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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Massey Graduate Recognized Among Top 40 Under 40

Amber Sims, a Belmont alumna and 2011 Distinguished Graduate Award nominee has been selected as a 2011 Forty Under 40 Award Recipient by the Nashville Business Journal.  The Forty under 40 Award recognizes outstanding business professionals under the age of 40 who are making a difference in their companies and community.

Sims serves as chief operating officer at Saint Thomas Physician Services in Nashville.  She began her business career after graduating from Western Kentucky University in 2001 with a degree in healthcare administration.  Sims earned her MBA from The Massey School in 2005.

Doyle Rogers Distinguished Chair of Law to Be Filled by Alberto Gonzales

Former U.S. Attorney General named to new, endowed position at Belmont University

Former U.S. Attorney General Alberto Gonzales speaks at event announcing him as new Doyle Rogers Distinguished Chair of Law at Belmont University.

Belmont University College of Law announced today the establishment of the Doyle Rogers Distinguished Chair of Law. The newly established, endowed position will be filled by former U.S. Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales. Judge Gonzales will be the only former U.S. Attorney General teaching full time in legal education and will begin his position at Belmont on Jan. 2, 2012.

Belmont College of Law Founding Dean Jeff Kinsler said, “The insight and experience Alberto Gonzales acquired while serving as the nation’s chief law enforcement officer, Counsel to the President, Justice on the Supreme Court of Texas and Texas Secretary of State will be immeasurable resources for our students and faculty. Since leaving public office, these qualities have helped Judge Gonzales develop into an outstanding professor. We are incredibly fortunate that he has decided to join our charter faculty, and we are extremely grateful for the support provided by Doyle and Barbara Rogers.”

After attending the United States Air Force Academy, Alberto Gonzales graduated from Rice University (B.A.) and Harvard University (J.D.). Gonzales was nominated by President George W. Bush and confirmed by the United States Senate as the 80th Attorney General of the United States on February 3, 2005 and served in that capacity until September 2007. Previously, he served as a partner at a major Houston law firm (Vinson & Elkins) and held positions as Justice on the Supreme Court of Texas, Secretary of State (Texas) and Counsel to the President of the United States (2001-2005) in addition to his consulting and mediation practice. Gonzales currently serves as a Visiting Professor and minority/veteran recruitment consultant at Texas Tech University.

Alberto Gonzales joins Randall and Sadie Baskin near the construction site for the Baskin Center, future home of Belmont's College of Law.

Judge Gonzales said, “I am honored to be named as the Doyle Rogers Distinguished Chair of Law, created in honor of an outstanding lawyer and extraordinary human being. I welcome the opportunity to be associated with the Belmont College of Law, and I look forward to working with an outstanding charter faculty to develop tomorrow’s leaders in the bar, the Nashville community and beyond.”

Among his many professional associations, Gonzales has served as a member of the American Law Institute, the leading independent organization in the United States producing scholarly work to clarify, modernize and otherwise improve the law.  For his many accomplishments and years of public service, Gonzales has been recognized as a Distinguished Alumnus of Rice University and received the Harvard Law School Association Award as well as the Central Intelligence Agency’s Director’s Award and the Office of the Secretary of Defense Medal for Exceptional Public Service. His work in the Hispanic community and his achievements as a role model have also earned him recognition as Hispanic American of the Year by HISPANIC Magazine and one of The 25 Most Influential Hispanics in America by TIME Magazine.

Belmont Garden Shares Fresh Foods with Community

Sophomore Bryan Yates interned this summer to provide Dismas House residents with produce from the Belmont Community Garden.

A few months ago, sophomore Bryan Yates had never before seen or tasted okra.

By the end of summer, he was an expert not only on okra but also in organic gardening, harvesting produce and using it to prepare meals.

Yates became the first Belmont Community Garden intern this year as part of an effort to strengthen ties between the University and the Dismas House, a nonprofit organization that provides transitional housing and support to former convicts. He worked in Belmont’s garden daily and took its organic tomatoes, onions, okra, kale, squash, zucchini and cucumbers to Dismas House in exchange for room and board there.

“This summer internship was about taking care of the Belmont Community Garden, a small garden at the Dismas House and creating and growing relationships with the guys there,” said Yates, who is studying audio engineering and technology. “It was kind of intimidating at first, but I lived on a farm in the past so I knew a little about it. It was a really great experience, and I still go back (to Dismas House) to visit and have dinner with them.”

Chemistry Professor Kimberlee Daus proposed a Belmont garden on a vacant lot with a letter to administrators in 2008. Once approved, her honors analytics class did chemistry tests on soil, researched what types of plants would grow there and developed plans for the garden. A first-year seminar class built raised beds and did initial planting in 2009.

“What we have built on is the idea of community sharing and partnership and for students to learn about food production, sustainability and in a creative learning environment that is interactive,” said Adjunct Professor Charmion Gustke. Students in Gustke’s first-year service learning class must spend at least five hours in the garden and students in her English 1010 class prepare meals at the Dismas House using harvest produce from Belmont’s garden.

Campus Connects with Community Organizations

Belmont students and employees networked with Nashville nonprofit organizations Wednesday during the Community Connections Fair.  The fair is designed to flood Belmont’s campus with information and people from community organizations to share volunteer opportunities.

“It is really important for students to get what is going on in the community and for people to participate,” said Polina Sologub, a sophomore from Ukrane studying international economics. She took interest in the Lupus Foundation of America after a family member was stricken with cancer. She now volunteers for the foundation’s Mid-South Chapter and worked at its booth during the Community Connections Fair to encourage her peers to also get involved.

“Volunteering will help the organization to grow, and the organization helps patients to grow,” Sologub said.

More than 60 nonprofit organizations throughout Middle Tennessee set up booths in Neely Hall, including Monroe Harding, Nashville CARES, Conexion Americas and Sports 4 All Foundation.

“We host this fair annually because a lot of students want to know about opportunities to volunteer in the community, to encourage faculty to find partners for service learning and to give the entire campus an opportunity to learn about where their charitable contributions go in the community,” said Tim Stewart, director of service learning. “And the organizations here benefit so much from the opportunity to meet and network with other nonprofits in the community.”

The fair also gives students an opportunity to apply skills they learn in the classroom in a hands-on setting, such as marketing, public relations and education.

“In a lot of nonprofits, you have one person wearing a lot of hats, so we really rely on students and volunteers to help us with our work in the community,” said Belmont alumna Liz Zinke (’07), now walk coordinator for the Mid-South Chapter of the Lupus Foundation of America.

CAS, Law Provide Volunteers for Hands on Nashville Day

The 20th anniversary for Hands On Nashville Day, a fund-raising and community service event for Hands On Nashville (HON), took place on Sept. 24. Forty-eight College of Arts and Sciences faculty, staff, students and family members worked side by side with ten other Belmont students to create two Belmont teams for HON Day. In addition, three CAS faculty members donated funds to cover the HON donation request for students who couldn’t afford to make a donation. This was the largest Hands On Nashville Day on record.

One Belmont team worked at Smithson-Craighead Middle School, where Education Assistant Professor Myron Oglesby-Pitts is principal, and the other team worked at Haywood Elementary School along with some teachers and students of that school. The volunteers had a great time getting to know the teachers and children they were servicing.

The groups spent the morning spreading mulch, trimming bushes, painting hallways, door frames, window frames, doors, classrooms, portable classrooms, playground equipment and a storage shed. Belmont representatives worked hard taping, painting, raking and moving mulch, but everyone was full of smiles and laughter, having a great time enjoying good company and knowing the work they were doing would have a positive impact on the school’s learning environment.

Several comments were made about how insignificant the work seemed, until the volunteers stepped back at the end of their volunteer time and looked at the whole project. The classrooms, hallways, main entry and grounds had been transformed, appearing fresh and like new.

Six members of Belmont’s Chapter of the Mathematics Association of American and Association of Computing Machinery (MAACM) participated in Hands on Nashville. They went to Charlotte Park Elementary School and painted, spread mulch and planted flowers.

College of Law Students Serve the Community
The Lawyers’ Association for Women (LAW) also hosted a community service day project in conjunction with Hands on Nashville.  The organization was created to provide opportunities for women lawyers to build a network between one another, both socially and professionally.  Within the professional arena, LAW promotes career opportunities for women lawyers, as well as encouraging women’s active participation in existing bar organizations and women’s nominations to the bench.  LAW partnered with Hands on Nashville to serve at an underserved Metro Nashville school. 

LAW invited students from Belmont’s College of Law to participate in this day of service.  Betsy Appleton, Brittany Dugas, Callie Hinson and Kimberlee McTorry, all members of the charter class, participated in the community service project.  The students completed handiwork, such as painting and landscaping at a Metro Nashville School, while networking with the members of LAW.  The College of Law students were excited to participate in this organization’s day of service, as well as give back to the community that will be their home for the next three years.

Barnes Elected to PRSSA College of Fellows

Public Relations Instructor Susan Barnes was elected secretary of the Public Relations Society of America College of Fellows. The Fellows is a selective group of senior practitioners and educators who have at least 20 years of experience in public relations and have earned accreditation.

Convocation Lecture Brings Dr. Al Gini to Belmont

College of Business Administration Dean Dr. Pat Raines chats with guest speaker Al Gini.

“In work, we create both the product and the person,” noted speaker Al Gini said during his convocation lecture Wednesday titled “Work, Identity and Self.” A professor of business ethics and the Chair of the Department of Management at Loyola University in Chicago, Dr. Gini spoke on the impact of work on the human spirit, not just the impact on the wallet.

He said that as a society, we rarely invite reflections on the nature of the work we do; rather, we’re only trained to work and expected to perform. Dr. Gini said in that routine we lose the most important aspect of work, creating ourselves.

He said he believes there is a direct correlation between our quality of life on the job and off. Since individuals spend so much time working, if the work is not enjoyed then chances are day-to-day life won’t be either. Dr. Gini concluded his lecture noting, “Don’t give up on your integrity… don’t let that happen to you.”

Belmont Co-Hosts Nashville’s First Annual Fringe Festival

Nashville’s Actors Bridge Ensemble, a professional theatre company in full time residence at Belmont, is hosting the first annual Sideshow Fringe Festival: Music City’s Progressive Performing Arts Event Sept. 29-Oct. 2. The first of its kind in Nashville, the festival joins the National Association of Fringe Festivals and is part of the city-wide Artober celebration.

Organized and led by three Belmont theatre alumni–Jessika Malone, Mitch Massaro and Jackie Johnson–the festival’s 41 events will be held at Belmont’s Troutt and Black Box Theaters, as well as at Bongo Java’s After Hours Theatre and on a Belmont-Hillsboro neighborhood stage. Over 50 percent of the actors and volunteers for the weekend are current Belmont students.

According to the Nashville Scene, “Actors Bridge Ensemble paves the way for Music City’s entry into the genre, providing a forum for aerial dancers, jugglers, fire eaters, magicians and puppeteers, plus Caffeinated Theatre (a live-theater version of the 48 Hour Film Project), stand-up comedy, original scripts and storytelling, and one-woman shows from singer Annie Sellick and writer-choreographer Gabrielle Saliba. Music, visual art and workshops are also part of the celebration.”

Passes can be purchased online for the entirety of the four-day weekend, and individual tickets for performances can be purchased at the door. The outdoor festival activities are free to the public. For more information about the festival or to see a complete schedule, click here.

Congresswoman Marsha Blackburn Kicks Off Copyright Forum

U.S. Rep. Marsha Blackburn presented a briefing on the Commerce Committee’s anti-piracy efforts to Belmont University students, faculty and administrators sitting alongside Nashville songwriters Thursday at the Quonset Hut Studio on Music Row.

“It is imperative that we look for ways to give you some certainty that you are going to have some protection under Article I, Section 8 of the Constitution and some consistency and for you to know what those enforcement mechanisms are going to be,” Blackburn said.

Photo Credit: Donnie Hedden

In updating industry insiders and educators on music piracy and other copyright issues, she directed their attention to the Protect IP Act moving through the U.S. Senate and soon to be introduced in the House of Representatives chamber.

The legislation, also known as the Preventing Real Online Threats to Economic Creativity and Theft of Intellectual Property Act of 2011, aims at disrupting the business model of rogue websites, especially those registered outside the country.

“We need to send the message loud and clear that the United States is going to stand with protecting our creators and protecting the product that they create and that they are compensated for that creation,” Blackburn said.

She also applauded the recent work of Tennessee legislators to make it a misdemeanor to share passwords for subscription-based streaming sites like Netflix and Rhapsody.

“People must realize the Internet is not the Wild West,” she added. “The Internet is a marvelous virtual marketplace, and it allows many of our innovators access to a global marketplace.

Photo Credit: Donnie Hedden

As social networking websites and music clouds evolve and may merge, Blackburn also said it is important for lawmakers to evaluate end users and connect their uses of entertainment and technology to compensation for creators rather than evaluating technology, which is constantly changing.

The Copyright Forum brings real world marketplace and legislative information and events to Belmont’s campus. Belmont’s students and faculty will in turn provide energy, ideas and feedback to help shape the future of the music industry.

“The overarching mission of the forum is to advance the American copyright debate by encouraging participation from all of the stakeholders, from all sides of the music entertainment industry. To do so, we intend to and will embed copyright in the day-to-day curriculum at the Mike Curb College of Entertainment and Music Business,” said the college’s Dean Wesley Bulla.

The Nashville Songwriters Association International and Belmont University announced in July a collaboration to host copyright and intellectual property forums to discuss solutions for the huge illegal file-sharing problem devastating the entertainment industry.

Hinton Appointed to APTA Finance and Audit Committee

Dr. Cathy Hinton, School of Physical Therapy professor, was appointed to the American Physical Therapy Association’s (APTA) Finance and Audit Committee.  The APTA is the national organization that represents physical therapists within the United States.  The appointment is for a four-year term, and the committee is tasked with providing the Board of Directors of the APTA with advice and counsel regarding financial commitments in light of the association’s strategic plan.  To provide that overview role, the members of this committee are involved with review of the association’s income, expenditures and investments.