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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Theology Faculty Embrace Their Inner Spartans with Obstacle-Course Race

Setting aside their studies of Scripture and theological analysis, three faculty members from the College of Theology and Christian Ministry engaged recently in a less thoughtful—and certainly much dirtier—activity: a Spartan Race.

Professor of Theology/Religion and the Arts Dr. Steve Guthrie, Lecturer in Religion Dr. Gideon Park and Assistant Professor of Theology Dr. Manuel Cruz competed in the “Spartan Military Sprint” at Fort Campbell on Aug. 20. The five-mile race challenged participants with more than 20 obstacles that included a rope climb, wall jumps, barbed wire crawl, Hercules hoist, mud slope climb, sand bag carry, atlas stone carry and javelin throw.

Guthrie said, “The course involved a lot of trail running, through woods, over hilly terrain and along and through creeks and streams. The most challenging part of the race, actually, was the condition of the course. It rained heavily the night before the race, the morning of the race, and then through parts of the race itself. So what had been dirt trails instead became ankle-deep or even knee-deep mud.”

The group’s participation in the event grew from Park’s arrival on campus last fall as part of a “teaching externship” he did while completing his PhD at Vanderbilt Divinity School. Guthrie was assigned as Park’s faculty mentor, and over the next year he, Park and Cruz began working out together at Belmont’s gym. Guthrie mentioned that the training felt like an extension of the faculty mentorship as the three men used their workouts to talk about professional and academic goals as well as to discuss how to pursue those goals while staying healthy as husbands and fathers and people.

Cruz said the Spartan race felt like a perfect capstone project for all of the spring and summer workouts, but it also inspired him in unexpected ways about the strength to be found in community. “I learned that much of what I perceived as my physical limits were in fact mental limits. Training, team support and the pressure of race day helped me push my body further than I thought possible… On race day, knowing that I was not getting left behind, knowing that our team of fellow theologians would be there quite literally to carry me strengthened my resolve to push on, as we waded through miles of mud. We forged incredible bonds of friendship. While crossing a river, we came across a living parable of the power and dignity of friendship and teamwork. A squad of military helicopter pilots in full flight gear were racing with one of their fellow soldiers who had lost both his legs on deployment. Up and down hills, muddy embankments and 10-foot walls, they pulled, pushed and carried their comrade in his ‘Freedom Chair!’ In the love and strength of community, all things became possible. This is the lesson I take from the race, a lesson I plan to take back to campus and into my own life.”

The CTCM faculty noted that physically they came out of the race sore but surprisingly unscathed, completing the course in just under three hours.

Park added, “We did a good job of training for Spartan Race doing hill sprints at the Capitol Building, trail runs at Percy Warner and even a downtown run through Broadway! The sheer amount of mud simply made the course far more challenging than we expected. But the most important thing is that we started the course together and finished it together!”

Students and CTCM faculty beware… the trio noted they hope to keep racing and plan to recruit some new Spartans from their College for next year’s Fort Campbell event.

Recent Graduate Hethcoat Plays Lead Actress in Locally-Produced Film

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Belmont graduate Allee-Sutton Hethcoat was recently cast as the lead actress in a feature-length film by Nashville director, screenwriter and producer Dave Christiano. The film, titled “Remember the Goal,” was released on August 26 to over 100 theaters in 10 southeastern states. Additional releases are planned for the fall.

In the film, Hethcoat is cast as a recent college graduate who becomes the coach of an all-girl cross country team for a fictional private high school. The film follows the team through their journey of adjusting to their new coach (Hethcoat) and dealing with many of the hardships high school students face. Hethcoat’s character helps lead the team through their conflicts on and off the field by using her own experiences and testimony of faith. She also sets a goal for the team to win their first ever state championship.

“Remember the Goal” was filmed in Nashville and is the first film in history to highlight girls’ cross country. Christiano hopes this film will help shed a light on girls’ athletics.

“In the history of movies, there has never been a feature film about girls cross country,” said Christiano. “I set out to produce an inspirational drama aimed at teens and students with many life lessons presented trying to give them direction and purpose.  I also represent the sport of cross country with 100% accuracy and showcase that girls’ athletics are every bit as competitive as boys’.”

Christiano is a former cross country runner and has coached two teams. In addition to “Remember the Goal,” he has produced 16 films alongside his twin brother Rich and a 64-episode drama series called “7th Street Theater.” Christiano has worked in the film industry for over 31 years.

More information on “Remember the Goal,” as well as its official movie trailer, can be found here.

Belmont Band ‘Mountains Like Wax’ Wins Music City Mayhem Competition

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Mountains Like Wax, a southern post-rock band made up of Belmont students Alex Zimmermann, Sam Katz, Mitchell Taylor and Hunter Beckgerd, recently won Lightening 100’s Music City Mayhem competition. As a reward for winning, Mountains Like Wax will receive three days of studio time with an engineer, an original song played in regular rotation on Lightening 100 radio for one month, 50 branded t-shirts & posters and a spot on the line-up for Nashville’s coveted Live on the Green concert.

Mountains Like Wax member Zimmermann said the band entered the contest over six months ago and never expected to be listed as a finalist. “It was one of those things we submitted for and honestly forgot about because it seemed like such a long shot,” he said. “So when we found out we were a finalist, we were shocked. It started with 300 bands and was narrowed down to 32 for online voting. We won every round of online votes which put us in the final four (plus a wildcard) showcase.”

The band attributes its style to the musical backgrounds of its members. Each artist has played music in the past ranging from pop-rock to hardcore metal. “Mountains Like Wax truly is a product of many different styles coming together to make something honest and familiar with a bit of a twist,” Zimmermann said.

The band members said they are grateful for the experience the Music City Mayhem competition has given them and for the amount of support they have received. They hope to continue performing and pursuing music careers for as long as possible and feel that the exposure they’ve received throughout this process will help them achieve their goals.

Zimmermann attributed some of his knowledge of the music industry to his experience at Belmont and the guidance of faculty members. “Belmont has helped me learn how to work with people more than anything. I’ve learned through faculty and my own experiences how to build solid and meaningful business relationships that are grounded in something deeper than just ‘networking’. The faculty has always been encouraging. I’ve learned over the years that I am in control of how much I get out of a class,” Zimmermann said.

Mountains Like Wax will play at Live on the Green Saturday, September 3 at 7:15 p.m. on the 615 Stage. Check out the band’s website here.

Photo taken by Nolan Knight.

Carr Appointed Associate Dean for Mike Curb College

slaycarr_cheryl (2)Belmont University’s Mike Curb College of Entertainment and Music Business has recently announced the appointment of Dr. Cheryl Carr as Associate Dean. In this position, Carr will oversee all undergraduate operations of the College including accreditation assessment, student advising, academic affairs and faculty development, among other things. Carr brings an extensive entertainment, law and performance background to the position as she began with the College in 2008. As an entertainment and intellectual property law attorney prior to entering academia, Carr launched a practice focused on developing creative business and legal solutions for arts and entertainment professionals. With more than 16 years of experience in representing creatives, Carr brings an additional 17 years of experience in managing and advising public sector programs as she developed a practice providing clients with counsel on changes in the entertainment industry and trends in IP law and policy.

A frequent presenter, writer and researcher, Carr is co-author of Music Copyright Law which provides in-depth coverage of copyright fundamentals within the music industry, contributing author of Trademark Infringement Remedies which focuses on the fundamentals of trademark law, and author of numerous articles ranging from strategies for success in the industry to funding film projects. She holds a Juris Doctor degree from the University of Maryland School of Law, a Master of Public Administration from Atlanta University, a Bachelor of Arts from the University of Michigan and has completed the Harvard Law School Program of Continuing Education for Lawyers in International and Comparative Intellectual Property. She also served as chair of the Maryland Bar Association’s entertainment & sports law section for four years where she pioneered the first continuing legal education program for entertainment law. Carr also taught in the clinical law program for University of Maryland School of Law.

In 2005, Carr was selected as a Maryland Bar Foundation Fellow, an honor awarded to two percent of the Maryland Bar membership, has served on the board of directors for Maryland Volunteer Lawyers for the Arts and is an alumna of Leadership Music. Her entertainment industry experience is augmented by her work as a vocalist with over 25 years of performance including the production and release of “Invocation,” a jazz-inspired recording of sacred and jazz standards. As a Curb College professor, Carr has taught courses on many topics including copyright and contract law, intellectual property and diversity, among others. She has severed on several committees including co-chairing the music business curriculum committee and developing Belmont’s first legal clinic in collaboration with the Arts and Business Council.

College of Law Students Serve at Capers Memorial Church

Capers Group PhotoBelmont University College of Law first year students spent the morning of August 22 engaging in a class-wide community service project at Capers Memorial CME Church. In 2015, Capers Memorial was named by Historic Nashville as one of the “Nashville Nine”, a list of nine properties in the area that are in “endangered by demolition, neglect, or development.”

Over 100 Belmont Law students, faculty and staff gathered at Capers Memorial to clean, paint and engage with the congregation. Students worked to address mild repair that the congregation and church leadership suggested. The majority of the members at Capers Memorial have attended church there for over 50 years, and much of their history and heritage is rooted in this building.

Serving as the culminating event of new student orientation for the Class of 2019, the second largest class in Belmont Law’s history poured over 300 hours into service at Capers Memorial.

Hawley Featured in ‘SacredSpace’ Video Blog

scott-hawleyAssociate Professor of Physics Dr. Scott Hawley was recently interviewed in a new video blog, “SacredSpace,” to discuss how he has kept his faith while working in a primarily atheist field. The video was shot in Belmont’s Janet Ayers Academic Center Chapel by successful music producer, songwriter and guitarist Rex Schnelle. Schnelle has worked as a producer at Sony for 25 years and is a pastor and worship leader at Christ Community Church.

The purpose of Schnelle’s blog is to highlight individuals who successfully show their Christian faith through their vocation. Schnelle hopes to integrate faith and vocation in a way that is real and authentic.

“In these interviews and blogs, I hope to use the bridges of sharing human experiences through art, science, conversation, debate and such to reveal God’s Spirit crossing over on them and being empirically present,” Schnelle said.

In his interview, Hawley discussed how studying the sciences strengthened his commitment to worship as he experienced the wonder of God’s power and creation. This is the philosophy that sparked Schnelle’s interest in interviewing Hawley for SacredSpace.

“Scott Hawley is a dear friend, and when we first met I was intrigued by the fact that he had a Ph.D. in relativity and is such a passionate and intelligent-thinking Christian, as well as an artist,” Schnelle said.

Hawley’s finished video interview can be viewed here.

Mulraine Presents at Center for the Protection of Intellectual Property

loren-mulraineLaw Professor Loren Mulraine recently spoke on a panel at the Center for the Protection Intellectual Property’s Third Annual Summer Institute in Seattle, Washington on August. The panel, “The Future of Control of Creative Content,” also featured Joe DiMona, VP Legal Affairs, Broadcast Music Inc.; Troy Dow, VP & Counsel, IP Legal Policy, Disney; Professor Sean Pager, Michigan State University College of Law and Amelia Wang, VP Industry Relations & Government Affairs, National Music Publishers Association.  The conference features the leading Intellectual Property voices in corporate, entertainment, academia and government.

Alumnae Selected as English Teaching Assistants in Italy

Belmont alumnae Mikaila Minott, Hillary Bell, Danielle McCleave and Madison Bradford were recently selected as English Teaching Assistants in schools of the region of Lombardy, Italy. The program is an eight-month-paid internship (Oct. 1 , 2016– May 31, 2017) open to B.A. students who have earned a minor in Italian in a North American university. On a weekly basis, selected candidates will instruct/assist 12 hours in English and pursue an additional 13 hours of related activities. This is a great reward for students of Italian language, literature and culture at Belmont. It is also a unique opportunity for Belmont graduates to continue their study of Italian language and culture while gaining valuable life and teaching experience.

Hillary Bell
Hillary Bell
Madison Bradford
Madison Bradford
Mikaila Minott
Mikaila Minott
Danielle McCleave
Danielle McCleave

Leville Begins Movement to ‘Save God’s Kids’

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It all started when Nancy Leville, a sophomore music business major at Belmont, couldn’t find a piece of fruit to snack on while walking to Yankee Stadium in the South Bronx. Igniting an interest in understanding food deserts and their prevalence in the U.S., Leville wrote a paper for a high school class and discovered that 83 percent of American children are not provided with the nutrients they need to thrive—regardless of their socioeconomic status or where they grew up. Armed with this information and a newly found passion for providing children with the resources they need to be healthy, Leville began the journey to “Save God’s Kids” (SGK).

Soon after, Leville moved to Nashville to attend Belmont. Beginning as a commercial music major, Leville’s future would change with the first person she met—Nancy Daines, a musician and fellow student. Soon after, Leville said the purpose she was led to Belmont became increasingly clear. “I had been called to Belmont to bring SGK to the world and to find Christian talent that could help deliver the message, beginning with my Phi Mu ‘big sister,’ Nancy,” she said. Within her first week of classes, Leville transferred to the Curb College to study music business, her current program.

Since developing her passion, Leville has launched SGK, a youth-driven movement to strengthen the church by nourishing the mind, body and spirit of all its members and empower young people to become stronger in their faith.  She began by compiling her research into a proprietary nutrition solution called GoBrite and authoring two books, Save God’s Kids for parents and the I’m God’s Kid Activity Book for kids, designed to represent the five BRITE colors found in God’s nourishing foods.

After publication, the One World Literacy Foundation adopted the GoBrite secular version of the program, I’m a BRITE Kid and the solution was introduced to the New York City Public School System. More recently, Leville and her foundation, Global Children’s Wellness (GCW), changed the direction of their work to focus on a newly published study indicating that some of the nation’s unhealthiest children are sitting in churches. Armed with this information and understanding that parents need support to provide children with healthy options, GCW expanded the Go-Brite nutrition solution to serve the entire family. GCW is now partnering with thousands of churches across America, and soon the world, where the entire Save God’s Kids solution will be made available free.

Thanks to her personal connections and time at Belmont, Leville said she is proud to say the GCW team is entirely youth-driven. With Belmont students who are studying publishing, journalism and communications, among other things, alongside her, Leville said GCW’s future is bright and has Belmont to thank for a good amount of its success. “When I entered Belmont, I quickly realized that I was surrounded by some of the most amazingly talented Christian students in the world,” Leville said. “I knew I was meant to utilize that to help nourish the spirit of millions of young followers.”

For Leville and her team, the ultimate goal is to live out the purposes they were created to live and change the lives of many in the process. “The most important thing I have learned is that God has a plan for each of us and that true happiness can only be achieved when that plan is being fulfilled,” Leville said. “I want to create a movement to stop the epidemic of chronic illnesses that are weakening the church and putting a generation of God’s kids at risk.”

As for GCW, there are still big dreams on the horizon including an online personal eating analysis that is under development, an online customizable nutritional plan for families to use and the creation of a Christian music label to support the foundation’s work.

Belmont University Names Dr. Mary Clark as Director of Multicultural Learning and Experience

Belmont announced today that Dr. Mary Clark has been appointed as Director of Belmont’s newly created Office of Multicultural Learning and Experience (MLE). Since coming to Belmont in 2014, Clark has provided innovative leadership to the Bridges to Belmont program as it has grown to include four cohorts and more than 100 students. In her new role, Clark will lead the Office in its charge to serve Belmont’s student-centered community by providing academic and experiential multicultural learning opportunities that serve the university’s mission to engage and transform the world.

In managing the daily operations of the Office, Clark will provide institutional leadership to support, strengthen and expand Belmont’s culture of inclusion and diversity by collaboratively partnering with diversity initiatives across campus including the University’s Welcome Home Team, a senior leadership advisory committee focused on racial and ethnic diversity. Focusing on creating culturally diverse conversations, the MLE will permeate all aspects of campus life as it supports awareness events across campus, establishes its own programming surrounding key diversity and inclusivity topics and creates new initiatives and opportunities for diverse experiences.

Belmont Provost Dr. Thomas Burns said, “I am very excited that Dr. Clark is willing to take on the additional role of Director of Multicultural Learning and Experience.  Her work with engaging students, faculty, and staff in conversations and collaborations around important issues has been exemplary.  Expanding her opportunity to lead these initiatives as the Director of Multicultural Learning and Experience will be foundational for the University and help us serve our students, faculty, and staff though new programs and new opportunities.”

The development of the MLE at Belmont allows the institution to take a proactive, educational approach to providing faculty, staff and students with opportunities to further develop and engage their cultural competencies. Serving as the central location for administration and corporate diversity planning, the MLE will continue to infuse existing structures with opportunities to increase multicultural knowledge, advance the campus dialogue on multicultural literacies and provide resources to campus constituents to enhance their foundational knowledge.

Clark said, “I am honored to serve Belmont and its community through the work of the MLE. As we embrace the premise that all people are created by God to serve Him and one another in ways that are reflective of our talents and gifts, we become a true reflection of God’s diverse creation, humanity.”

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