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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Belmont Ranked Among Top 30 Christian Colleges

According to the website Faith on View, Belmont University ranks among the top 30 in a national ranking of Christian colleges. A total of 204 colleges were ranked on the site’s list, and Belmont was featured in the first of three tiers of Christian colleges.

Faith on View uses a variety of categories to rank universities including faculty resources, reputation, major college rankings and student success and satisfaction. The website also pays attention to schools who hold their religious affiliation at the core of university life. In addition to the overall list, Belmont was ranked second for Christian colleges in Tennessee and fifth for the South region.

Alumni Set Sail for Ocean Research Project, Travel ‘From Here to Anywhere’

Lauren George, a 2015 music and religious studies alumna, recently set sail along the East Coast with a dream to move aboard her sailboat and travel for a few years alongside her husband Trey George, a fellow Belmont graduate.

While at Belmont, Trey studied philosophy and worked as an editor during the early years of Belmont’s journal of philosophy, “Philologoi.” His position involved calling for and publishing student research across the globe. He points to his time on campus as having contributed to his ability to ask the “big questions of life” and formulate his own ideas towards meaningful fulfillment.

“Upon graduation, all of the tests and quizzes and essays and journals couldn’t hold a candle to the biggest body of work that Belmont’s department of philosophy helped me complete,” Trey said. “New perspectives, broadened horizons and a radically different worldview. I saw opportunities in places I never would have previously imagined, and I felt equipped with the tools to take hold of them.” It was this mindset that ultimately landed he and Lauren in a unique environment soon after getting married in 2014.

Interested in exploring an “unconventional lifestyle to continue learning and evolving continuously as they had at Belmont,” the newlyweds spent their first year researching their options after meeting another young couple who had made their boat a home. A year later they bought a 1975 sailboat and spent two years fixing it. By June 2018, they were ready to set sail and began their trip up the eastern coast of the U.S. as volunteers for the Ocean Research Project (ORP)’s Citizen Science Project, Fish Finder.

“As we have both always been passionate about the environment, we were thrilled when Lauren’s work with environmental research and education introduced her to the opportunity to contribute to ORP,” Trey said. “Our involvement with them was really the cherry on top of our crazy, extraordinary adventure. It lent us a sense of overriding purpose throughout the journey and made a lot of the difficult times feel ‘worth it,’ so to speak.”

One of six mariners selected to serve the initiative, the Georges work to record the locations of tagged animals in the sea and understand their migratory patterns. ORP works in partnership with the Smithsonian Environmental Research Center to tag animals so receivers can use acoustic telemetry to pick up their locations. Each time the duo was at anchor this summer, George lowered the receiver into the water and recorded the depth, latitude, longitude and time it was submerged.

Though her experience might look different than the path she studied at Belmont as a music and religious studies major, Lauren is quick to mention her gratitude surrounding the opportunity to explore these vast, seemingly unrelated, topics. In the end they all point to her unending passion for learning new things.

“I consider myself fortunate that I have a wide variety of interests and experiences, from classically performing with orchestras to teaching kids about habitats and how to protect fragile ecosystems,” Lauren said. “As long as I am learning, making a difference and still getting to participate in the art scene, I’m thrilled.”

In late August, the Georges sailed out of the New York Harbor and passed Ellis Island. Unexpectedly chilly for the season, Lauren reached for her favorite sweatshirt — which happened to be from her time on campus.

“As I warmed up in my Belmont hoodie and watched the Statue of Liberty diminish in the distance, all I could think about was the motto, ‘From here to anywhere.'”

McMakin and Carr Represent Curb College at DIY Musicians Conference

When music distribution company CDBaby held their annual DIY Musicians Conference in Nashville again this year, Belmont was a supporting sponsor for the event for the second year in a row.  Cheryl Carr, associate dean for the Curb College and Pat McMakin, director of operations for Belmont’s Oceanway Recording Studios, have worked with conference producers each year to create partnership opportunities.

McMakin hosted and produced live demo recording sessions at Oceanway featuring bands attending the conference. These demo sessions were so popular last year that the conference planners requested a repeat performance and increased the number of sessions offered from one session in 2017 to four in 2018. Carr presented a Belmont-branded workshop titled “Mapping Your Path to Authentic Art & Business” to a standing room only crowd. Carr also provided attendees with information about Belmont and Curb College programs.

Staff Member’s Band, Sister Sadie, Lands at No. 2 on Billboard Bluegrass Albums Chart

Band Celebrates Release With Official Video for Lead Single ‘Losing You Blues’

Curb College Academic Advising Director Tina Dishman, who uses Tina Adair in her music career, is celebrating the release of Sister Sadie II, the new sophomore project from her bluegrass group Sister Sadie. After its first week of release, Sister Sadie II stormed its way onto the Billboard Bluegrass Albums Chart as the highest new entry onto the chart, debuting at No. 2 for the week of September 15.

“We couldn’t have picked a better weekend for the release of our second record – Sister Sadie II – on Pinecastle Records. It worked out that we were playing the Delaware Valley and the Thomas Point Beach festivals which are both awesome places that we love,” said  Adair. “We had a blast celebrating our new release with all the folks at both places. And wow… what a nice surprise to get the wonderful news today that we’ve debuted at #2 on the BILLBOARD Bluegrass Albums Chart for the week – we are beyond grateful for everyone that has helped us reach this spot by purchasing our new music.”

Fans were treated to the lead single, “Losing You Blues” earlier this summer. The official video was also unveiled on The Bluegrass Situation, where fans were give an exclusive first-watch. Shot on-location in Knoxville, Tenn., the band takes fans inside a home style jam, featuring all five world renowned musicians, each at the top of their game. Bluegrass enthusiasts can watch the full video here. The song, which was written by Adair, recently hit No. 1 on Roots Music Report’s Contemporary Bluegrass Song Chart.

Sister Sadie will be rolling into the annual International Bluegrass Music Association (IBMA) conference later this month as finalists in the category for “Emerging Artist of the Year.”  “Raleigh’s Ride” from the new project is also being used by IBMA as a soundtrack for marketing and upcoming World of Bluegrass festivities, which the band will be performing at. The IBMA Awards are set to take place on September 27 in Raleigh, N.C. at the Duke Energy Center for the Performing Arts.

In addition to Tina Adair, other Sister Sadie band members include Dale Ann Bradley, Gena Britt, Deanie Richardson and Beth Lawrence.

 

Cusic’s ‘Minnie Pearl’ Musical Earns Strong Reviews Opening Weekend

Don CusicThe musical “Minnie Pearl: All the News from Grinder’s Switch” saw a sell-out opening weekend Sept. 7, 8 and 9 at Chaffin’s Barn Dinner Theater. The musical was written by Belmont University Professor of Music Business and music historian Don Cusic. The musical focuses on how the character Minnie Pearl came to be created and cultivated by Sarah Ophelia Colley Cannon. It also shares stories from times at the Grand Ole Opry, intertwined with original songs to show more of who the character Minnie Pearl was.

Aimed at showing the audience two sides of the story, both Pearl’s and Cannon’s, Cusic includes a switch in the second act to focus on the lesser known side of the country comedian, Cannon as her true self. According to Broadway World Nashville, there are “moments of emotional resonance that make the larger-than-life character of Sarah Cannon more accessible.”

The show features two separate actresses for the parts of Pearl and Cannon individually. Broadway World Nashville says the dual casting “works beautifully in Cusic’s slight play, giving audiences a glimpse into the process of how Sarah became Minnie and, in turn, the evolution of a seemingly cornpone comic helped her become an entertainment legend.”

Cusic is working on another musical to be released Oct. 1 that is based on a musical timeline of Nashville and titled “Nashville Sound.”

Massey Alumna Appointed President of Shaw University

Dr. Paulette R. Dillard, who received her Masters in Business Administration from Belmont University, was recently appointed as the 18th President at Shaw University in Raleigh, North Carolina. The university’s Board of Trustees reached a unanimous decision to appoint Dillard on Saturday, Sept. 8.

“Upon her appointment as interim president, we determined Dr. Dillard to be the ideal selection to lead this institution,” said Chairman of the Board of Trustees Joseph N. Bell, Jr. “We believe her performance to date has demonstrated that she is committed to the transformative education process and more than qualified to lead Shaw University into this next era of excellence.”

Dillard was serving as interim president prior to her official appointment to the position. She previously served as the University’s vice president for academic affairs and dean of the college of arts and sciences. She held prior positions in the field of diagnostic laboratory science.

Shaw University, founded as the Raleigh Institute, is a private liberal arts institution and historically black university affiliated with the Baptist church with an enrollment of approximately 1,600.

 

Alumna Lands Position at Bone McAllester Norton Law Firm

I'Ashea Myles-DihigoBone McAllester Norton PLLC recently announced the addition of attorney and Belmont alumna I’Ashea Myles-Dihigo, an experienced commercial construction and business litigator who also has counseled clients on alcoholic beverage laws.

In her construction practice, Myles-Dihigo handles matters related to the building and development of both commercial and residential properties. Her experience includes representing owners, contractors and subcontractors in federal and state courts. Additionally, she counsels her clients through the building process, including bid negotiations, contract drafting, liens and compliance with changing regulations.

Myles-Dihigo also counsels business clients on a variety of matters, including litigation and alternative dispute resolution, and advises restaurants, hotels, bars and other venues on federal, state and local alcoholic beverage licensing and regulatory compliance.

“With the addition of I’Ashea, the firm bolsters both its alcoholic beverage law and real estate practices,” said Charles R. Bone, president and CEO of Bone McAllester Norton. “Her knowledge and perspective will be a great asset as we continue to build upon our tradition of offering diverse and robust practice areas to best serve our clients.”

Myles-Dihigo earned both her undergraduate and law degrees from Belmont University. She received a Bachelor of Music with minors in music business and marketing, and graduated from Belmont’s College of Law in 2014. While in law school, she clerked for the Tennessee Court of Appeals under the Honorable Judge Richard H. Dinkins. In 2017, Myles-Dihigo was named to the National Black Lawyers’ Top 40 Under 40. She was recently selected to Murfreesboro Magazine’s Top 20 Under 40 and as a fellow for the American Bar Association (ABA) Forum on Construction Law.

She is currently on the board of directors for the United Way of Rutherford and Cannon Counties and also has served on the Board for the Tennessee Bar Association Young Lawyers Division.

Award-Winning Poet Nikki Giovanni to Speak to Belmont Students

Renowned poet, activist, educator and author Nikki Giovanni will be this year’s keynote speaker at Belmont University’s 2018 Humanities Symposium. Giovanni will also be the College of Liberal Arts and Social Science’s Scholar-in-Residence. Giovanni is an award-winning poet, known for her work driven by the Black Arts Movement of the 1960s. She has written a number of poems, some of which have been compiled into larger works,  as well as composed children’s books and recorded many readings of her poetry.

Nikki Giovanni 2Giovanni’s visit to Belmont’s campus comes in conjunction with the 2018 Humanities Symposium which will focus on the subject, “The Present and the Future of the Past.” She is also the featured First Year Seminar speaker and will give a talk titled “I’m Just a Poet: All I Have is Words” on Sunday, Sept. 23 at 7 p.m. in the Curb Event Center.

As the First Year Seminar keynote speaker and Scholar-in-Residence, Giovanni comes to Belmont to serve as an inspiration to underrepresented students, to offer guidance and to introduce students to opportunities for advancing education.

Originally from Knoxville, Giovanni attended Fisk University where she took an interest in writing and was editor of the campus literary magazine. Giovanni went on to continue her education at the University of Pennsylvania and Columbia University in New York. She has lectured and taught at many schools including Rutgers University, Ohio State University and Virginia Tech, where she is a University Distinguished Professor.

For her achievements in teaching, writing and poetry, Giovanni has received awards such as the Langston Hughes Medal, NAACP Image Award, Caldecott Honor Book Award and was named as one of Oprah Winfrey’s 25 Living Legends. She has also been nominated for a Grammy Award for Best Spoken Word Album for her recording of “The Nikki Giovanni Poetry Collection.”

During her visit to Belmont, Giovanni will not only be a featured speaker but she will also do a poetry reading to conclude the 2018 Humanities Symposium on Monday, Sept. 24. First year seminar students and faculty will have the opportunity to speak with Giovanni through a series of different events on campus.

More information on her visit can be found on Belmont’s campus calendar.

Preview: 2018 Humanities Symposium to Discuss Ideas of the Past, Present and Future

The 18th annual Humanities Symposium at Belmont University will  take place Sept. 17-24 in the Janet Ayers Academic Center on Belmont University’s campus. The title of this year’s symposium is “The Present and the Future of the Past” and will be a week long event discussing how, in society, historical and cultural resources are identified, interpreted, preserved and dismissed based on their relation to the present and future. Belmont University’s College of Liberal Arts and Social Sciences has been working to prepare a symposium with many key speakers, from differing disciplines, to speak on topics relevant to today, and the past.

With over 30 speakers featured at this year’s symposium, a variety of topics will be examined. These topics range from philosophy to poetry, and all contribute to a week-long discussion over the wider theme of the symposium. The week will begin with the Monteverde Plenary Address given by Dr. Doug Murray, professor of English, who will explore the past and how culture treats it.

There will be six different key speakers at this years event. Each has been brought in to share on a specific area of the overall topic of the symposium. Speakers include:

  • Dr. James A. Clark, professor of English at Barton College
  • Dr. Gregory Hansen, professor of folklore and English at Arkansas State University
  • Dr. Gregory N. Reish, director of the Center for Popular Music and professor of music history at Middle Tennessee State University
  • Dr. Martha Norkunas, professor of oral and public history at Middle Tennessee State University
  • Dr. Paul S. Loeb, professor emeritus of philosophy from The University of Puget Sound
  • Nikki Giovanni, a renowned poet, activist, author and educator who will also be the First Year Seminar featured speaker

“By examining and (re)contextualizing the past, we will discuss how versions of the past are communicated in society through a multiplicity of institutions and media, including school, popular entertainment, public displays, art and literature,” said Dr. Francesca Muccini, associate professor of Italian and chair of this year’s symposium. The symposium will conclude on Sept. 24 with a poetry reading from Giovanni followed by questions from the audience.

The week before the symposium an international film festival will be held on campus. Organized by Dr. Maggie Monteverde, professor of English, a different film will be shown every night that will help lead in to what is going to be discussed at the symposium.

For more information on the 2018 Humanities Symposium, click here. For a schedule of the week’s events, click here, or look on Belmont’s campus calendar.

Searcy Featured in StyleBlueprint’s FACES of Nashville

Belmont Director of Community Relations Joyce Searcy was previously featured as a FACE of Nashville by StyleBlueprint, a local digital media company. The article highlighted her dedication to the Belmont community, as well as numerous organizations in the Nashville area including Nashville Public Library, Nashville Public Library Foundation, Nashville Area Hispanic Chamber of Commerce and Tennessee Women’s Forum.

Searcy shared with StyleBlueprint that she is “grateful to have the opportunity to serve both the University and our city through her position at Belmont.”

To read the article in its entirety, click here.