IMPORTANT NOTE: These are the archived stories for Belmont News & Achievements prior to June 26, 2023. To see current stories, click here.

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Mock Trial Teams Wow at Regional Tournament

Mock Trial Champions pose with their trophyBelmont University College of Law’s Mock Trial team recently traveled to Lousiville, Kentucky to compete in the American Association of Justice Regional Tournament. Two teams of students including Zac Barker, Will Blackford, Whitney Hickerson, Jeff Walker, Paul Fata, Kiersten Jodway, Mario Knox and Summer Melton participated in the weekend’s competitions.

Fata, Jodway, Knox and Melton advanced to the final round and went on to secure the regional championship. They will go on to compete in the National Tournament. Led by Professor Caple Shaw and Dayne Geyer, Belmont’s Mock Trial Team has been to the final round of this regional tournament for the past four years, bringing home the championship title three of the four times.

 

Student Gives Presentation at Popular/American Culture Conference

Wood standing in front of his presentation at the February conferenceBelmont University student Jamey Wood recently presented research that originated from a project in his digital writing class at the 2017 Southwest Popular/American Culture Association Conference. Wood’s presentation was titled, “A Dramatist Examination of John Prine’s ‘Sam Stone’” and was given as part of a panel discussion on rhetoric and technical communication, where he was able to receive feedback and considerations for furthering his work. The conference took place February 15-18 in Albuquerque, New Mexico.

Wood’s project has also been accepted to a conference that is scheduled to take place this June at Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond, Virginia.

‘The Belmont Store’ Celebrates Grand Opening

New campus retail outlet occupies historic property that was a former site of Athlete’s House, Lay’s Potato Chip businesses

Belmont Store Grand Opening on the Belmont University campus in Nashville, Tenn. March 13, 2017.

With campus mascot Bruiser the Bear manning a pair of scissors, Belmont students and University administrators officially cut the ribbon this morning on The Belmont Store, a new campus retail outlet and spirit shop located on the former property of the Athlete’s House.

Located at the intersection of Belmont Boulevard and Portland Avenue, the property provides a convenient location for campus members seeking to purchase apparel and supplies. It further solidifies the southern end of campus as a student-centered area as the Belmont Store sits near the recently renovated Gabhart Student Center and joins a number of student-run businesses along Belmont Boulevard (House Of, Boulevard Record Shop) along with restaurant outlets McAlister’s Deli and Curb Café. The stand-alone building will also enable the store to develop its own brand in a more visible and highly trafficked retail location, and the dedicated spot allows University staff to think about processes, like textbook delivery, in a new and innovative way in terms of providing services to the campus community.

“This new store is beautiful, highly-visible and easily accessible, making it a significant upgrade from our previous location,” said Belmont President Dr. Bob Fisher. “Even better, The Belmont Store’s location holds deep connections for our campus and the Nashville community as a now-famous former occupant, Herman Lay, built a business empire from this corner that impacts Belmont students to this day.”

Clothing in the Belmont Store
Belmont Store Grand Opening on the Belmont University campus in Nashville, Tenn. March 13, 2017.

In 1932, Herman Lay became an independent snack food distributor in Nashville and located his potato chip manufacturing office at 1700 Portland Avenue. The site became a distribution center enabling his chips to be delivered to shops around the city, and that warehouse sat across the street from an Esso gas station owned by Ed and Bernice Johnson. The couple often helped Lay keep his potato chip trucks on the road by allowing him to pay for gas on credit. In 1948, in gratitude for the help, Lay offered the Johnsons a chance to buy stock in his company.

H.W. Lay & Company gradually grew, merging with the Frito Company in 1961 and with Pepsi-Cola in 1965, where Herman Lay became chairman of the board until his retirement in 1980. Thanks to that original friendship—and the Johnsons’ love and support for Belmont students and faculty—more than $18.6 million in scholarship donations can be sourced to the helping hand Ed and Bernice Johnson offered entrepreneur Herman Lay.

College of Pharmacy hosts Fourth Annual Homecoming Continuing Education Program

On Saturday February 25, the College of Pharmacy hosted its annual Homecoming Continuing Education event. Approximately 20 local pharmacists attended the event. Attendees came from across Middle Tennessee and represented a variety of pharmacy practice settings including health system pharmacists and community pharmacists. Presentations included a 2016 New Drug Update, Cyber Risk & Your Pharmacy, Precision Medicine in Pharmacy Practice, Neuropsychiatric Symptoms of Dementia and an Update on the Screening and Treatment of Depression. Belmont faculty Drs. Genevieve Ness, Kate Claussen, Amy Ham and Michael McGuire were among the presenters. Other presenters included Hayden McKaskle of Kroll and Stephanie Walters of Alive Hospice.

Belmont University College of Pharmacy is accredited by the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education (ACPE) as a provider of continuing pharmacy education. For more information on upcoming Continuing Education opportunities, click here.

Physical Therapy Faculty, Alumni and Students Present at American Physical Therapy Association

Belmont University’s School of Physical Therapy had a strong presence at the 2017 Combined Sections Meeting sponsored by the American Physical Therapy Association in February. Physical therapists from around the country gathered in San Antonio, Texas to present research, attend workshops and honor the academic achievements of the past year.

Belmont faculty, alumni and current students were among those attending the conference. The faculty had four presentations and seven posters highlighting their scholarly work including the platform presentation on clinical electrophysiology and wound management by Kathleen Galloway, PT, DSc, ECS.

Several alumni received recognition for specialty certifications including Kristin Story, PT, DPT (’07), the second physical therapist in Tennessee to receive the Cardiovascular and Pulmonary certification. An additional seven alumni were recognized for receiving specialty certifications in sports and orthopaedics.

Additionally, Elise Meade, PT, DPT  (’15) presented research that she completed as part of the Neurologic Residency Program at Vanderbilt Pi Beta Phi Rehabilitation Institute and Belmont. Meade graduated from the residency program in August 2016.

The School of Physical Therapy also had a strong student presence as Jenny Ellison, Abby Lester, Kyla Lydon, Megan Rolfe, Ashely Gowen and Amy Krichau  presented research on a national stage.

 

 

 

Delight Ministries: From Bell Tower to Beyond

One Friday morning, three Belmont sophomores with a passion for chasing God met in Belmont’s iconic Bell Tower with 20 other women who were interested in starting a campus-wide Bible study. The group named the study “Delight” and made it a regular occurrence throughout the rest of the semester. They established a mission of building community that fosters vulnerability and transforms stories, and they worked hard to create an environment that allowed for honest and transparent discussion. The study expanded beyond the Bible and soon, the women began cooking dinner together, serving hot chocolate to the homeless together and learning to live more like Christ together. By the end of their sophomore year, the group of three women grew to nearly 100 who shared the same passion for Christ.

Fast-forward to 2017, and Delight Ministries is now the only nationwide college ministry for women. There are chapters of the organization on over 80 different college campuses across the U.S., built of more than 400 campus leaders and 4,000 members. Delight Ministries co-founders and 2015 Belmont University graduates Mackenzie Wilson and Mackenzie Baker, who were among the original group of three women, now run an office on Blair Blvd as the organization’s headquarters. They handle their own content creation, marketing and even host interns that plan leadership conferences and events for all chapters.

“Delight started with three friends who simply wanted to start a Bible Study together,” Wilson said. “We had the idea to create a place for women, especially freshman, to come and connect with a Christ-centered community. We desired to surround ourselves with a group of women who could point us back to Jesus time and time again and who we could have intentional conversations with about the ways God was moving in our hearts and lives. Today, we still have an awesome Delight chapter at Belmont with an amazing student leadership team. Our Belmont chapter is our founding chapter and one that so many of our chapters from around the country look to for inspiration and guidance.”

Belmont Delight is run by seven students, lead by junior faith and social justice major Hunter Wade. “I heard about Delight the first week of my freshman year at Belmont, and I was almost immediately in love with the ministry and their passion for stories and cultivating genuine, deep community,” Wade recalled. “The leaders at the time were so kind and wonderful, and I jumped right in to attending Delight that first semester.  Even though I did not really know anyone there, I continued coming back week after week because the Holy Spirit taught me something every single time.”

As the leaders of Belmont’s chapter, Wade and the other six women organize the group’s weekly meetings, worship nights, service events, leadership team meetings and community events while maintaining an open, vulnerable and safe space for members to learn about God. According to Wade, one of the most transforming aspects of being involved in Delight is the community that has been built on campus.

“These women have become my very best friends. They are the first people I call when I need prayer, they hold me accountable to be who I am created to be, they’ve held my hand when I have cried as I have experienced tragedies throughout my time in college.  They are constantly pushing me to the heart of Jesus through their actions, through their words, through their constancy in my life and through their love. And that is what Delight is about, this community with women centered around Jesus that changes lives through doing this life together.”

As for Wilson and Baker, both women intend to continue growing Delight as their main career focus with dreams of having a chapter on every college campus across the country. “Both Kenzie (Baker) and I would love to continue to work for Delight and grow this ministry. We both have a passion for speaking and sharing our story, so we hope that there are more opportunities for that in our future. We love getting to sit down with college women and help them to find a more intimate relationship with the Lord during this crazy period of life. I think if we get to keep doing that, then we’ll both be fully content and happy with our careers.”

Wilson and Baker are thankful for all of the Belmont faculty and staff who supported them during the initial years of their ministry with Delight.

“There’s something about the atmosphere at Belmont that I think inspires students to think outside of the box, to notice gaps and to think creatively on how to fill them,” Wilson said. “From the beginning of Delight, we had so much support from the University Ministries department. They truly came alongside of us and helped us to grow and walk forward in where God was calling Delight at Belmont as well as where God was calling Kenzie and I individually.”

For more information on Delight Ministries, its purpose and its current chapters, visit its website.

Community Partnership Benefits Belmont Students, Local Ballet Students

A community partnership has brought internship, work study and volunteer opportunities to Belmont students while also providing young ballet dancers with lifelong role models. Belmont University has established several connections with local nonprofit Rejoice School of Ballet, an organization dedicated to celebrating dancers from diverse racial, socioeconomic and cultural backgrounds. Established in 2000, the school aims to offer high-quality dance lessons to children who are unable to afford classes elsewhere. Since opening its doors, more than 1,200 students have received a dance education from professional faculty that emphasizes diversity and Christian formation.

As a result of the partnership, Rejoice School of Ballet currently has two Belmont student interns who help with an after-school ballet program at Hadley Park Community Center in North Nashville. The school has also employed seven students as teaching assistants through Belmont’s work study program where they assist dance instructors. Additionally, two Belmont Service Year students, a program the University offers that provides students with free housing in exchange for regular volunteer work, have completed their service hours at Rejoice.

Rejoice student dancers practice during a class at the organization's studio.While these connections offer significant opportunities to Belmont students, Rejoice School of Ballet Founding Executive Director Patricia Cross believes that the presence of Belmont students in the school’s dance classes has also been beneficial for her students. “Over the past several years, we have been blessed to have Belmont students as volunteers and teaching assistants. These young people model for our students what the next stage of their life can look like. They are professional and kind. They are dedicated students and community volunteers. They are the kind of young people we are teaching our dancers they can grow up to be,” said Cross.

In addition to having Belmont students involved at several of the School’s four locations, Rejoice will host its annual spring showcase, complete with 140 dancers, at Belmont’s Troutt Theater. “Using the beautiful theater on Belmont’s campus is such a treat for our dancers,” Cross said.  “To have access to a venue as excellent as our training gives our dancers and their families an added sense of accomplishment and pride.”

Rejoice also has two Belmont alumnae on its faculty, Ashlyn Hall and Molly (Thatcher) Robinson, who are both dance minors. Hall teaches ballet, tap and modern classes and is the assistant director of the school’s upcoming ballet, “The Sleeping Beauty.” Robinson teaches tap and strength and conditioning among other classes. She also helps introduce younger students to the world of ballet in an interesting way that encourages participation in the school’s pre-professional training track. In addition to Hall and Robinson, Rejoice’s Administrative Assistant Meghan Lamb is also a Belmont graduate. Lamb volunteered at the school throughout her time at Belmont.

“Belmont has been a faithful partner with Rejoice for many years,” said Cross. “As we work to provide excellent ballet training, the volunteers and staff we have from Belmont have helped us create an environment focused on spiritual formation and excellence for our young dancers.”

For more information on Rejoice School of Ballet and the services it offers, visit its website.

Photographs by permission of Rejoice School of Ballet.

Belmont University Launches New Undergraduate Mock Trial Team

Mock Trial team at Belmont with their coaches and advisorsBelmont University’s first undergraduate American Mock Trial Association (AMTA) team participated at the 2017 Louisville Regional Tournament at Bellarmine University February 24-26 with 21 other teams. The team is sponsored by Interdisciplinary Studies and Global Education. In its debut competition, Belmont’s inaugural team performed admirably in four rounds against seasoned competitors from the University of Tennessee, UAB and MTSU, splitting the first ballot in their first round against UT. Invaluable, complimentary feedback from attorney judges suggested ways to prepare for future tournaments.

“We’re thrilled to give wings to student initiative and add Belmont’s name to the list of prestigious undergraduate institutions that compete in AMTA. It is an excellent co-curricular activity for students who hope to develop presentational and rhetorical skills or to learn through experience about the practices of the justice system that is so integral to our democratic society,” said Dr. Mitch McCoy, Belmont’s coordinator of the minor in legal studies and faculty sponsor of Belmont’s team. “I had the pleasure of watching all four rounds in which Belmont competed and was truly impressed by the dedication and seriousness that each team member showed throughout the three day tournament.”

“The Belmont University Mock Trial Team was able to be founded through the support of some amazing people whose expertise has allowed our team to soar beyond anything that I imagined,” said sophomore philosophy major Blake Simmons, founder of the undergraduate Mock Trial team. “I pitched this team as a way to give back to a school that has given me so much. I have no doubt that our team will continue to grow, thrive, and earn prestige.”

Mock trial is a simulation of lower-court trials in the United States judicial system. AMTA acts as the governing body for intercollegiate mock trial competition and hosts tournaments at universities across the nation to provide opportunities for college students to gain experience for future law careers. Through the trial simulations, students develop critical thinking and public speaking skills, as well as a knowledge of legal practices and procedures.

New to Belmont this year, the undergraduate Mock Trial team is led by Belmont College of Law 1L Margaret Connor who ably coached and offered her congratulations to the team for this first important step in establishing a trajectory toward excellence in AMTA.

Along with Simmons, team members include freshman music business major Matt Nino, sophomore music business major Becca Sweett, freshman motion pictures major Sarah Lancaster, freshman music business major Karl Kleppe and senior music business major Eric Donica.

At tournaments, team members assume the roles of witnesses, counsel for plaintiff or counsel for defendant. Since the team is only notified of which side it will represent just prior to the round, all team members are prepared to take on more than one role.

Chorale Flash Mob Video Goes Viral, Receives Media Mention

Chorale member singing during the flash mobBelmont University’s Chorale recently posted a video of their flash mob performance of South African hymn “Hlonolofatsa,” a song sung in one of South Africa’s 11 original languages, at a restaurant in Memphis. Within days, the video went viral as more than 400,000 people viewed it on the group’s Facebook page, and more than 1.3 million people saw the post on ChoirBuzz, a facebook page that covers choral news and information from across the country.

After posting the video, Chorale member Emily Kivi received a message from a reporter representing the Daily Sun, a South African newspaper. Upon speaking with Dr. Ames, reporter Abigail Javier published a story covering the group’s performance.

Director of Choral Activities and Associate Professor in the School of Music Dr. Jeffery Ames said he prides himself in the opportunity to expose his students to multicultural music. Taking care to program classical works along with spirituals, concert gospel music or music from other cultures, Ames said the hymn “has a wonderful call and response beginning between the soloist and the choir and is a spectacular addition to any performance.”

The group’s rendition of the hymn illustrates how people of all backgrounds can celebrate each other in powerful ways, Ames said. “This is an amazing example of how music transcends race and ethnicity. I love how this impromptu performance happened at the restaurant. The translation is, ‘Bless everything in the name of the Father,’ and in our current world, we all need to speak blessings more than hatred.”

Afzali and Yi Certify with HIMSS in Healthcare Informatics

Afzali's headshotYi's headshotBelmont University College of Pharmacy students Aziz Afzali and Jae Yi recently became certified by examination in the area of health care informatics. The Certified Associate in Healthcare Information and Management Systems (CAHIMS), a credential distributed by the Health Information Management Systems Society (HIMSS), is a health IT certification designed for emerging professionals within the industry. This certification demonstrates knowledge of health IT and management systems, facilitating entry-level careers in health IT. It is designed to be a career pathway to the Certified Professional in Healthcare Information and Management Systems (CPHIMS) credential.

Belmont Assistant Professor of Pharmacy Informatics and Analytics Anthony Blash is the sponsor of the CAHIMS certification initiative at Belmont and has created a four-course sequence of classes to prepare pharmacy students for healthcare informatics. The department saw its first student certify at the CAHIMS level in 2015 and expects 20-30 students to certify each year moving forward.