battalion alumna and a former Miss Tennessee who owns
Grumpy's Bail Bonds, a main event sponsor with the National
Guard.
"This program develops the best and brightest Americans who
contribute to the glorious tradition of men and women in uniform,
providing security for this great land,"; she said. "We
are committed to supporting these young cadets and are giving our
all for them. We need you to join us.";
Golfers will receive gift bags and an opportunity to participate in
an auction to be held throughout the tournament. Breakfast, lunch
and an awards' reception will be provided.
Businesses and organizations that sponsor the tournament will
receive advertisement as well as many other benefits, depending on
sponsorship level, McQueen said.
For more information, call 615-898-2470 or visit the website at
www.mtsublueraiderbattaliongolffundraiser.com
.
>>Top of Page
New director takes Dyslexia
Center helm
by Tom Tozer
Dr. Regina Boulware-Gooden is the new director of the Tennessee
Center for the Study and Treatment of Dyslexia at MTSU.
She replaces Dr. Diane J. Sawyer, who retired in May 2010 after 20
years of service to MTSU.
Before coming to MTSU, Boulware-Gooden served for eight years as
director of research at Neuhaus Education Center in Houston, Texas,
where she established a Master's Reading Specialist program
and master's programs with partnership with both Stephen F.
Austin State University and Southern Methodist University.

During a three-year hiatus from Neuhaus, she was director of the
reading program at the University of St. Thomas, a liberal-arts
school in Houston.
"I met Diane Sawyer at some national meetings, and she asked
me if I was interested in changing universities,";
Boulware-Gooden said. "Diane is known throughout the country,
and the center is well-known and respected.";
The new director added that she had never been to Tennessee and
decided to chart new territory by taking the helm at the MTSU
center.
Boulware-Gooden explained that one of the center's primary
jobs is assessing students who may have dyslexia. She said research
indicates that 20 to 25 percent of the students sitting in
classrooms across the nation are dyslexic.
"A lot of kids are struggling,"; she said. "They
don't know why, and their parents don't know why. And a
lot of teachers aren't trained in identifying
dyslexia.";
Dyslexia is a neurological disorder that affects the decoding of
written text, Boulware-Gooden pointed out. It doesn't involve
comprehension; students with dyslexia can understand the spoken
word but are unable to fully understand information from the
printed page.
"They know they are not performing up to their peers, so they
start getting frustrated,"; she said. "It hurts their
self-esteem. Teachers are becoming more aware of it and are
identifying it earlier.";
The center staff helps train MTSU's school-psychology
students to identify dyslexia and trains graduate assistants to
assist with the testing in schools.
"We want to streamline the testing procedures and
report-writing so that we can get students through the center
faster,"; Boulware-Gooden said. "We certainly are
identifying [symptoms of dyslexia] more now.";
Boulware-Gooden says she also wants to sponsor more workshops for
teachers and parents, noting that parents need to ask questions,
learn strategies and find the role they can play in helping their
children.
>>Top of Page
Health Fair
planned for KUC on April 7
The MTSU School of Nursing will host its annual MTSU Health Fair on
all three floors of the Keathley University Center, on Thursday,
April 7.
The 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. event will feature health-related giveaways
and free health screenings from a variety of vendors, said
Christina N. Moore, president of the MTSU Student Nurses
Association. The screenings will include tests for hearing, speech
and vision, blood pressure, body-mass index, blood glucose, bone
marrow and HIV, he added.
The American Red Cross will hold a blood drive that day in KUC 322.
Other resource providers include the Vanderbilt Student Community
Health Coalition, American Heart Association, Nashville CARES,
Eating Disorders Coalition of Tennessee, The Women's Center
and the Murfreesboro Police Department.
>>Top of Page
People
Around Campus: MTSU student anchors national sports program
by Gina K. Logue
Each time Sarah Fryar takes to the airwaves, she reaffirms the
value of hands-on experience by students preparing for challenging,
fast-paced careers.
The senior from McMinnville is the anchor for "Athlon Sports
Weekly Update,"; which is recorded at MTSU. The short recap of
the week's top sports stories was launched in October in
conjunction with the debut of Athlon Sports inserts, which are now
featured in nearly 500 newspapers across the country.
Nashville-based Athlon is best known for its seasonal preview
magazines of professional and major college sports. The
company's game plan for "Weekly Update"; is to
offer the video to the newspapers that carry Athlon Sports,
enabling local publications to have a stronger multimedia presence
on their websites.
"One minute, I had no idea what my next thing was going to
be, and the next minute, I had an internship and a very promising
future with the company,"; Fryar says of her unique part-time
job.
Journalism is in Fryar's DNA. Her father, Ron Fryar, is the
publisher of The Murfreesboro Post and owner/publisher of
Woodbury's local newspaper, the Cannon Courier. But the
younger Fryar says her nose for news always led her toward sports
journalism, a field that is still trying to play catch-up in its
acceptance of women.
An admirer of ESPN's Erin Andrews, Fryar says she also
respects that network's Rachel Nichols, along with Pam Oliver
of Fox and Tracy Wolfson of CBS. She is equally critical, however,
of stations and networks that hire female sports reporters more for
their "hotness quotient"; than their knowledge and
professionalism.
"I am prepared each and every day to meet some guy that
… tells me I'm 'just a girl' and I
don't know what I'm doing,"; Fryar says.
"And I say, 'Fine! Watch me!'";
Jerry Lyles, Athlon's senior vice president of newspaper
relations, says the company's goal is to hire Fryar full-time
when she graduates.
"She's very conscientious, " Lyles says. "
She does not need a lot of guidance. She's competent,
creative and a good writer. It's amazing, because you
don't expect to get the complete package from a 21-year-old
still in college.";
Fryar writes her own scripts, and she also has experience behind
the scenes. She says that gives her a necessary insight that
results in great respect for producer Kurt Mullen, a senior
majoring in electronic media communication, and the other MTSU
students who gather at 9:30 p.m. each Monday to record another
program.
"My parents always told me, 'When you get your license,
you're going to learn to drive a stick shift before you drive
an automatic,'"; Fryar says. "I have that exact
same opinion about broadcasting. You need to know how to do
everything behind the scenes before you go in front of the camera
so you know how everything works.";
Lyles says the partnership between Athlon and MTSU allows his
company to avoid costly production expenses while providing future
broadcasters with a preview of their profession.
"I was surprised with the quality of the product the students
put out, and the level of quality has increased,"; says Lyles.
"We would like to continue to work with MTSU to help them get
some good career experience that will help them down the road.
Hopefully, some of them will be with us when they graduate.";
MAKING NEWS—";Athlon Sports Weekly Update"; anchor
Sarah Fryar, a senior majoring in electronic media communication,
works on a show in MTSU's TV studio.
photo courtesy of Athlon Sports
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The Big Event
(Click the graphic above for more information!)
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Faculty/Staff Update
Awards
Dr. Hugh Berryman (sociology and anthropology,
Forensic Institute for Research and Education) recently learned
that he will receive the 2012 T. Dale Stewart Award for lifetime
achievement in physical anthropology from the American Academy for
Forensic Sciences. The T. Dale Stewart Award, given annually to a
single recipient, is the highest honor bestowed upon a forensic
anthropologist in the United States. The formal award presentation
will be made at the AAFS annual meeting next February in Atlanta.
Elections
Dr. Marisa Richmond (history) and
Professor Gracie Porter (elementary and special
education) were elected as at-large directors on the 2011 board of
Davidson County Democratic Women.
Media
Dr. Arunesh Nadgir (music) was a featured
performer in a live video webcast, "A Global Piano and
Literary Salon: Beyond Bollywood,"; on WNYC's "The
Greene Space"; on Feb. 24.
Publications
Dr. Sonja Hedgepeth (foreign languages and
literature), co-editor of
Sexual Violence Against Jewish Women During the Holocaust
(University Press of New England/Brandeis University Press), has
been on a bookeum and the CUNY Graduate Center. She was a panelist
at the Sackler Center on March 20 for "Sexual Violence During
the Holocaust and Other Genocides,"; a discussion moderated by
Gloria Steinem, and she participated in a March 21 seminar at the
CUNY Graduate Center that featured co-editor Dr. Rochelle G.
Saidel, acclaimed Israeli novelist Nava Semel and Dr. Eva Fogelman,
a psychologist and author of one of the book chapters.
Dr. Jeffrey Walck (biology), along with his
Japanese colleagues, recently published a paper in
The American Journal of Botany on "Seed dormancy in
Trillium camschatcense (Melanthiaceae) and the possible roles of
light and temperature requirements for seed germination in
forests.";
Get noticed in
The Record!
Submit Faculty/Staff Updates, Campus Calendar items and other news
to
gfann@mtsu.edu by 3 p.m. Wednesday, March 30, for the
April 11 edition of
The Record. Deadline to submit items for the April 25
edition of
The Record is 3 p.m. Wednesday, April 13.
>>Top of Page
Campus Calendar: March 28-April
10, 2011
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+ (Comcast 250): Sundays, 1:30 p.m.
Visit
www.mtsunews.com
for other airtimes or
www.youtube.com/user/MTSUOutoftheBlue
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
March 29-30: MTSU Softball vs. Florida Atlantic (4 p.m.
and 1 p.m.)
March 31: Men's Tennis vs. DePaul, 2 p.m.
April 1-3: MTSU Baseball vs. South Alabama (6, 4
and 1 p.m.)
April 2-3: Men's Tennis Sun Belt Shootout; MTSU
Softball vs. South Alabama (1 p.m. and noon)
April 3: Women's Tennis vs. University of
Alabama-Birmingham, 1 p.m.
April 5: MTSU Softball vs. Lipscomb, 5 p.m.
April 6: MTSU Baseball vs. Austin Peay, 6 p.m.
For information, visit
www.goblueraiders.com
.
Monday, March 28
TIAA-CREF Employee Financial Counseling Sessions
To schedule an appointment, contact: 800-732-8353.
Spring Honors Lecture Series: Dr. John R. Vile, "The
Fourth Amendment: The Search for Reasonableness";
3 p.m., Room 106, Honors Amphitheatre
For information, visit
www.mtsu.edu/honors
or contact: 615-898-2152.
March 29-April 7
Bachelor of Fine Arts Candidates' Exhibition: Studio
2
8 a.m.-4:30 p.m., Todd Gallery (opening reception 6:30-8:30 p.m.
Monday, March 28)
For information, visit
www.mtsu.edu/art
or contact: 615-898-5653.
March 30-April 2 and April 6-9
MTSU Theatre: "Rent";
7:30 nightly, Tucker Theatre
Admission: $10 adults; $5 MTSU faculty, staff and K-12 students;
MTSU students admitted free with valid ID
For information, visit
www.mtsu.edu/tuckertheatre
or contact: 615-494-8810.
Wednesday, March 30
Guest and Faculty Recital: Meredith Blecha, cello, and Arunesh
Nadgir, piano
8 p.m., Hinton Music Hall
For information, visit
www.mtsumusic.com
or contact: 615-898-2493.
Thursday, March 31
MTSU Jazz Combos
7:30 p.m., Hinton Music Hall
For information, visit
www.mtsumusic.com
.
Friday, April 1
First Friday Star Party: Special Guest Charlie Warren,
"Astronomy Down Under";
6:30 p.m. lecture, Room 102, Wiser-Patten Science Building;
followed by telescope viewing at the MTSU Observatory
For information, visit
http://bit.ly/MTStarPartiesS11
or contact: 615-898-5946 or 898-2483.
Smith Studio April Fools' Concert
8 p.m., Hinton Music Hall
For information, visit
www.mtsumusic.com
.
Saturday, April 2
Clavierfest Final Concert
7 p.m., Hinton Music Hall
For information, visit
www.mtsumusic.com
.
April 4-5
American Association of University Women Book Sale
11 a.m.-2 p.m., first floor, Keathley University Center
For information, contact:
aauw@mtsu.edu.
April 4-8
Scholars' Week
For information, visit
http://bit.ly/MTScholarsWeek11
.
Monday, April 4
Spring Honors Lecture Series: Dr. Phil Mathis, "From
Empirical Science to Poetry and Prose";
3 p.m., HONR 106
For information, visit
www.mtsu.edu/honors
.
Stones River Chamber Players Present "Happy
Anniversary, MTSU!";
7:30 p.m., Hinton Music Hall
For information, visit
www.mtsumusic.com
.
Wednesday, April 6
Off-Campus Housing Fair
11 a.m.-2 p.m., KUC Knoll (rain site: KUC second floor)
For information, contact: 615-898-5989.
Scholars Week/SpringOUT Keynote Speaker: Meghan
McCain
7-8 p.m., Room 221, McWherter Learning Resources Center
For information, visit
http://bit.ly/MTMeghanMcCain
or contact: 615-898-5489.
Thursday, April 7
Women's and Gender Studies Research Series: Dr. Nancy
Rupprecht, "When Civil War is Waged by Women";
3-4 p.m., Room 100, James Union Building
For information, contact:
nrupprec@mtsu.edu.
Guest Piano Recital: Henning Vauth
6 p.m., Hinton Music Hall
Composers Recital of Electroacoustic and Acoustic Music:
Stephen Gorbos and Spencer Lambright
8 p.m., Hinton Music Hall
For information, visit
www.mtsumusic.com
.
Sunday, April 10
String Studio Extravaganza
3 and 5 p.m., Hinton Music Hall
Brass Chamber Ensembles
7 p.m., Hinton Music Hall
For information, visit
www.mtsumusic.com
.
Get noticed in
The Record!
Submit Campus Calendar items and other news to
gfann@mtsu.edu by 3 p.m. Wednesday, March 30, for the
April 11 edition of
The Record. Deadline to submit items for the April 25
edition of
The Record is 3 p.m. Wednesday, April 13. For additional
Record deadlines through the spring, please visit
www.mtsu.edu/news/Record/deadlines.shtml
.
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