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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Hutchins Presents at Two Professional Nursing Conferences

Assistant Professor of Nursing B.J. Hutchins is presenting at two professional conferences this summer.   In July she presented a workshop on the Fundamentals of Evidence Based Practice at the National Nurse Staff Development Organization’s annual convention in Boston, Mass.  In August, Hutchins will travel to London, England to present a plenary session at the International Nurse Practitioner/Advanced Practice Nursing Network Conference entitled Frailty in the Older Adult, Implications for Care. She will also have a poster presentation at this same meeting entitled Cardiovascular Effects of Obstructive Sleep Apnea: Implications for Care.

Pharmacy Donates School Supplies

Faculty, staff and students in the College of Pharmacy recently donated school supplies to children of mothers in a recovery program at Renewal House. This non-profit organization provides women and their families with comprehensive treatment services related to alcohol and drug addiction. This is the second year that Belmont’s College of Pharmacy has participated in a back-to-school drive for children receiving services at Renewal House. This year a total of twenty children received  backpacks filled with new school supplies to begin the academic year.

Alumnus Earns Pharmacy Excellence Awards

Dr. Maurice Parrom, a 2012 graduate of the Belmont College of Pharmacy, has received the Mylan Excellence in Pharmacy Award.

According to its website, “Mylan Pharmaceuticals has been committed to the highest standards of quality in research and development, manufacturing and distribution and customer service since 1961. This commitment has been extended into pharmacy education through their annual Excellence in Pharmacy Award. Since 1985, the Excellence in Pharmacy Award has honored a baccalaureate or entry-level Pharm.D. graduate for his or her academic achievement, personal motivation and unique ability to communicate drug information.”

Hawley Contributes Lesson Plans to Online Physics-Teaching Web Service

Assistant Professor of Physics  Scott Hawley has contributed lesson plans to the Valve (Software) Corporation online physics-teaching web service www.teachwithportals.com. Since last summer Hawley has worked with Leslie Redd, Valve Corporation’s director of education and outreach, on this project. Hawley’s written two great lesson plans for high school students about Portal “Bouncing” and Oscillations and Simple Harmonic Motion and Hooke’s Law. The lessons show students how to compare and contrast oscillation behavior as it adheres to the game world’s laws of physics versus those of our own. Austin Guthrie, a Belmont physics and mathematics double major, is also mentioned in the introduction to the lesson plans.

Belmont Renames Residence Hall in Honor of Late Benefactor

Potter Hall is named in memory of Virginia Frances Potter.

Belmont University remembered long-time benefactor Virginia Frances Potter July 30 with the renaming of a residence hall in her honor.

Potter was active in Belmont campus life from 1951 forward and a lead donor to the University for many years. She believed that “Christian education is an answer to our world’s problems” and shared gifts for new or refurbished buildings, scholarships, mission programs and faculty support.  A longtime Nashvillian and 1932 graduate of Tennessee College for Women, Potter had faith in the vitality and potential of Belmont students.  Her quiet nature, brilliant mind and gentle humor will be remembered through the co-ed residence hall, formerly known as Maple Hall. Potter Hall is a suite-style building housing 190 freshmen. It opened in the fall of 2008 as part of the North Lawn community.

“Frances Potter believed in Belmont University and the value of a Christian education. From the founding of Belmont College in 1951 until her death Nov. 9, 2011,  she supported the work of four University presidents, was a member of the Belmont Auxiliary, helped raise money for Belmont scholarships through the Tennessee College for Women Alumnae and quietly gave her own personal leadership gifts. She is missed and will long be remembered,” said Vice President of University Advancement Bethel E. Thomas.

Physics Professor Lands Sizable Research Grant

A professor and two alumni have received a grant to further understanding of gravity and the universe through a computer code.

3D contours of the conformal factor 'phi' in the vicinity of two spinning black holes. Phi is one of the variables solved for, and is used to transform the 'initial guess' or 'background' spacetime into a final, 'physical' spacetime which satisfies Einstein's equations.

The National Institute for Computational Sciences (NICS) at Oak Ridge National Laboratories has awarded Physics Assistant Professor Scott Hawley a grant of 250,000 service units, valued at $112,500, to upgrade the code and allow it to be interfaced with other research groups around the world. The grant is a follow-up to the “startup” allocation of 20,000 service units Hawley was awarded last fall. It reflects NICS’s mission to support Tennessee institutions of higher learning and the National Science Foundation’s EPSCOR program.

“The fact that Belmont is a teaching university and located in Tennessee made it very easy for NICS to award my grant request,” Hawley said.

Einstein’s General Theory of Relativity says that gravity is an effect of the geometry of space and time being warped. When matter becomes super dense, it forms a spinning black hole, which is a region of gravity that is so intense that nothing can get out. Hawley’s research concerns the effects that the direction of the spin has on the gravitational attraction between two nearby-black holes and the ripple of gravitational waves.

“My research involves writing a general purpose, publicly-available computer code for solving Einstein’s equation, which will allow researchers around the world to produce more accurate simulations of gravitational wave signals,” Hawley said.

It took Hawley 10 years to develop the former version of the code, known as Tex Mex. He has dubbed the new version as BRUISER, an acronym standing for Belmont Research for Undergraduates In Studies of Einstein’s Relativity.

Alumnus and campus security officer Tyler Welton is working with Hawley to overhaul the codes to make them directly interface with the most popular simulations used in the relativity community. The two met when Welton took a class on the physics of audio engineering from Hawley, and they spent time writing plugins for digital audio work stations on Welton’s senior research project. Welton plans to re-enroll as a computer science major this fall as he works on BRUISER.

Hawley also continues to work with alumna Lindsey Thompson, a psychology honors student who took an interest in physics and ran simulations and computations on TexMex using a Belmont server until its 48 gigabyte memory was exhausted. She currently is a Fulbright scholar in England.

“Other people will begin collaborating with me to use the code in all of the wonderful simulations that they can dream up to do dealing with neutron stars and black holes,” Hawley said. His code currently works only for vacuum solutions, or empty space, and he is working with a Louisiana State University professor to make it functional on mass like neutron stars. “It really is a group effort and my code is just one important piece.”

Niedzwiecki and Biology Student Present at Evolution 2012

Assistant Professor of Biology John Niedzwiecki and Belmont honors student and biology major Rachel Chandler attended Evolution 2012 in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, from July 6-10. It was the annual meeting of the American Society of Naturalists and Society for the Study of Evolution, but this year was billed as the First International Evolutionary Congress, as the Canadian, British and European Evolutionary Societies also attended. Niedzwiecki presented a talk in the Evolution Education Section titled Presenting Evolution by Natural Selection at a Christian University. Chandler presented a poster of her honors research with Niedzwiecki titled “Testing the Specificity of a Predator Cue in Relation to Phylogeny in a Salamander Sunfish System.” In addition to presenting her poster, Chandler was able to meet students and professors, and learn about the research in their labs as she prepares to apply to their graduate programs in evolutionary ecology this fall.

Shin Lectures at Four Universities During Visit to South Korea

Department of Sport Science Assistant Professor Stephen Shin presented lectures at four universities during his visit to South Korea. He gave a first lecture to the junior and senior students of Public Administration class in Kwangwoon University in Seoul. The title of the lecture was “Relationship Orientation vs. Task Orientation in Leadership and Management.” The intent of the lecture was focused on how to balance relationship orientation with task orientation in the public and private sectors in South Korean society where dehumanizing social pressure is great and task-oriented styles are dominant.

The next lectures presented successively were in the Annual Sport Marketing Seminar at Tongmyong University in Busan and in a sport marketing class at Dankook University in Cheonan. The topic was related to effective sport marketing strategies and promotional approaches. The main issue was how to incorporate the recent sport marketing strategies and approaches used in the American sport to South Korean sport industry. An active discussion was generated among the participants and students by debating which marketing strategies and approaches are working or not in Korean sport culture and how to reinvent or modify them based on different cultural context. The extended follow-up discussion aimed at 2018 Pyeongchang Winter Olympics which will be held in South Korea.

The last lecture presented at Korea Maritime University in Busan, was with Jiho Kim of Wingate University, N.C. to introduce American intercollegiate athletics and the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) and its organizational/divisional structure. The lecture was for the personnel and students working in athletics in high school and colleges where the Korean athletic system is mainly organized and operated based on amateurism.

 

Murphree Speaks at ‘Insects of the Night’ Festival

On July 13, biology Professor Steve Murphree was a speaker at the Warner Parks Nature Center’s “Insects of the Night” festival. Murphree set up a UV light/scorpion tent for the event.  A great time was had by all the lightening bugs, bees and random creepy crawlers that dressed up for the insect parade.

Biology Associate Professor Lori McGrew and environmental science student Erin Pitts also were volunteers. Pitts is working at Warner Parks Nature Center this summer.

Belmont Band Dearly Brothers Competes for Letterman Slot

The band Dearly Brothers, featuring  Belmont students and alumni, just landed a song titled “Marble Floors” on the soundtrack for upcoming Worldwide Pants Production  We Made This Movie, which releases in theaters Sept. 20.

As part of the competition which landed the band on the soundtrack, Dearly Brothers now has an opportunity to score a performance slot on the “Late Show with David Letterman.” Click here to vote for the band. The contest runs through Aug. 7, and fans may vote once per day every day.

“Marble Floors” was recorded at RCA B, Oceanway Nashville and REM Studios at Belmont. Dearly Brothers consists of junior Vian Zaayman (vocals), sophomore Joseph Kenkel (guitar, mandolin, harmonica, vocals), recent class of 2012 graduate Phillip Englehart (guitar, banjo, vocals), sophomore Trevor Nikrant (bass), sophomore Drake Morey (keyboards) and sophomore Chris Worley (drums). Sophomore music business major Drew Hoffman manages the band and first discovered the contest, while senior audio engineering major Justin Croft engineered the band’s debut.