The Record, April 11, 2011, V19.19
Read the PDF version here!
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Visiting
scholars teach
and learn
by Sydney Warneke
Students may sometimes feel that faculty are difficult, if not
impossible, to relate to, but visiting scholars Danielle Brown and
Shawnya Harris are working to show that MTSU professors and
students have plenty in common.

A student herself, Brown came to MTSU via the University of
California at Davis to finish her dissertation in biology and
animal behavior. While participating in MTSU's
Underrepresented Minority Dissertation Fellowship program, she is
able to complete the final portion of her doctorate by teaching a
biology class for non-biology majors.
Brown says she feels MTSU is a good fit for her.
"It's definitely a good place to finish my
dissertation,"; she says. "The amount of work is just
enough, along with trying to finish my dissertation.";
A plus to the equation, she notes, is that her husband is also an
MTSU professor, teaching health and wellness and some graduate
courses in the Department of Health and Human Performance.
Harris, who is in the final stage of earning her doctorate in
African-American art, says she couldn't be happier to be at
MTSU. An alumnus of both Yale and the University of North Carolina
at Chapel Hill, Harris also is participating in the dissertation
fellowship offered alongside her doctoral program, which allows her
to teach students while also completing her research.
"It has been the best experience I've had, and
I'm not exaggerating,"; Harris says with a smile.
Brown, a native of New Orleans, La., received her undergraduate
degree from Cornell University in New York. In 2001, she moved to
Tennessee, working for three years in a psychology laboratory at
Vanderbilt University before starting her doctoral studies in
California.
As a child, Brown says she always loved animals and wanted to
become a veterinarian. When she learned that degrees were offered
in the field of animal behavior, however, Brown changed course
slightly and headed to school.
While earning her degrees, she also did extensive work in the
field. Most of that research was on the anteater, most notably the
type known as the tamandua, which is found from southern Mexico
throughout Central America and into South America. Her research has
so far led her to Guyana and Brazil, and she plans to finish her
dissertation in Panama.

Harris received her bachelor's degree in African-American
studies from Yale. Though she says she enjoyed her major courses,
she always found herself gravitating toward art-history classes.
That realization led her to earn her master's degree in art
history from UNC, allowing her to tie her two interests together.
"The majority of my graduate work is focused on the African
Diaspora in history,"; she says, referring to the emigration
of Africans and their descendants around the world, most often to
find education, jobs and a better standard of living for themselves
and their children.
This semester, Harris is teaching an African-American-focused
art-history class, which conveniently parallels her research in
studying the market perception for African-American art in the last
30 years.
"I like the students here, sincerely,"; she says.
"They are engaging; they laugh at my jokes and are receptive
during discussion.";
After completing her doctorate at MTSU in May, Brown says she wants
to go into academics and continue teaching. Though she isn't
yet sure where she'll wind up, she says she's hopeful
that there will be jobs in the area.
"People need to be informed to make good decisions,";
she says. "I would really like to take students out and do
research in the field and let them see things you can't see
in textbooks.";
Now in her second semester of teaching here, Harris says she too
has enjoyed the experience, adding that MTSU has been very generous
with both resources and time to help her educational career. Though
she says she's unsure of where she would like to work in the
future, she hopes to put her degrees to good use.
"I would like to secure a tenure-track teaching position, but
I'd also be happy in a museum gallery, where I was
before,"; she says.
Overall, Brown has been impressed with the atmosphere at MTSU,
saying that it's good to be part of the school as it makes
progress in research.
"People don't realize the extent to which MTSU is
moving forward,"; she says. "It's good to
see.";
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Omachonu is new academic vice provost
(Click the headline above for a link to the story.)
>>Top of Page
MTSU Magazine returns
with spring 2011 edition
Dr. Hugh Berryman, professor of sociology and anthropology and
director of MTSU's Forensic Institute for Research and
Education, appears on the cover of the spring 2011 edition of the
re-launched
MTSU Magazine.

Berryman's efforts to establish MTSU as a regional hot spot
for undergraduate forensic-science studies is the thrust of the
cover story in the magazine, which returns with a 48-page issue to
be mailed to alumni this month.
Berryman 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.
Other feature articles in
MTSU Magazine's new incarnation include a look at
five stellar members of the graduating class of 2011 and a preview
of the University's pending Centennial anniversary.
Serving as editor is Drew Ruble, the new senior editor of
university publications at MTSU. Before his appointment, Ruble was
editor of
Nashville Post, BusinessTN and
The City Paper.
"This re-launched MTSU magazine will be compelling in its
content and striking in its visual impression,"; Ruble says.
"Whether reporting on alumni of unusual accomplishment, on
student achievers or on the frontiers of faculty-led research, the
magazine will present the campus not as an isolated entity but as a
place engaged with the weighty issues of the day.";
The Office of Marketing and Communications will host a 3-4 p.m.
magazine-launch party on Wednesday, April 13, in the Alumni
Relations House.
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In Brief: Help with lunch April
27
MTSU's Rutherford County Alumni will hold their annual
scholarship-fundraiser lunch at Bonefish Grill, located at 505 N.
Thompson Lane in Murfreesboro, on Wednesday, April 27,
Administrative Professionals' Day. Two seating times will be
available: 11 a.m. and 12:30 p.m. Cost is $12 per person. To make
your reservations, call 615-898-2922 or visit
www.mtalumni.com
.
>>Top of Page
For the Record:
President offers update on 2011-12 budget
by Dr. Sidney A. McPhee
The picture on our budget for the next fiscal year is becoming a
little clearer, and challenges from state-appropriations reductions
continue for MTSU.
Gov. Bill Haslam has included in his state budget proposal an
additional higher-education state funding reduction of 2 percent.
That reduction will be a $1.7 million reduction for MTSU. As I
mentioned in my message to campus in January, we knew that the
Tennessee Higher Education Commission had recommended a
higher-education budget that included a 1 percent reduction for
next fiscal year, and, depending upon state revenue projections,
that reduction could be up to 3 percent. This reduction will mean
that since July 1, 2008, MTSU's state appropriations have
been reduced by approximately $33 million.
Additionally, the new THEC Outcomes-Based Funding Formula will take
effect July 1. The only good news in that regard is that there will
be a small increase in state funding for MTSU from the combination
of the phase-out of the state appropriation hold-harmless
(positive), the phase-in of the new formula (negative) and the 2
percent additional state reduction. It will not, however, be
significant enough to help much. It will only be helpful in
covering part of the remaining base reductions needed to cover the
last several annual reductions, whose immediate effect, as you
know, was mitigated up to June 30, 2011, with federal stimulus
funds.
Barring any major changes in the amount of state-appropriations
reductions, no division at this time will be asked to make any more
cuts than it has already made or planned. Hopefully, too, no
reallocation of current funds will be needed to fund any new
initiatives that cannot be covered with new funds from enrollment
growth and/or tuition increases.
I will be meeting soon with the provost, deans and vice presidents
to discuss budget needs and challenges. Every effort will be made
to minimize the effect of the additional state-appropriations
reduction. As always, too, MTSU's first priority is to
protect academics, i.e., classroom instruction and student
services.
One thing that may affect the need for additional budget cuts is
salary increases. Gov. Haslam has included in his state budget
proposal a 1.6 percent salary increase. As is usually the case, it
will not be fully funded, and higher-education institutions will be
required to fund a portion of that increase. Any additional
increase and/or possible bonus also will have to be funded by the
institutions.
The governor's salary proposal acknowledges the fact that
there has not been any employee salary increase for the last
several years. Even before Gov. Haslam included a proposed salary
increase in his state budget proposal, the Tennessee Board of
Regents had generally discussed salary increases, so there may be a
possibility of an increase higher than the proposed 1.6 percent. I
will continue to push our efforts to have a salary increase, even
if we have to find local funds to do that.
I will keep you informed as we know more on the developing state
budget.
This is a reprint of recent email communications from Dr.
McPhee to the MTSU community.
>>Top of Page
Student groups team
up for free Earth Day events
Want to show you're green while being true to the blue? Join
MTSU's Students for Environmental Action and the American
Democracy Project Student Organization, who are sponsoring an Earth
Day celebration on Thursday, April 21.
Students are circulating posters with the day's itinerary,
which includes a free document-shredding service, recycling
information, music, special guests and vendors, all on the Keathley
University Center Knoll.
All events are free and open to the public.
Earth Day is usually observed on April 22, but MTSU organizers
moved up their event date to accommodate the Good Friday holiday
and ensure that more people can participate.
"Raiders Recycle"; T-shirts and tote bags, in bright
spring colors and in tie-dye, will be for sale on the Knoll on
April 21. The celebration is scheduled for 9 a.m. until 4 p.m., and
events include:
- free shredding and recycling of documents by MaxShred of
Murfreesboro, 10 a.m.-noon;
- acoustic music and a poetry slam, 11 a.m.-2 p.m.;
- entertainment by DJ B. Roll, 2-4 p.m.; and
- a yard sale by Young Americans for Liberty.
Special guests include representatives from Rover,
Murfreesboro's public-transportation system; The Nature
Conservancy; Procycling Bicycle Repair; the Center for
Environmental Education; the Murfreesboro Electric Department;
Origins beauty products; Scott Atkins for Kangen; and Drs. Cliff
Ricketts, Charles Perry and Ngee Sing Chong, who will bring the
latest green inventions.
For drive-through and drop-off of materials for shredding at
MTSU's Earth Day event, recyclers should enter campus from
East Main Street onto North Baird Lane, turn right onto Alumni
Drive and then left on Friendship Street to circle through the
Davis Science Building parking lot. Students will unload papers
there for shredding by MaxShred.
For more details, visit the SEA website at
www.sea-mtsu.org
or email
amerdem@mtsu.edu.
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Honor retirees
at special April 12 JUB ceremony
A reception for retiring members of the MTSU community is planned
for Tuesday, April 12, from 3 to 4:30 p.m. in the Tennessee Room of
the James Union Building.
Scheduled to be honored are employees who retired in the 2010-11
academic year, including:
- C. Nathan Adams, Computer Information Systems;
- Joe H. Alexander, Building Services;
- Nancy Boone Allsbrook, School of Music;
- Nancy Shacklett Ammerman, Department of Speech and
Theatre;
- Donald Lee Bogle, Construction/Renovation Services;
- Dallas Henderson Burns, Housing Administration;
- James L. Bush Jr., Department of Accounting;
- Donald Allen Campbell, Department of Mathematical
Sciences;
- Howard R. Cook, CRS;
- Linda Davis, University College (formerly Continuing
Education and Distance Learning);
- Nancie Dockery, Business Office;
- Ruben Ray Dougherty, Energy Services;
- Larry Edward Farmer, accounting;
- R. Wayne Gober, CIS;
- Christian L. Haseleu, Department of Recording Industry;
- Barbara S. Haskew, Department of Economics and Finance;
- Gayle Powers Hayes, Housing;
- John David Hays, University Counsel;
- Sherian S. Huddleston, Enrollment Services;
- Joseph W. Hugh, Procurement Services;
- Mary T. Hugh, Human Resource Services;
- David Leon Hutton, Student Aid Office;
- Nemmie Inmon, Custodial Services;
- Betty L. James, College of Business;
- Michael Alvin Johnson, Counseling Services;
- George E. Kerrick, Department of English;
- Paul D. Lee, Department of Physics and Astronomy;
- Shirley A. Luscinski, Student Athlete Enhancement;
- John C. Lynch, News and Media Relations;
- Gary Wayne Moss, Walker Library;
- Sheron Lee Neeley, Creative and Visual Services (formerly
Publications and Graphics);
- Thomas J. Nolan, Department of Geosciences;
- Randall O'Brien, WMOT Radio;
- Emma Jean Osborne, Custodial Services;
- Lynn Palmer, Admissions;
- Elizabeth Patty, Post Office;
- Linda Marie Puckett, Admissions;
- Mary A. Ray, Department of Human Sciences;
- Richard S. Redditt, Department of Engineering
Technology;
- Daniel L. Reynolds, accounting;
- Frances R. Rich, President's Office;
- Barbara A. Robbins, Development and University
Relations;
- Kenneth Robert Rushlow, Department of Elementary and Special
Education;
- Judith M. Sanders, Admissions;
- Judith Ann Shook, CVS/P&G;
- Michael D. Sniderman, speech and theatre;
- Lura Ann Sparks, Facilities Services;
- Catherine D. Stogner, human sciences;
- Horace Niven Stogner Jr., Academic Support Center;
- Jimmy Ray Stokes, Campus School Custodial Services;
- Robert D. Taylor, Energy Services;
- Ronald Wayne Viola, Energy Services;
- Dellmar Walker, human sciences;
- Grant Edwin Wall, Building Services;
- Paul F. Wells, Center for Popular Music;
- Forrestine White Williams, Institutional Equity and
Compliance;
- James H. Wilson, Receiving and Moving Services;
- Tech Wubneh, International Programs; and
- Gary P. Wulfsberg, Department of Chemistry.
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Program for
artists with disabilities will celebrate 1st decade
by Gina K. Logue
Former "American Idol"; competitor Scott Douglas
MacIntyre is scheduled to lead a lineup of talented entertainers
helping VSA Tennessee celebrate its 10th anniversary at a 7 p.m.
performance Tuesday, April 12, at the Schermerhorn Symphony Center
in Nashville.
The evening event will be the culmination of a daylong appreciation
of VSA Tennessee, the state organization on arts and disability.
Tickets are $10 and can be purchased in advance by calling The Arc
of Tennessee at 615-248-4878. Tickets also will be available at the
door.
MacIntyre, a national VSA Young Soloist winner and a top-10
finalist in the 2009 "American Idol"; competition, was
"Idol's"; first blind finalist. His latest CD,
"Heartstrings,"; debuted at No. 15 on the iTunes Pop
Album Chart.
A summa cum laude baccalaureate graduate of Arizona State
University at age 19, MacIntrye earned his master's degree at
Royal Holloway, University of London and the Royal College of
Music.

Other entertainers slated to perform in the 7 p.m. event include
Laura Dodd, the 2010 Inspirational Country Music New Artist of the
Year and former national VSA Young Soloist winner, along with 2011
Tennessee VSA Young Soloist winners Lake Rise Place and country
singer J.P. Williams.
The day's events will start at 9:30 a.m. with hands-on
activities with musical instruments, as well as theater, art and
dance activities for special-education students, followed by an 11
a.m. performance for students.
There also will be four art exhibits, created by children with
disabilities, representing various workshops recently offered by
VSA Tennessee.
At 1 p.m., the Nashville Symphony will lead a workshop connecting
the arts to core concepts of literacy.
The hands-on opportunities will open again for the general public
with art activities at 5:30 p.m. and a multifaceted performance at
7 p.m.
"Over the past 10 years, VSA Tennessee has worked tirelessly
to bring the arts to all people and to celebrate the abilities of
all people,"; said VSA Tennessee Executive Director Lori
Kissinger. "The arts are an investment in the education of
our children, the economy and the lasting imprint that our society
leaves as a record for generations to come.";
The VSA celebration coinciding with MTSU's 100th anniversary
year is especially meaningful, Kissinger said, because MTSU served
as a "fiscal agent"; for the organization in its
inaugural year, enabling it to survive until it could obtain
501(c)3 tax-exempt status.
Kissinger, who teaches organizational communication at MTSU, says
students from her class are coordinating logistics, public
relations and volunteers for the event. Other MTSU contributors
include Omega Phi Alpha, Golden Key Club, the Department of Human
Sciences and organizational-communication and
communication-disorders faculty members.
Sponsors for VSA Tennessee's 10th-anniversary celebration
include the National Endowment for the Arts, VSA's national
offices, the Tennessee Arts Commission, the National Arts and
Disability Center at the University of California-Los Angeles, the
Memorial Foundation, Publix Supermarket Charities, First Tennessee
Bank, Ozburn-Hessey Logistics, CVS/Caremark and Harman.
For more information, call 615-826-5252 or email
userk7706@comcast.net.
>>Top of Page
Mock-trial
awards
CONVINCING ARGUMENTS—Kristin Johnson, left, and David J.
Haggard of MTSU were among the top witnesses and attorneys in the
opening round of the American Mock Trial Association's
National Championship Tournament March

25-27 in Memphis. Haggard, a senior English major from Greenbrier,
Tenn., received an award as one of the tournament's top
attorneys. Johnson, a double major in political science and
communications studies from Elmwood, Tenn., was recognized as one
of the tournament's top witnesses. Both plan to attend law
school after they graduate from MTSU. The MTSU team participated in
the tournament after qualifying in an earlier regional competition
at Mississippi College in Jackson, Miss. The team, consisting of
Lee Whitwell, Rachel Harmon, David J. Haggard, Kristin Johnson,
Kaitlin Beck, Eric Bisby, Lisa Starke and Constance Grieves,
compiled a record of four wins, three losses and a tie in Memphis.
They met teams from the University of Alabama, the University of
Tennessee at Knoxville, the Air Force Academy and Washington
University in rounds, each of which had two scoring judges. Dr.
John R. Vile, dean of the University Honors College, said that
MTSU's mock-trial program dates back to 1989 and is among the
most successful programs in the nation. He and local attorneys
Brandi Snow, Shiva Bozarth and Kevin Rayburn serve as coaches for
the MTSU teams.
photo submitted
>>Top of Page
Labov bringing science-education
effort to campus
The National Academy of Sciences' Jay Labov will speak
Wednesday, April 13, on "Teaching Controversial Topics in
Undergraduate Science: The Critical Need for Science as a Liberal
Art in the 21st Century.";
The lecture is scheduled to begin at 7 p.m. in the Business and
Aerospace Building's State Farm Lecture Hall. A reception
will start at 6:30.

Labov is the senior adviser for education and communications for
NAS and the National Research Council. His appearance, which is
free and open to the public, is part of the MTSU Distinguished
Lecture Series. Labov has directed production of 11 National
Academies' reports focusing on teacher education, advanced
study for high-school students, kindergarten through eighth-grade
education and undergraduate education.
He oversees the NAS's efforts to confront challenges to
teaching evolution in the nation's public schools as well as
the academy's work with professional societies and state
academies of science on education issues.
An organismal biologist by training, Labov spent 20 years on the
Colby College biology department faculty before joining the NAS in
1997. He has received Kellogg, American Association for the
Advancement of Science and Woodrow Wilson fellowship appointments.
His MTSU appearance is sponsored by the Distinguished Lecture Fund
as well as the Colleges of Graduate Studies, Liberal Arts, Basic
and Applied Sciences, and Education; Departments of Chemistry,
Biology, Sociology and Anthropology, and History; the American
Democracy Project; the Learning Teaching and Innovative
Technologies Center; the MTSU SENCER Team; the MTSU WISTEM Center;
and the Nashville Local Section of the American Chemical Society.
>>Top of Page
Student
design show puts creativity on display
by Randy Weiler
Hundreds of garment submissions by MTSU students will be on display
during the Spring 2011 Student Design Fashion Show, "Into the
Wild: Discover the Undiscovered,"; on Friday, April 15, at 7
p.m. in the James Union Building's Tennessee Room.
Dr. Jasmin Kwon, director of the fashion show, created the theme,
which has three sub-categories: "tribal style,";
"wild wild nature"; and "adventures in fantasy
wilderness.";
Kwon's class of 35 students, divided into six committees, has
been planning the show for weeks.
"It gives MTSU textile-program students a chance to showcase
their skills and creativity,"; said Melanie McClure, a senior
textile-merchandising and design major from Chattanooga.
"We gather a lot of resources from our department and utilize
two departments (merchandising and design),"; added Ashley
Adkins, a senior from Nashville, who also is a
textile-merchandising and design major. "This is our chance
to show our skills that we have been learning for the last two
years.";
One of the garment submissions is from Taylore Massa, a junior
apparel-design major from Smyrna, whose silver garment was made
from aluminum foil and paper.
Massa said her "inspiration was the book 'Rainbow
Fish' for the 'wild, wild nature' category. I
took a black cocktail dress and attached 'scales' made
out of magazines and aluminum foil to the dress in an overlapping
pattern using hot glue. The finished garment resembles a beautiful,
shining fish from the ocean.";
A second submission is from Leslie Stephens, a senior
textile-merchandising major from Nashville, who also said her
garment is "inspired by 'wild, wild nature.' To
quote Diane Von Furstenberg on leopard print, "If it looks
good on animals, it looks good on us.";
Stephens' brown- and cream-colored jacket-and-skirt ensemble
is made from 100 percent polyester.
The MTSU community and general public are invited. Ticket prices
are $7 in advance, $10 at the door and $15 for VIP tickets.
For information, contact Kwon at 615-904-8340.
>>Top of Page
Concrete Industry Management
gains department status
by Randy Weiler
The MTSU Concrete Industry Management Program is now the MTSU
Department of Concrete Industry Management.
Alumni and industry partners joined MTSU faculty and administrators
for the announcement, which was made in the Tom H. Jackson Building
on March 31.

In essence, CIM will leave the umbrella of the Department of
Engineering Technology to become one of 10 departments in the
College of Basic and Applied Sciences. It was the first program of
its kind in the country when students first took classes in fall
1996, and CIM saw its first seven graduates in 2000.
";I'm excited about what the future holds for CIM,
working with the industry in new and radicalized ways in the
amazing world of concrete,"; said University Provost Dr. Brad
Bartel. "This (change) has a higher degree of visibility and
distinctiveness.";
"We have a lot of past success, but we'll have a lot of
future successes,"; added CIM Director Heather Brown.
"I'm proud of our activity level.";
Brown, who will become department chair, said a new $8.5 million
building to house CIM is planned for the east side of campus. She
said about 25 percent of the funding is in place, and she expects
construction to begin by late 2012.
"CIM is a great program,"; College of Basic and Applied
Sciences Dean Tom Cheatham said. "It's amazing how
passionate folks in the industry are. They support the program in
every way.";
CIM offers a four-year Bachelor of Science degree for its majors,
offering a broad education with technical knowledge and a solid
business background. Currently, there are 315 majors and more than
500 alumni.
Bartel said that an "executive MBA degree to train students
at a higher level"; soon would be added for the CIM
department.
Known for its close industry ties and high job-placement rates, CIM
has become one of the fastest-growing majors on campus.
Other CIM programs around the country are spinoffs of the MTSU
program, including those offered at Arizona State University, the
New Jersey Institute of Technology, Chico State in California and
Texas State University.
>>Top of Page
Antenna
system to eliminate wireless 'dead zones'
by Tom Tozer
In December 2010, MTSU signed a contract with Longent LLC to
install a Distributed Antenna System throughout campus to add
wireless-communication coverage and capacity to campus.
A design for the placement of antennae is currently under way. The
system should be fully operational by fall.
Wireless carriers have sought ways to expand coverage areas because
of increased wireless use on campus, but building another
communications tower would require space that just doesn't
exist at MTSU. Installing a DAS eliminates the need for a large
tower by strategically placing smaller antennae on rooftops.
If those external antennae don't provide the needed coverage,
some antennae, resembling smoke detectors, will be installed inside
certain facilities.

"When you start to look at the growth of the use of the smart
phones and the increasing demands, there are many dead spots on the
campus,"; said Bruce Petryshak, vice president of information
technology. "We're trying to future-proof the
University as best you can with this kind of technology.";
Eliminating dead zones on campus will be particularly important
with emergency notification, he noted. The basement of the Cope
Administration Building, for example, is one designated "safe
place"; for tornado warnings, but cell phones often
don't receive a signal in that area. The DAS will allow
building runners in Cope and more isolated areas to communicate
with public-safety officials and find out when an all-clear has
been issued.
"Longent is a neutral partner providing the infrastructure
for the system,"; noted Steve Prichard, telecommunications
director, who helped prepare the request for the proposal and is
working closely on the project.
"Longent makes it possible for the carriers to connect into
this antennae system, and their signal is then broadcast over the
network. It's a very localized system. It's focused
much more on getting coverage within a small geographic area.
It's designed to cover the core campus.";
Prichard said DAS is referred to as a microcell system. Traditional
large towers are macrocell systems.
"Distributed antenna systems were first used in sports
venues, stadiums, arenas and also airports,"; Prichard said.
"It has now expanded to universities, hospitals and
convention centers—places where masses of people come
together and want to use their phones for voice or data
purposes.";
"At a football game, for example, you can have a lot of
people (in one place), and density suddenly becomes
important,"; Petryshak added. "Everyone is looking up a
web page or posting photos. The beauty of it is it's not
vendor-specific. Whatever carrier you have on campus that
participates on the network will have top connectivity.";

Prichard said he anticipates that AT&T and Verizon will come on
board. Those two carriers comprise about 80 percent of those
registered with Rave Wireless, the emergency-notification system
MTSU uses. He said the DAS can accommodate four or more carriers,
so he hopes other phone services will become part of it.
"The carriers have seen the growth at MTSU and figured out
that it would be nice to serve that market,"; Prichard said.
"They have anticipated this explosion in smart phones,
wireless devices, tablets and so on. They see that people are
pulling more and more traffic from the wireless carriers than ever
before. They want to give the user the best possible
service.";
The whole thing won't cost MTSU a dime.
"As the carriers come on board, they will pay an access
fee,"; Petryshak said. "We have a third-party company
that's putting in the system. They will make the arrangements
with the carriers, and that's how they get paid.";
"It's been estimated that it would cost $1 million to
$2 million to install the DAS,"; Prichard added. "If
only two carriers sign on, it would be a 50-50 cost. If we get two
carriers to come on right away, it will make it more lucrative for
additional carriers to come on. Everyone would share the cost. Each
carrier would have its own specific equipment to carry a signal,
but they would share a distribution infrastructure put together by
our third-party provider.
"We should see a big improvement in making and receiving
phone calls and the use of data devices,"; Prichard added.
>>Top of Page
Martin Chair
golf tourney set April 19 at Champions Run
from Staff Reports
Insurance Liaison Committee members are hoping to see another large
field for the 27th annual BlueCross BlueShield of Tennessee Tommy
T. Martin Chair of Insurance Golf Tournament, which will be held
Tuesday, April 19.
"It's easily the main fundraiser for our
program,"; Dr. Ken Hollman, Martin Chair of Insurance chair,
said of the tournament at Champions Run Golf Course in Rockvale.
Chattanooga-based BCBST again is the main corporate sponsor with a
$7,500 contribution. Hollman added that Special Touch of
Murfreesboro is making a $2,500 contribution, while Jack Morris
Glass is providing lunch.
Golfers can begin registering at 10:30 a.m. on the day of the
tournament. It will begin with a noon shotgun start in the
best-ball, scramble format. A meal and awards presentation will
begin around 4:30 p.m.
For more information, contact Hollman at 615-898-2673 or
khollman@mtsu.edu.
>>Top of Page
Accounting alumni
event scheduled
by Randy Weiler
The 20th annual Accounting Alumni Appreciation Day at MTSU will be
held Thursday, April 28, from 7:30 a.m. to 4:50 p.m. in the State
Farm Lecture Hall of the Business and Aerospace Building.
The event targets those interested in accounting, taxation and
computer training. The fee is $100 for MTSU alumni and $150 for all
other attendees. Net proceeds will be earmarked for accounting
scholarships, and lunch will be provided.
Participants will earn eight hours of Continuing Professional
Education credit and have the opportunity to visit with alumni and
former professors and see how the campus configuration is changing.
Aaron Beam, co-founder and first chief financial officer of
HealthSouth, will open the conference with a session on Wagon to
Disaster.
Dr. Joe Huddleston, executive director of the Multistate Tax
Commission, will discuss national developments in state business
taxation and the Multistate Tax Commission.
Breakout sessions and leaders will include the following MTSU
professors:
- Bill Mooningham, who will provide an American Institute of
CPAs update;
- Drs. Mary Phillips and Tammy Bahmanziari, who will discuss
XBRL, or EXtensible Business Reporting Language;
- Dr. Pat Wall, who'll present an employment-law
update;
- Dr. Jeannie Harrington, who plans to discuss contemporary
cost-managerial practices;
- Dr. Lara Daniel, who'll tackle "The
Constitutionality of Health Care Law";;
- Dr. Denise Leggett, who will discuss issues in taxation;
- Dr. Paula Thomas, who'll provide a Financial Accounting
Standards Board update; and
- Dr. Robert "Smitty"; Smith, who will bring a
Governmental Accounting Standards Board update.
Rick Murray, executive vice president and chief financial officer
of Commerce Union Bank, also will discuss information technology
during a breakout session. Seating is limited, so participants
should register early at
www.mtsu.edu/accounting
. For more information, call the MTSU Department of Accounting
at 615-898-5306.
>>Top of Page
Register now
for See Spot Run 5K
Participants are being encouraged again to run with their dogs in
the annual See Spot Run 5K Run/Walk on Saturday, May 14.

The event, which is sponsored by MTSU's Office of Leadership
and Service, supports MTSU's Habitat Blitz Build and the
Rutherford County Habitat for Humanity.
It all begins at 6:30 a.m. with registration at Peck Hall, followed
by the 8 a.m. race start on campus.
The entry fee is $20 per person before Sunday, May 8, and $25 until
race day. Organizers also are offering a group rate to student
organizations and faculty; groups of 10 or more participants may
race at $15 per entry.
Entry fees include a T-shirt to the first 200 participants and
awards to the top age-group finishers. The 5K course is both flat
and fast. Participants can register at
http://bit.ly/SeeSpotRun11
.
For more information, please contact the MTSU Office of Leadership
and Service at 615-898-5812.
>>Top of Page
Digital
dedication
MORE ACCESSIBLE—College of Mass Communication graduate
student Barry Blair works on his Master of Fine Arts degree
portfolio in the Walker Library Digital Media Studio March 22
during an open house for faculty. The studio offers 12 iMacs with
27-inch monitors, eight Dell PCs with 22-inch monitors and an array
of open-source and commercial software to enhance students'
multimedia presentations. Librarians and student assistants are
available to help students with their projects. Funding for the
studio, which opened last fall, comes from Student Technology
Access Fees. The studio is open during regular library hours. For
more information about the new Digital Media Studio, call
615-904-8526 or visit
http://library.mtsu.edu/digitalmediastudio
.
photo by News and Media Relations
>>Top of Page
from MT Athletic Communications
2011 football season tickets are now on sale at the Middle
Tennessee ticket office, and the good news is that the prices will
be the same as last year.
More good news is that the Blue Raiders will play six home games
again this year, including September games against Georgia Tech and
Memphis. On the schedule also are four Sun Belt conference games,
highlighted by the traditional battle with rival Western Kentucky
in October.
Reserved sideline tickets for the six-game package are $100 each,
while reserved campus-sideline seats are $70. Chairbacks and
club-level seats are $135 and $100, respectively, but they require
a minimum donation to the Blue Raider Athletic Association of $250
for chairbacks or $500 for club-level seats.
A general-admission pass to the upper deck is $75 per person for
all six games. End-zone general admission for the season is only
$50 per person. Reserved sideline seating for groups of 20 or more
is $85 per set of season tickets.
Marco Born, director of ticketing, also announced an incentive
program for renewal of 2010 tickets.
"If fans renew their season tickets in full by the renewal
date deadline of June 15, for every five season tickets the account
holder renews, they will receive the official Blue Raider Season
Ticket T-Shirt.";
Reserved single-game tickets, which will be available Aug. 1, are
$25 for sideline seats for Georgia Tech, $22 for Memphis and $18
for Sun Belt Conference games with Western Kentucky, Louisiana,
Arkansas State and Florida International. End-zone reserved seats
are $20 for Georgia Tech, $18 for Memphis and $17 for SBC games.
General-admission upper deck is $18 for Georgia Tech, $15 for
Memphis and $12 for Sun Belt games. Student guest and group rates
for the Georgia Tech game are $12; all the rest of the games are
$8. The ticket office also will have tickets to the game with
Tennessee in Knoxville on a priority basis.
Season tickets may be purchased by calling the ticket office at
888-YES-MTSU (888-937-6878) or visiting
www.goblueraiders.com
.
>>Top of Page
Baobab tree
photo exhibit closes April 14
"The Baobab: Tree of Generations"; exhibit is on display
in MTSU's Baldwin Photographic Gallery through Thursday,
April 14.
The photographer, Elaine Ling, was born in Hong Kong but has lived
in Canada since age nine. She studied piano, cello and medicine.
Upon graduation from medical school, Ling became a family physician
with the First Nation populations of northern Canada.
Her images' life began a 20-year journey in photography,
exploring the shifting equilibrium between nature and the man-made
across four continents. Ling has photographed in the deserts of
Mongolia, Namibia, North Africa, India, South America, Australia
and the American Southwest and in the citadels of Persepolis,
Petra, Cappadocia, Machu Picchu, Angkor Wat and Great Zimbabwe.
Exhibitions are free and open to the public. The Baldwin
Photographic Gallery is located in the McWherter Learning Resources
Center; its operating hours are 8 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Monday through
Friday and noon to 4 p.m. Saturday.
For information about the exhibit, call 615-898-2085.
>>Top of Page
MTSU Around
the Country: Mass-comm grad Strickland still aiming high
by Tom Tozer
Some MTSU alumni are almost impossible to follow because
they're continually on the move, aspiring to newer and
greater heights. Ken Strickland (B.S.'89) is one of them.
Strickland, an MTSU football player-to-be turned-mass communication
major, recently was promoted to deputy bureau chief at NBC News in
Washington, D.C.
"It's very different from what I've done for the
past 14 years in the field as a beat producer,"; Strickland
said. "You can do a lot as an individual producer or
reporter, but as a manager, you can really help effect change on a
much larger scale. It's an evolving industry, and I'm
excited about NBC News.";

Strickland started at WKRN-TV, the ABC affiliate in Nashville. He
also worked at WVTM, the NBC affiliate in Birmingham, Ala., where
he won a Peabody Award for a documentary. He considers working as a
tape editor for CNN in Atlanta as his first "real job";
after college. He joined NBC in 1995 and served as an associate
producer for "Dateline."; Two years later, he was named
White House producer, then moved to helping cover Capitol Hill.
Strickland's interest in journalism evolved from the
high-school gridiron in Joliet, Ill., to making the Blue Raider
football team as a walk-on player.
"I wanted to play football, but my high-school coach also
knew that I had an interest in communication,"; he said.
"My coach had gone to MTSU for a clinic under Boots Donnelly,
and he came back and said to me, 'Strickland, there is this
school you should look at. It's a Division 1-AA school in
football, and they have a really good communications
program.'
"So I got on the bus and met with the MTSU coaches and also
with (Dr.) Dennis Oneal in the (then-)School of Communication. I
was trying to decide between going to Southern Illinois and MTSU.
As it turned out, Dr. Oneal did his undergraduate work at Southern
Illinois, and he encouraged me to go to MTSU. I ended up quitting
football before the season started, but I stuck around for the
communication program.";
Strickland has no regrets about his lackluster football career, nor
do Blue Raider football and NBC. Today, Strickland coaches students
who want to pursue a big-league career in journalism.
"We get a lot of applications for interns, and one of the
things that puts some candidates above the others is their
educational background."; Strickland said. "My
experience at MTSU—and I was there long before digital
journalism crept in—put me far ahead of my
competitors.";
Strickland advises college students to do as many internships as
they can and gain real-world experience.
"By the time I graduated from college, I had already done
enough internships and had had enough part-time jobs where I was
writing for WSMV, the NBC affiliate in Nashville, on the weekend,
editing tape for WTVF, the local CBS affiliate, and had gotten an
internship at CNN between my junior and senior years where I was
editing stuff during the 1988 Democratic Convention for broadcast.
None of that would have been possible had I not learned those
skills while in college.
"I really think the foundation I got at MTSU was, for me,
what made the difference,"; he continued. "I was talking
with the interns this morning, telling them that being successful
is about 'buffet service,' not about
'white-tablecloth service,' where people come to you
with menus. You have to get up and go get it.";
Strickland added that faculty and staff at MTSU,
"specifically (Dr.) Bob Spires and Pat Jackson, were a
critical part of my development as a student—they and others
were a constant source of encouragement and guidance.";
Strickland and his wife, Christina, have two children, ages 9 and
4. The family has lived in suburban Maryland since 1995.
"I'm on the Board of Visitors for the College of Mass
Communication, but it's been a few years since I've
been back to MTSU. It's been hard to find the time. I'd
like to get back and talk to the students,"; he said.
VETERAN NEWSMAN—Shown above is an article by MTSU alumnus Ken
Strickland, then a producer for NBC News, posted during the 2010
congressional campaign.
photos submitted
>>Top of Page
Friz honored
as top business professor
from Staff Reports
Edward Friz, an instructor in the Department of Management and
Marketing, has been chosen "Outstanding Professor in the
College of Business"; in an election sponsored by the
insurance fraternity Gamma Iota Sigma.
Students in the Jennings A. Jones College of Business announced the
award after a vote on March 17. Every professor in the College of
Business was a candidate for the honor. All students with a major
or minor in the college were eligible to vote.
A total of 457 votes were cast, and Friz received 72—more
than his nearest competitor.

"My teaching style is a hybrid of both psychology and
marketing theories,"; Friz said. "My classroom
philosophy is to create a lighthearted learning environment using
real-life examples found in today's headlines. I encourage
students to be a part of the learning experience by sharing their
own relevant stories and life lessons, and I believe it is very
important that my students enjoy learning as much as I enjoy
teaching.";
Gamma Iota Sigma gives the award as part of its competition with 50
other chapters across the country. The award is given only at MTSU.
Dr. Ken Hollman, holder of the Martin Chair of Insurance in the
College of Business and adviser for Gamma Iota Sigma, praised Friz.
"Mr. Friz is devoted to the students and his
profession,"; Hollman said. "He is well-prepared,
current in his field and can relate extremely well to today's
student.
"The students in our fraternity and I feel that naming an
outstanding professor each year is a way to provide psychological
encouragement to the faculty for doing a good job,"; Hollman
added.
Friz has been an instructor in management and marketing at MTSU
since 2003. He received both his bachelor's and
master's degrees from MTSU.
>>Top of Page
Campus Calendar April 11-24,
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
April 12: MTSU Baseball vs. Vanderbilt, 6 p.m.
April 13: MTSU Baseball vs. Tennessee Tech, 6 p.m.
April 15-17: MTSU Baseball vs. Troy (6, 4 and 1
p.m.)
April 16: MTSU Soccer vs. Belmont, 4 p.m.
April 17: MTSU Soccer vs. soccer alumni, 2 p.m.
April 20: MTSU Softball vs. Western Kentucky, 6
p.m.
April 22-24: MTSU Baseball vs. Louisiana-Monroe
(6, 4 and 1 p.m.)
April 23-24: MTSU Softball vs. Troy (1 p.m. and
noon)
For information, visit
www.goblueraiders.com
.
Through April 14
Photography Exhibit: Elaine Ling, "The Baobab: Tree of
Generations";
Baldwin Photo Gallery, Learning Resources Center
8 a.m.-4:30 p.m., Monday-Friday; noon-4 p.m. Saturday
For information, contact: 615-898-2085.
Monday, April 11
Spring Honors Lecture Series: Dr. Bob Pondillo, "Creativity,
Storytelling and Movies";
3 p.m., Room 106, Honors Amphitheatre
For information, visit
www.mtsu.edu/honors
or contact: 615-898-2152.
Faculty Senate Meeting
4:30 p.m., Room 100, James Union Building
For information, visit
www.mtsu.edu/facultysenate
or contact: 615-898-2582.
Spring Choral Concert
7:30 p.m., Hinton Music Hall
For information, visit
www.mtsumusic.com
or contact: 615-898-2493.
Tuesday, April 12
Tornado Siren Testing Date
12:20 p.m., campuswide
For information, contact: 615-898-2424.
William M. Bass Legends in Forensic Science Lectureship:
Dr. Jan Garavaglia, "Forensic Pathology: Fact and
Fiction";
7 p.m., Murphy Center
For information, contact: 615-494-7713.
Wednesday, April 13
MTSU Guitar Ensemble
8 p.m., Hinton Music Hall
For information, visit
www.mtsumusic.com
.
Thursday, April 14
Retired Faculty/Staff Coffee
9:30 a.m., Foundation House
For information, contact: 615-898-2922.
MTSU Wind Ensemble
7:30 p.m., Hinton Music Hall
For information, visit
www.mtsumusic.com
.
Friday, April 15
Spring 2011 Student Design Fashion Show
7 p.m., Tennessee Room, JUB
Tickets: $7 advance;, $10 door
For information, see page 5 or contact: 615-904-8340.
Sunday, April 17
MTSU Symphony Orchestra
4 p.m., Hinton Music Hall
For information, visit
www.mtsumusic.com
.
MTSU Chinese Film Festival: "In the Mood for
Love";
6 p.m., Room 103, Bragg Mass Communication Building
For information, contact: 615-898-2217 or 615-904-8365.
April 18-19
The Clothesline Project
11 a.m.-1 p.m., Keathley University Center Knoll
For information, contact: 615-898-5989.
Tuesday, April 19
"Take Back the Night/Walk a Mile in Her Shoes'
6 p.m., KUC Knoll
For information, contact: 615-898-5989.
April 21-23
MTSU Dance Theatre: Spring Dance Concert
7:30 nightly, Tucker Theatre
Admission: $10 adults; $5 for MTSU faculty, staff and K-12
students; MTSU students free
For information, visit
http://bit.ly/MTTheatre10-11
or contact: 615-494-8810.
Get noticed in
The Record !
Submit Campus Calendar items and other news to
gfann@mtsu.edu by 3 p.m. Wednesday, April 13, for the
April 25 edition of
The Record. Deadline to submit items for the May 9 edition
of
The Record is 3 p.m. Wednesday, April 27. For additional
Record deadlines through the spring, please visit
www.mtsu.edu/news/Record/deadlines.shtml
.
>>Top of Page