The Record, May 23, 2011, V19.22
Read the full-color PDF version here!
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2
more MTSU faculty receive Fulbrights
by Tom Tozer and Randy Weiler
Two MTSU professors have been awarded Fulbright Scholarships, which
will take them across the globe to teach, conduct research and
extend the hand of partnership to other universities.
Dr. Mohammed Albakry, associate professor of English, will prepare
for a year's residence in Morocco this fall, where he will teach
linguistics at the University of Mohammad the Fifth. The university
is one of that nation's largest and its first modern university, he
said.

Albakry's assignment will be for 10 months, comprising the 2011-12
academic year. Albakry's wife, Judy, is an academic adviser in
MTSU's College of Liberal Arts.
"In addition to teaching, I will be kind of an ambassador of
American scholarship, linking the two countries together, forging
partnerships with scholars there, giving lectures in different
places," Mohammed Albakry said. "It could certainly result in
bringing scholars from there to MTSU."
Albakry, who is a native of Egypt, said he chose North Africa as a
destination, and Morocco in particular, because he enjoyed an
international conference there.
"It's a very interesting place—where East meets West," he
said. "For linguists, it's a good location to be in for research
and writing, because of the diversity of the Moroccan linguistic
landscape."
The professor says he wants this experience to become a permanent,
positive memory for the couple's children. Their son, Sami,
5½, is in kindergarten, and their daughter, Amanda, 3½,
is in day care.
"I see this as a growing experience where they will be exposed to
different environments and cultures in this formative stage of
their lives," he noted.
Dr. Mark Byrnes, dean of the College of Liberal Arts, said he is
"delighted that Dr. Mohammed Albakry of our English department has
won a Fulbright to Morocco. He joins Dr. Richard Pace, who will be
going to Brazil. "
The latest announcements mean MTSU students and faculty have
received five Fulbright awards in one year. History professor Dr.
Sean Foley will extend his current Fulbright in Malaysia through
fall 2011. MTSU senior Kim Yarborough was offered a Fulbright for
an English teaching assistantship in Spain, and recent graduate
Patrick Pratt received a Fulbright to research poverty in Tanzania.
"To have three faculty members and two students on Fulbrights in
the same year is outstanding and reflects the excellent quality of
our faculty and students," Byrnes said.

Pace, a professor of sociology and anthropology, said the Fulbright
Teaching and Research Award will "provide me with an excellent
opportunity to accomplish this level of intellectual exchange as I
teach and conduct my research in Brazil.
"This is an important milestone I have not had the opportunity to
fulfill during my academic career," he added, noting that he will
head to the Brazilian Amazon to teach and conduct research during
the 2011-12 academic year.
His time in Brazil begins this summer by directing two study-abroad
programs affiliated with MTSU: the Tennessee Consortium for
International Studies in Fortaleza and Rio, followed by the
University's ethnographic field school in the Amazonian community
of Gurupá.
"The latter trip will include seven MTSU students who will conduct
undergraduate research in the rain forest while learning about
anthropological field techniques," Pace said.
Pace will participate in an archaeological project in Gurupá
in July, funded in part by a Faculty Research and Creative Activity
Committee grant from MTSU.
In August, Pace will begin his teaching duties, all in Portuguese,
at the Federal University of Pará in Belem, which is located
at the mouth of the Amazon River.
In addition to teaching, he will conduct ethnographic research on
the socioenvironmental impact of the Belo Monte Dam on downstream
communities, including Gurupá. Once completed, Pace noted,
Belo Monte will be the third largest dam in the world and will
create massive environmental changes for the people who depend upon
the forest and river for their livelihoods.
During his Fulbright year, Pace will work with colleagues from the
Federal University of Pará to publish an edited volume in
Portuguese on seven decades of anthropological research in the
community of Gurupá as well as publishing his data on the
cross-cultural impact of television. (
Please click
here
for details on a photo exhibit, which includes work from Pace,
detailing MTSU's anthropological work in the Amazon for the last
seven decades.)
Pace said he also will work to expand MTSU exchange opportunities
for students and faculty in Brazil.
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On the Hill
(Click the headline above for a link to the photo.)
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NASA FOCUS Lab is
breaking down barriers to learning
by Sydney L. Warneke
Students are leaving college and entering the aviation-industry job
market with only "independent silos" of training, says MTSU
aerospace professor Dr. Paul A. Craig—training that isn't
completely realistic to how flight operations run in the field.
To break down these "silos" and promote cross-disciplinary
communications, the Department of Aerospace at MTSU is using its
NASA Flight Operations Center-Unified Simulation, or FOCUS, Lab to
train students in real-life scenarios and create needed interaction
between students in diverse areas of study.
"Once students enter the job market, they realize that success and
efficiency depend on cross-disciplinary communications and
understanding," Craig says. "We want to prepare the next generation
of aviation professionals in a real-world environment and enable
employees to perform better on the job from the first days of
hire."
Underrepresented students also have an open door into the NASA
FOCUS experience. The Tennessee Louis Stokes Alliance for Minority
Participation, or TLSAMP, at MTSU provides learning opportunities
for minority students who are majoring in science, technology,
engineering or math.
Craig, who directs the training program, says this is his fourth
NASA-grant project. The current program includes a team of seven
undergraduate and graduate students representing areas of
aerospace, psychology and TLSAMP.
Students in different academic areas traditionally learn in
isolated clusters, Craig explains, but the NASA FOCUS Lab allows
students from various disciplines to interact with one another. The
professor says he believes such collaborative learning better
prepares students for the workforce.
In the aviation industry, for example, "these interactions can
produce smooth and safe operations for passengers, profits for
employers and economic benefits for the nation and world," Craig
points out.
Billy Whisman, a senior flight dispatch student, says the work he
has accomplished in the program is extremely valuable when it comes
to finding a job in his discipline.
"I realized that dispatch is where my passion is, and now I am
going full-force into that," he says. "Plus, when an employer asks
me questions about certain situations in a job interview, I can
think back to what I decided during that lab time."
Rebekah Cavaliere, an aerospace major with a professional-pilot
concentration, says the program exposed her to the "big picture" of
the airline industry and allowed her to see behind the scenes.
"I was placed in the lab as one of two pilots," Cavaliere says.
"Our jobs were to dispatch and direct flights as well as keep track
of any delays. We were responsible for communicating with the
flight-dispatch operator, maintenance control and maintenance
coordinator as any issues came up."
As a result of what they've learned at MTSU, Craig says, students
will be able to make good decisions when they are forced to react
in real-life work situations.
Sydney L. Warneke, a journalism major, graduated May 7 with a
bachelor's degree in mass communication. She worked as a practicum
student for the Office of News and Media Relations during the
spring 2011 semester.
HANDS-ON LEARNING—Students train in MTSU's NASA FOCUS Lab in
the Business and Aerospace Building. In the photo above, Charity
Somma, front, and Colin Kerley, second from front, work in the
flight-operations data positions during a three-hour simulation. At
right is Marvin Hood, working as flight-operations coordinator,
while Kyler Garmen handles maintenance planning and scheduling and
Alden Stokes works maintenance control in the back of the lab. In
the photo below, aerospace Assistant Professor Andrea Georgiou,
standing, works with Hood, Somma and Kerley in the center of the
lab as Twyla Frazier, left, and Sean Torman, right, concentrate on
their tasks during the three-hour simulation in the NASA FOCUS Lab.
Georgiou is coordinator of the aerospace flight-dispatch program.
MTSU Photographic Services photos by Andy Heidt
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In Brief: Summer at Campus
Rec
The $50 summer family membership for MTSU employees is back at
Campus Recreation through the end of August! "Family" includes the
employee, a spouse and dependent children up to age 21. Families
also may be interested in summer camps, which begin May 31. For
more information, call 615-898-2104, or stop by the Campus Rec
Office 7:30 a.m.-5 p.m. weekdays.
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For the Record:
Changes beginning for transfer-student services
by Dr. Debra Sells
In our ongoing efforts to better serve transfer students wishing to
enroll at MTSU, Provost Brad Bartel, Dean Mike Boyle and I are
pleased to announce a number of changes affecting this important
group of students. As the result of the hard work of a number of
MTSU folks who work closely with transfer students, several new
programs are under way.
Beginning this summer, MTSU Financial Aid will be able to serve as
the home institution for consortium agreements, allowing MTSU
students with additional summer financial aid eligibility to apply
that financial aid to summer classes at a local, in-state community
college. Similarly, community-college students, or students from
other four-year institutions within Tennessee who wish to take
summer courses at MTSU, will be able to use available financial aid
from their home institutions to cover costs on our campus. Students
interested in this program should contact Stephen White in the
Office of Financial Aid, located in Room 218 in the Cope
Administration Building, or at
swhite@mtsu.edu or 615-898-2422.

As you may know, MTSU recently signed a dual-admission agreement
with Chattanooga State, and we already have a dual-admission
agreement in place with Nashville State. We are hoping to finalize
a similar agreement with Motlow in the near future. The
dual-admission program allows qualified students to be admitted to
MTSU contingent upon their successful completion of an associate's
degree at their community-college campus. Dual-admission students
may receive academic advising from the MTSU University College
Advising Center to help seamlessly transfer credits.
To clarify communication with our community-college partners and to
insure consistency in the key contacts to those campuses,
community-college recruitment and transfer admissions have been
consolidated within our undergraduate Admissions Office. Michelle
Blackwell, who has served as director of the independent Transfer
Student Services Office at MTSU, will now be working within
undergraduate admissions to help create a smooth admissions process
for transfer students. She will be working closely with Matt
Hannah, who has served for several years as the
undergraduate-admissions recruiter assigned to community colleges.
Michelle and Matt will now work together to provide community
colleges with their own specific admissions representative to work
on-site consistently with students. Michelle and Matt will provide
all services to students up to the point of their admission to
MTSU, and they also will coordinate memoranda of agreement and
articulation agreements, 2+2 programs, reverse transfers and dual
enrollments. Michelle's new location will be in Cope 208; her
telephone number and email address remain the same (615-898-2237
and
emblackw@mtsu.edu). As a result of these changes, the
former Transfer Student Services Office in the McFarland Building
will be closed, and students looking for transfer-admission
information should be directed to Cope 208.
Advising for transfer students, previously coordinated through
Michelle Blackwell and Transfer Student Services, will now become a
part of the University College Advising Center under the direction
of Dr. Laurie Witherow. Dusty Doddridge has been reassigned to the
UCAC and will be working with transfer students to connect them to
faculty advisers as they declare majors and enter MTSU. He may be
reached through the UCAC main telephone line at 615-898-2339 or
directly at 615-904-8373 or via email at
jdoddrid@mtsu.edu. Transfer students looking for general
academic-advising information should be directed to the UCAC in the
McFarland Building.
The University College will continue to be responsible for all
off-campus programs, operation of the Middle Tennessee Education
Center in Shelbyville and MTSU's Adult Degree Completion Program.
We appreciate the work of all of our staff who dedicate themselves
to assisting transfer students in joining the MTSU family, and we
encourage you to contact Michelle, Matt and Dusty if they may be of
service to you or your students. Thanks.
Dr. Debra Sells is vice president for student affairs and vice
provost for enrollment and academic services.
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Alumni honored at
record-setting spring graduation
Mark Gwyn, director of the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation,
stressed the values of integrity and public service to the
graduates recognized May 7 at MTSU's 100th spring commencement.
Gwyn, a 1985 MTSU alumnus, delivered the keynote speech at the
first of two spring 2011 graduation ceremonies. The University
awarded more than 2,400 degrees, setting a record for the spring
ceremony.
"There has never been a better time for forward-thinking people,"
said Gwyn, who encouraged graduates assembled at Murphy Center to
"seek out and embrace change and actively seek out and find ways to
grow throughout your lives.
"With some dedication and perseverance, you will eventually
accomplish your dreams," added Gwyn, the first African-American to
lead Tennessee's largest law-enforcement agency.
Gwyn, who was reappointed in 2010 to a second six-year term as TBI
director, was among five alumni recognized by the University during
commencement as 2010-11 Distinguished Alumni. Others were:
- Michael Latterell (B.S. '03), who was honored for young
alumni achievement. Latterell has been nominated for five Grammy
Awards as a recording engineer and won a 2009 Grammy for Best
Bluegrass Album;
- H.G. "Pete" Taylor (B.S. '60), who was honored for service to
the community. Taylor served for 33 years in the U.S. Army,
including roles as commanding general of the 24th Infantry
Division and the National Training Center; and
- Don and Hanna Witherspoon, who were honored for service to
the community. The Witherspoons graduated from MTSU in 1964 and
have served their alma mater in a variety of volunteer and
fundraising roles.
Dr. Hershel "Pat" Wall, special assistant to the president of
the University of Tennessee, was the keynote speaker for the 1 p.m.
ceremony. Wall, a Murfreesboro native, spent more than 50 years on
the UT Health Science Center's Memphis campus serving in various
roles, including chancellor and interim dean of medicine.
MTSU divides its spring and fall commencements into two ceremonies
to accommodate its large graduation classes. In September, MTSU
will celebrate the centennial of its founding.
Candidates recognized at spring 2011 commencement surpassed the
mark set in spring 2009, when 2,147 were honored.
MTSU President Sidney A. McPhee urged graduates at the May 7
ceremonies to "enjoy this time of excitement and bask in the glory
that comes with this day.
"Although you may feel that the long journey is now over, those of
us here at MTSU see this time of commencement as being a comma,
rather than a period, in your lives," McPhee said. "This is just
the beginning of even greater things to come."
Gwyn, whose entire career has been spent in law enforcement,
extolled the values of public service and urged graduates to
consider such options. "Helping victims see justice served keeps me
going for many days," he said.
The TBI director told graduates that "MTSU is a good foundation for
your future," but noted that they will face tests of character. He
urged them to act with integrity and build enduring relationships
with family, friends and community.
Integrity, he said, is "deliberately doing the right thing, even if
no one knows what you have done."
Wall, also a retired colonel and physician in the U.S. Army
Reserve, urged graduates at the afternoon ceremony to share their
talents and skills with their communities and "enjoy the journey
ahead … this is only the beginning.
"I am particularly proud to be an alumnus of the No. 1 choice of
undergraduates in Tennessee," added Wall, who graduated from MTSU
in 1957 and spoke fondly of faculty role models from his
undergraduate studies.
"If you have valued your education, invest in the future of where
you received it," he said. "Don't wait to be asked."
To see a small slideshow of photos from commencement, go to the
MTSU News "Spring 2011 Commencement" photo gallery at Flickr by
clicking
here.
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Work
under way on women's basketball offices
from MT Athletic Communications
Alumnus Ken "Coach" Shipp knocked down the first wall May 4 as
renovations for MTSU's women's basketball coaches' offices got
under way, almost three months to the day of Shipp's $1 million
gift announcement.
On Feb. 5, at halftime of the women's basketball game between
Middle Tennessee and South Alabama, Shipp made a commitment of $1
million to his alma mater. A large portion of the gift was
designated to renovate and upgrade the women's basketball coaching
offices, providing a suite for all the coaches in one location.
The balance of the monetary commitment is to go toward scholarships
for Rutherford County students who plan to attend Middle Tennessee.
Shipp joined Women's Basketball Coach Rick Insell in a ceremonial
knocking-down of the first wall to start the renovation process.
Other dignitaries at the ceremony were MTSU President Sidney A.
McPhee; Joe Bales, vice president for development and university
relations; Director of Athletics Chris Massaro; Diane Turnham,
associate athletic director and senior woman's administrator;
members of the women's basketball coaching staff and other MTSU
administrators.
"I am excited for Coach Shipp. He is like a kid at Christmas," said
Insell. "He has been looking forward to this since he made the gift
to us. Every day he comes in and talks about it. He is excited
about it, and he keeps me excited about it."

Insell said that he and his staff have been so busy with recruiting
and getting things lined up for next season that the timing of the
project was perfect.

Work on the project also helps in recruiting, officials said.
Insell and his staff no longer have to show potential recruits the
artists' renderings of the new facility; they can see the work
being done.
"They (the recruits) know when they get here, it will be ready, and
that means a lot," Insell said. "My staff is excited, I am excited
and we are all excited for Coach Shipp."
TAKE DOWN THAT WALL—Alumnus Ken "Coach" Shipp, shown above,
takes the first few swings at a wall in the MTSU women's basketball
coaches' offices May 4. Shipp, who donated $1 million in February
to fund the renovations and pay for scholarships, joined other Lady
Raider supporters during a special "groundbreaking" event in Murphy
Center. The sledgehammer he used, complete with inscription, is
shown in the photo above left. A slideshow of photos from the event
is available at
www.goblueraiders.com
.
photos courtesy of MTSU Athletic Communications/Travis
Woods
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Guitar
Festival drawing top musicians to MTSU
by Gina K. Logue
Some of the nation's finest guitarists will converge on MTSU's
Wright Music Building June 1-4 for the 10th annual Tennessee Guitar
Festival, when the event will have its first national-level
competition.
A total of more than $3,600 in prizes will be offered, including a
$1,500 first prize for the Solo Competition. The finals of the Solo
Competition will be held at 8 p.m. Saturday, June 4.
Guitarists aged 18 and younger who have not begun college may enter
the Youth Competition, where they will vie for first, second and
third prizes of $300, $200 and $100.
Among the headliners scheduled to attend this year's festival are
Roger Hudson, Rene Gonzalez and Jose Lezcano, who are slated to
perform at 8 p.m. Wednesday, June 1. Matt Palmer will take the
stage at 8 p.m. Thursday, June 2, and William Kanengiser will
perform at 8 p.m. Friday, June 3.
Admission for each concert is $10 per person.
In addition, a composers' workshop and a luthier/vendor fair are
part of the festivities. All competition applications must be
received by Friday, May 27.
Hudson holds a master's degree in music theory from Georgia State
University. The late country legend Chet Atkins praised his "great
compositions," and, according to his website,
www.rogerhudson.com, "Hudson's compositions are flavored
with blues, jazz and the varied influences of his youth."
Lezcano, a two-time Grammy Award nominee, is a professor of music
at Keene State College in New Hampshire. He has been described by
New Millennium Guitar magazine as "a superb guitarist as
well as a first-rate composer and arranger."
Gonzalez is an associate professor and program director of
classical guitar at the University of Miami's Frost School of
Music. He also is founder of The Ruck Ensemble, a professional
classical guitar group.
The recipient of the 2010 "Up-and-Coming Guitarist of the Year"
award from
Guitar International magazine, Palmer began his formal
studies with Dr. William Yelverton, professor of guitar at MTSU,
and earned his master's degree at Appalachian State University.
"He has performed at this festival three times, and every time he
has received a standing ovation," Yelverton says of Palmer. "Matt
is the most gifted guitarist I've seen in my 22 years of college
teaching.He is simply one of America's finest young
virtuosos."
Kanengiser is a Grammy winner and founding member of the Los
Angeles Guitar Quartet. His repertoire includes arrangements of the
works of Mozart, Bartok and Handel, among others. Kanengiser has
been a member of the faculty of the University of Southern
California's Thornton School of Music since 1983.
Supporters of the event include the Tennessee Arts Commission, the
Community Foundation of Middle Tennessee, NashvilleArts Magazine,
the D'Addario Music Foundation, the Arts Builds Communities
Program, the MTSU Instructional Development Committee, the MTSU
Office of Sponsored Programs and the MTSU School of Music.
For more information, click on the Tennessee Guitar Festival
graphic above or email Yelverton at
yelverto@mtsu.edu or
concertguitar@comcast.net.
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Anderson Scholars honored
SPECIAL STUDENTS—2011 June S. Anderson Foundation Scholarship
award winners Rhonda Davidson, left, and Nancy Kini, right,
celebrate their accomplishments during a May 12 luncheon at the
MTSU Foundation House. Joining the scholars are Drs. Mary
Magada-Ward, foundation president and philosophy professor, center
left, and Andrienne Friedli, foundation vice president and
chemistry professor. Davidson, a resident of Martin, Tenn., is
majoring in construction management and plans to work with the U.S.
Army Corps of Engineers when she completes her degree in fall 2012.
She also received the Anderson Scholarship for 2010. Kini, a
resident of Murfreesboro, is majoring in accounting and plans to
continue with her current employer, Specialty Products Global LLC,
when she graduates in spring 2012. The late Dr. June Anderson,
shown in the inset photo, was MTSU's first female chemistry
professor. She created the foundation that carries her name in 1982
with local attorney Margaret Behm to help close the gender gap in
earnings. The annual award covers full tuition for full-time female
undergraduates who are age 23 or older and preparing for careers in
nontraditional fields for women. For more information, visit
www.mtsu.edu/~jsa
.
MTSU Photographic Services photo by J. Intintoli
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11-week series of
CUSTOMS orientations begins
by Sydney L. Warneke
As summer begins, incoming freshman students will venture to campus
for MTSU's annual CUSTOMS program.
CUSTOMS is the new-student orientation program that helps acquaint
students with what will be their new academic and social home for
the next few years. The program aims to ease the transition of new
students into college and decrease their anxiety.
Eleven sessions are scheduled to take place, beginning May 25-26
and continuing all the way through July.
While CUSTOMS is not mandatory, students are strongly encouraged to
attend so they can familiarize themselves with their new
surroundings. Reservations are assigned on a first-come,
first-served basis, so students should register as early as
possible.

During the course of each two-day program, students will be shown
the campus and local environment while also being taught the
policies, procedures, requirements and programs of MTSU.
Representatives from the Admissions Office and Office of Financial
Aid, along with the Office of Housing and Residential Life, are
involved in CUSTOMS as well as other campus departments.
Students attending CUSTOMS will be accommodated with on-campus
housing in one of MTSU's residence halls. Families are strongly
encouraged to attend the session with their students, and the
University offers a separate program to answer parents' and
guardians' questions and familiarize them with their students' new
environment.
For more information, visit
www.mtsu.edu/customs
or call 615-898-5533.
Summer 2011 CUSTOMS dates for students entering MTSU in fall 2011
include:
- May 25-26—all scholarship students;
- June 2-3—for College of Business, Liberal Arts, Mass
Communication or Education majors;
- June 7-8—for College of Basic and Applied Sciences or
Behavioral and Health Science majors;
- June 10-11—business, liberal-arts, mass-comm or
education majors;
- June 15-16 and June 21-22—basic and applied sciences or
behavioral and health sciences majors;
- July 6-7— business, liberal-arts, mass-comm or
education majors;
- July 14-15—basic and applied sciences or behavioral and
health sciences majors;
- July 19-20— business, liberal-arts, mass-comm or
education majors;
- July 22-23—basic and applied sciences or behavioral and
health sciences majors; and
- July 27-28—open to all colleges' majors.
Undeclared majors are welcome to attend any session of CUSTOMS
but must reserve a place on a preferred date.
Sydney L. Warneke, a journalism major, graduated May 7 with a
bachelor's degree in mass communication. She worked as a practicum
student for the Office of News and Media Relations during the
spring 2011 semester.
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Connecting MTSU with the Amazon
A special exhibit of photos chronicling "MTSU's Amazon Connection"
to anthropological and sociological research is on display at the
Todd Gallery through Friday, May 27.
The Department of Art and the Department of Sociology and
Anthropology are hosting the exhibit, "MTSU's Amazon Connection: A
Contribution to Seven Decades of Research in the Brazilian Rain
Forest," which opened May 9.
Since 1999, MTSU faculty and students have ventured up the Amazon
River and into the Amazon rain forest to conduct anthropological
and sociological research. Twenty-five students now carry that
experience with them, including five who are pursuing their
doctorates in anthropology and seven who have completed Master of
Arts degrees in anthropology, sociology and public health.
All the students have contributed to seven decades of ongoing
social-science research in the rubber tapper community of
Gurupá, located on the southern bank of the Amazon River about
500 nautical miles inland from the ocean.
The photographic exhibit documents MTSU's presence in the Amazon as
well as changes in the local community since 1948.
The exhibition is free and open to the public. The Todd Gallery
hours are 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday. For more
information, contact Dr. Richard Pace at 615- 904-8058 or Eric
Snyder at 615 898-5653.
The three photos shown here are included in the Todd Gallery
exhibit. The photo above shows a rubber-tapper family living along
the Bacá River in Gurupá, Brazil. The image was shot by
Pace in 1985.
In the second photo, participants in the 2005 MTSU Ethnographic
Field School pause alongside a local boat captain and a local
child. From left are students Daniel Hansen, Valerie Nutt, Cynthia
Pace, Claire Wilson, Jessica Miraldi and Carrie Adams. This image
also was taken by Pace.
The third photo, above, shows a religious procession for St.
Benedict, the beloved saint of the Amazon community of Gurupá,
captured on film in 1948 by pioneering anthropologist Dr. Charles
Wagley. Wagley, who passed away in 1991, was a Columbia University
and University of Florida scholar and teacher who specialized in
researching Latin American cultures, chiefly the people of the
Amazon basin in Brazil.
all photos submitted/courtesy of Dr. Richard Pace
>>Top of Page
Osher
scholarships make MTSU unique in Tennessee
MTSU is now the only four-year institution of higher learning in
the state to offer reentry scholarships to nontraditional students
from the Bernard Osher Foundation.
Nine of the first 11 recipients will receive the full scholarship
$5,000 amount for 2011-12, officials said.
The Osher Reentry Scholarship pays tuition for nontraditional
students who are beginning or resuming their first undergraduate
college degrees.
The Bernard Osher Foundation, located in San Francisco and founded
in 1977 by businessman Bernard Osher, provides post-secondary
scholarship funding to colleges and universities across the nation
with special attention to reentry students.
"MTSU was awarded the grant because of (its) percentage of
nontraditional students … and the services that they receive
from the University and the Older Wiser Learners student
organization," says Dr. Carol Ann Baily, assistant professor of
French and faculty adviser to OWLs and Pinnacle, the honors society
for nontraditional students.
Each applicant must show a cumulative gap of five or more years in
his/her education, demonstrate financial need, show academic
promise and a commitment to completing a degree. Applicants also
must be planning to work for a significant period of time after
graduation.
Fourteen other MTSU students will benefit from scholarships awarded
by OWLs for the 2011-12 academic year, including the Academic
Service Scholarship, the Challenge Scholarship, the Jane Nickell
Taylor Scholarship and the Joan Nickell Bailey Scholarship.
For more information about OWLs, contact Baily at 615-898-5646,
cabaily@mtsu.edu or
owls@mtsu.edu. To learn more about the Osher Reentry
Scholarships at MTSU, visit
http://mtweb.mtsu.edu/owls/osherreentryscholarship.htm
.
>>Top of Page
Encourage students to apply for
2012-13 Fulbright grants
Applications for the Fulbright U.S. Student Competition for 2012-13
must be submitted before Wednesday, Sept. 7, and MTSU's
Undergraduate Fellowships Office is asking all faculty and staff to
encourage eligible students to learn more now and apply.
The Fulbright's purpose is increasing mutual understanding between
the United States and other countries by exchanging people,
knowledge and skills. A Fulbright grant gives a U.S. student the
opportunity to live and study in a foreign country for one academic
year.
Eligibility requirements include:
- U.S. citizenship;
- receipt of a bachelor's degree before August 2012;
- a grade-point average of 3.3 or higher; and
- language proficiency sufficient to communicate with the
people of the host country.
Candidates who haven't had opportunities for extended study or
residence abroad (except military duty or study abroad) will
receive preferential consideration. In some countries, preference
is given to graduate students conducting research.
Each applicant is usually required to outline a course of study or
a research project in his/her major field that may be completed in
one country during one academic year abroad.
Full grants under the Fulbright program provide round-trip
transportation, a language or orientation course, tuition, books,
health and accident insurance, and maintenance for one academic
year in one country. Fulbright travel grants provide transportation
costs to one of a limited group of countries.
Students may learn more about the program by contacting the UFO at
615-898-5464 or by emailing UFO Coordinator Laura Clippard in the
University Honors College at
lclippar@mtsu.edu. All applicants should meet with
Clippard before beginning their Fulbright applications. For more
information, visit
www.fulbrightonline.org
.
>>Top of Page
Officer
training
READY TO ROLL—Second Lt. Rachael Lezon, center left, of
Cleveland, Tenn., smiles with pride as her parents, William and
Suanna Lezon, pin her officer's bars on her uniform sleeves during
MTSU ROTC's spring commissioning ceremony May 6. Lt. Col. T.K.
Kast, professor of military science at MTSU, looks on at right.
Lezon, one of 20 degree candidates who received their commissions
at the MTSU military memorial in front of the Tom Jackson Building,
earned her MBA the next day at MTSU's spring 2011 commencement. She
will now report to the Army Reserve for duty with the Signal Corps.
MTSU Photographic Services photos by J. Intintoli
>>Top of Page
Junior plays prominent
role at campus-Capitol event
MTSU junior Katie Bogle got in a little practice recently in
preparation for her role as Speaker of the House when the Tennessee
Intercollegiate State Legislature convenes in November.
Bogle, a political science major from Wilson County, participated
in the Campus-Capitol Connection on Capitol Hill in Nashville in
April, an event where students observe various elements of state
government.

"After the opening session, we heard from legislative alumni who
talked about their experiences," she said. "That was followed by a
lobbyist panel discussion." Bogle served as panel facilitator.
"After lunch there was a mock legislative session, and I was able
to present some legislation. Gov. (Bill) Haslam spoke, and he was
followed by Supreme Court Justice William C. Koch Jr. And then I
introduced (House) Speaker (Beth) Harwell."
Bogle said she's not sure she wants to be a politician, but she
does want to work in government on public-policy issues.
The Tennessee Intercollegiate State Legislature will be held Nov.
17-21.
>>Top of Page
18
initiated into MTSU chapter of GIS insurance organization
Eighteen students were added to the Omega Chapter of Gamma Iota
Sigma Insurance Fraternity's membership during the organization's
annual initiation banquet at the Doubletree Hotel in Murfreesboro.
Initiated were Mike Adams, Alexandra Amacher, Rachel Baldwin, Ali
Beki, Keith Churn, Kyle Eager, Melissa Giglio-Hunt, Rick Luna,
Guangfan Mao, Shermin Noman, Whitney Patterson, Matthew Spears,
Danielle Stiscak, Jamie Vance, Travis Williams, Le Yin, Lianlian
Zhou and Mengjia Zhou.
Insurance industry professional Janice Hackett, a member of the
Insurance Liaison Committee for the annual Martin Chair of
Insurance Golf Tournament, spoke to the group, which included
alumni, industry representatives, other students and faculty in the
program and other guests.
One of the invited guests was Professor Edward Friz, an instructor
in the Department of Management and Marketing. He received a plaque
as the winner of this year's Outstanding Professor in the College
of Business.
Serving as mistress of ceremonies was Rachael Casillas, the Omega
Chapter president.
>>Top of Page
Opportunities Around Campus:
New electron microscope to enhance research efforts
by Tom Tozer
MTSU has acquired the TESCAN LYRA 3 focused-ion beam-scanning
electron microscope, or FIB-SEM, workstation to enhance research
across disciplines.
The equipment will be installed by this fall in MTSU's
Interdisciplinary Microanalysis and Imaging Center, which is
located in Forrest Hall. MIMIC opened in February 2007.
"The reason both TESCAN and MTSU are so excited about this is
because MTSU is the first U.S. customer for the FIB-SEM system,"
said Dr. Ngee-Sing Chong, MTSU chemistry professor and MIMIC
director.
"Imagine having a combination drill/milling device that is able to
work on structures much smaller than a human hair," explained Dr.
Nathanael Smith, MTSU assistant professor of physics and astronomy.
"That's what a focused-ion beam instrument can do—and more.
"The LYRA 3 FIB-SEM workstation will not only allow very small
structures to be accurately machined, but with specialized,
integrated detectors, it can also be used to analyze the structure
and chemical composition of a host of sample types, from
cross-sections of solar cells to biological specimens."
Smith added that the instrument will have 3-D imaging capabilities
to see samples in newer, more powerful ways.
Physics applications for the new equipment could include observing
the characterization of solar cells and fabricating "photonic
circuits," where light is used in place of electricity. The LYRA 3
FIB-SEM also can be used to develop nanomaterials for chemical
analysis and catalytic acceleration of chemical reactions.
Nanotechnology is the study of manipulating matter on an atomic and
molecular scale.
The new equipment will enhance MIMIC as a training and research
facility at MTSU, Chong noted.

"The microscopy instrumentation at MIMIC is accessible for research
by all MTSU faculty and students," he pointed out. "Primary users
of the equipment come from biology, chemistry, physics, engineering
technology, geology and anthropology. The facilities are also
available for fee-based usage by microscopists from industries in
the middle Tennessee region."
Established in 1991 and headquartered in the Czech Republic, TESCAN
is an ISO-certified company and a leading provider of scientific
instrumentation.
"LYRA ... is ideal for multiuser environments such as MIMIC," said
Jeff Streger, vice president of sales and marketing at TESCAN USA
Inc., located in Cranberry Township, Pa. "We are very excited to
have MTSU as a customer."
>>Top of Page
Faculty/Staff Update
Media
Dr. Sean Foley (history) was interviewed on
al-Jazeera's English-language network on March 22 about the violent
opposition to the government in Yemen. That interview is available
on YouTube by clicking
here.
Dr. Warren Gill (agribusiness/ agriscience) and
Tim Redd (MTSU Farm Lab) discussed the MTSU farm
and the new dairy under construction on "The Truman Show" May 11 on
WGNS Radio (1450 AM).
Dr. Carter F. Smith (criminal justice) appeared on
"Inside Politics" on NewsChannel5+ May 6 to discuss terrorism. He
also spoke on gang violence and MTSU's second annual Ethnic Gangs
Organized Crime Symposium on the May 3 edition of NC5+'s "Openline"
with Dr. Jeffrey Rush of Austin Peay State University.
Panels
Professor Jennifer Vannatta-Hall (music education)
recently served on the Tennessee Arts Commission's Fiscal Year 2012
Peer Advisory Panel in Nashville. Panelists meet once a year to
offer advice on program planning and to review grant applications.
They also serve as year-round resources to the Arts Commission
staff as advocates for the arts in their communities.
Publications
Dr. William F. Ford (Weatherford Chair of Finance)
published an article, "The Fed's Accounting Raises Red Flags," in
the April 18 edition of the American Institute for Economic
Research's
Research Reports.
Christy Groves and
William Black (Walker Library) are authors of a
book chapter, "Understanding Gen X at Work: Securing the Library's
Future," in the new book
The Generation X Librarian: Essays on Leadership, Technology,
Pop Culture, Social Responsibility and Professional Identity
(McFarland and Company, April 2011).
An essay by
Dr. Mark Allan Jackson (English), "Playing Legend
Maker: Woody Guthrie's 'Jackhammer John,'" is included in a new
edited collection,
The Life, Music and Thought of Woody Guthrie: A Critical
Appraisal (Ashgate Press, 2011).
Dr. Jeffrey Walck (biology) published a review
paper, "Climate change and plant regeneration from seeds" with
colleagues from Australia, the United Kingdom and Germany in G
lobal Change Biology, a top-ranked journal in climate
studies.
Dr. Debra Rose Wilson and
Brandi Lindsey (nursing) reviewed
On Duty: Power, Politics and the History of Nursing in New
Jersey by Frances Ward for the
Journal of Health Care for the Poor and Underserved,
22(2), 704-705.
Special Note of Thanks
"I wish to express my gratitude to the MTSU community for the many
cards, messages and calls of sympathy and support concerning my
brother's death and my rescue in Utah in March. Special thanks go
to Tom Tozer, director of the Office of News and Media Relations,
and Andrew Oppmann, associate vice president and spokesman, for
their assistance with media inquiries." —
Dr. David Cicotello, associate vice provost,
Admissions and Enrollment Services.
Get noticed in
The Record!
Submit Faculty/Staff Update items to
gfann@mtsu.edu by 3 p.m. Tuesday, May 24, for the June 6
edition of
The Record. Deadline for the final print edition of
The Record, June 20, is 3 p.m. Wednesday, June 8. Thanks!
>>Top of Page
Campus Calendar: May 23-June 5,
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
.
Campus Recreation Summer Hours
Monday-Friday, 6 a.m.-8 p.m.; Saturday, 9 a.m.-7 p.m.; Sunday, 2-8
p.m.
For information, visit
www.mtsu.edu/camprec/summerhours.shtml
.
Through May 27
Photo Exhibit: "MTSU's Amazon Connection: A Contribution to Seven
Decades of Research in the Brazilian Rain Forest"
8 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Monday-Friday, Todd Gallery
For information, contact: 615-904-8058 or 898-5653.
Tuesday, May 24
"Cemetery Community Public Workshop"
sponsored by MTSU Public History Program, Bradley Academy Museum
and Stones River National Battlefield
8 a.m.-4:30 p.m., Bradley Academy Museum
No admission charge
For information, contact: 615-975-0573.
May 25-26
CUSTOMS Orientation
All scholarship students
7:30 a.m., campuswide
For information, visit
www.mtsu.edu/customs
or contact: 615-898-2454.
May 28-29
Volunteer Ranch Horse Show
Tennessee Miller Coliseum
For information, visit
http://vrha.digitalcowgirls.com
.
Monday, May 30
Memorial Day Holiday
No classes; university closed.
June 1-3
MT Women's Basketball: Lil' Raider Camp
for girls in kindergarten through eighth grades
8 a.m.-noon, Murphy Center
Cost: $150 per camper ($110 employee rate)
For information, visit
www.goblueraiders.com
or contact: 615-898-5207.
June 2-3
CUSTOMS Orientation
Business, liberal arts, mass comm, education and undeclared
majors
7:30 a.m., campuswide
For information, visit
www.mtsu.edu/customs
or contact: 615-898-2454.
Friday, June 3
Summer May Term Final Exams
Saturday, June 4
Summer May Term Saturday-Class Final Exams
Get noticed in
The Record !
Submit Campus Calendar items and other news to
gfann@mtsu.edu by 3 p.m. Tuesday, May 24, for the June 6
edition of
The Record. Deadline to submit items for the final print
edition of
The Record, June 20, is 3 p.m. Wednesday, June 8.
>>Top of Page