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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Arts & Business Council of Greater Nashville Honors Multi-Generational Arts Patrons Steve and Jay Turner

The Martha Ingram Rivers Arts Visionary Award presented last night during An Evening of Arts Visionaries, featuring keynote address from internationally renowned artist Edgar Arceneaux.

The Arts & Business Council of Greater Nashville partnered with the Belmont University Department of Art to present “An Evening of Arts Visionaries” last night in the Chapel in the Wedgewood Academic Center on Belmont University’s campus. In addition to a keynote presentation from internationally acclaimed artist Edgar Arceneaux, “An Evening of Arts Visionaries” culminated with the presentation of the Martha Rivers Ingram Arts Visionary Award to prominent father-son developers and philanthropists Steve and Jay Turner.

The award, named for one of Nashville’s leading arts patrons, is intended to honor outstanding dedication to and support of the arts. This year, the award will highlight the importance of multi-generational support of the arts such as that embodied in this year’s father-son recipients. Notable Nashville citizens, Steve and Jay Turner, along with business partner Joe Barker, are the leadership team behind MarketStreet Enterprises, a privately held real estate investment and development firm that spearheaded the development The Gulch. The father-son duo have also long demonstrated their support of the arts through their involvement with the Schermerhorn Symphony Center, the Frist Center and many other arts institutions in Nashville.

Casey Summar, executive director of the Arts & Business Council, stated that “The Arts & Business Council exists to create a thriving, sustainable creative culture in Nashville, and presenting this award recognizes individuals who have made significant contributions to further that culture. We are thrilled to honor Steve and Jay Turner, who are quite literally changing the face of downtown Nashville while emphasizing sustainable practices and fostering an environment where our city’s creative community can flourish.”

The Founder of the Arts & Business Council and namesake for the award, Martha Rivers Ingram, applauded Steve and Jay Turner.  Ingram said “I’m just delighted that you are receiving this award tonight, father and son, it’s a lovely thing to think about and it’s certainly well-deserved.”

“An Evening of Arts Visionaries” was made possible by the Leu Endowment for the Visual Arts at Belmont, which provided the opportunity for the Belmont Department of Art to bring an artist of Arceneaux’s international caliber to campus to teach and work directly with Belmont art students. Arceneaux is the co-founder of the Watts House Project, which is a nationally recognized creative placemaking project, and a Whitney biennial artist.

Arceneaux’s visit will leverage the partnership with the Arts & Business Council, a nonprofit-in-residence on Belmont’s campus, as well as relationships with leaders and artists in the Edgehill community surrounding Belmont.  Arceneaux began working with local artist team leaders and Belmont art students in the fall to engage with the Edgehill neighborhood and begin conceptualizing potential community art projects. His keynote address focused on issues of civic art practice and community building.

The Ingram Arts Visionary Award is sponsored by Earl Swensson Associates, a noted architecture firm known for its investment in the community. Past award recipients include Walter Knestrick (2012), Dennis C. Bottorff (2011) and Earl Swensson (2010).

Alumna Basden Advances to Live Round of ‘The Voice’

9554_980731651996599_4382434863022640617_nAlumna Katie Basden is competing on Judge Blake Shelton’s team of NBC’s “The Voice,” and she has officially made it to the Live Rounds. Basden will perform April 11, and the show begins at 7 p.m.

For those who are unfamiliar with the show setup, each team has six people on it at the current Knockout round. As the Live Shows begin, 24 contestants will be cut to 12, based primarily on America’s vote.  The top two contestants with the most votes on each team will make it through, then the coach gets to save one more. A 14-hour voting window follows the show’s airing.

Voting can occur on The Voice Official App, the Facebook page or on the show’s website.  Lastly, download Basden’s performance on iTunes. All of these will add up to 40 votes per person.

Follow Basden on Twitter and Facebook to keep up with her progress, and download The Voice Official App to vote for the contestant during the live voting portion of the show.

Belmont Student on Next Generation Mobility Challenge Winning Team

Net Impact recently partnered with Toyota to engage students on bringing sustainability to the transportation industry. The Next Generation Mobility Challenge was held at Vanderbilt University on Friday, March 18, an opportunity for only 50 students to spend 7 hours in interdisciplinary teams to create innovative solutions to make the transportation industry more socially and environmentally sustainable. Participating teams pitched to Toyota and mobility experts and the national winning team received an internship with Toyota’s innovation partners.

JP Hechter, a Belmont senior audio engineering technology major and computer science minor, was a member of the challenge’s winning team. Michael Kranzlein, a Belmont senior with a computer science and French double major, also participated and came in second place. Hechter’s team will ultimately compete in a national event for the Toyota internship opportunity.

Kranzlein said, “Overall, the event was fantastic! Logistically, everything was very smooth, and I could tell that the event truly was about innovation. There was great representation across all disciplines and from quite a few schools.”

Mathematics Faculty and Students Present at MAA Southeastern Section Meeting

Students and faculty from the Mathematics & Computer Science Department recently attended the Mathematical Association of American’s Southeastern Section (MAA-SE) meeting March at the University of Alabama at Birmingham.

Dr. Andy Miller, chair and professor of mathematics, and Dr. Ryan Fox, assistant professor of math and education, led a three-hour workshop titled “Projects and Case Studies to Promote Quantitative Literacy.” Dr. Brad Schleben, assistant professor of mathematics, gave a talk on “Infinite Wedge Representations of a Lie Superalgebra.”

Students Kailee Gerzema, Savannah Halliday and Katie Kruzan presented on “Unique Opportunities for Growth and Collaboration via a Math/CS Club.” Two students gave undergraduate research presentations including Jonathan Hesser on “3D Hyperstereo Image Stitching” and Tucker Dowell on “Exploring Ramsey Theory.”

Allison Hardee, Halliday, Dowell, and Katie Kruzan formed Belmont’s Math Jeopardy tournament team. Dr. Sarah Ann Fleming, associate professor of mathematics, served as their sponsor. Belmont’s team earned one of the “wild card” spots in the second round where they were defeated by Berry College.

Magruder and Robinson Published in Physical Research Journal

Drs. Robert Magruder and Steve Robinson, (physics), co-authored a paper that was recently published in Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section B: Beam Interactions with Materials and Atoms. The paper is titled “Effects of excess oxygen on the 4.5–6.3 eV absorption spectra of oxygen-rich high purity silica.

Lovgren Published in International Journal of Operations Research and Information Systems

robin_lovgrenDr. Robin Lovgren, assistant professor of mathematics, recently had a paper published in the International Journal of Operations Research and Information Systems.  The Journal examines current, state-of-the art advances in the interactions, linkages, applications and support of operations research with information systems. Covering emerging theories, principles, models, processes and applications within the field, this journal provides practitioners, educators, and researchers with an international collection of all operations research facets.

The paper is titled “AEGISi – Attribute Experimentation Guiding Improvement Searches Inline Framework” and was co-authored with Michael Racer from the University of Memphis. 

Mathematics Faculty Present at Joint Mathematics Meetings

Several mathematics faculty members recently presented at the Joint Mathematics Meetings in Seattle, Washington. The Mathematical Association of America (MAA) and the American Mathematical Society (AMS) combine for the Joint Mathematics Meetings (JMM), the largest Mathematics meeting in the world. Dr. Andy Miller helped organize and moderate a contributed paper session on “Quantitative Literacy in the K-16 Curriculum” and presented “Connecting quantitative literacy to financial literacy in the community” in the MAA session on Bringing the Community into the College Mathematics Classroom.

Dr. Maria Neophytou presented “Helping students see connections between mathematics and other disciplines through a fun teaching exchange project,” based on work she has done with several Belmont colleagues in multiple departments. New mathematics faculty member Dr. Brad Schleben co-organized a MAA Project NExT workshop on “Designing an original course.”

Drs. Mike (mathematics) and Robbie Pinter (English) gave a joint presentation on “Contemplative practices in mathematics: It’s not just a breathing exercise” in the MAA Session on Contemplative Pedagogy and Mathematics, Contributed Paper Session. Pinter also presented “Hats, hamming and hypercubes” in the MAA Session, Helping Students See Beyond Calculus.

Wells Receives Scholarship to Beijing Language and Culture University

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Belmont senior Jackson Wells, who has spent the last four summers performing in China while transitioning from student artist to rising star overseas, has received a scholarship to study at Beijing Language and Culture University (BLCU). BLCU is home to approximately 10,000 international students from different countries that come to join the 6,000 Chinese students on campus every year. Since its founding in 1962, the University has been an academic base for language and cultural research and the cradle for talent in China. University alumni include Kassem Tokayev, the current United Nations deputy secretary-general and director-general of the United Nations Office at Geneva; Mulatu Teshome Watto, Ethiopian President; Karim Massimov, prime minister of Kazakhstan; Igor, Russian deputy minister of foreign affairs; Kubin, German sinologist and Eric Cornell, American physicist and Nobel laureate.

Wells has gained popularity in China for his original compositions which he performs in both English and Chinese. He is committed to four festivals in China this spring, including the fourth annual Taihu Music Festival, featuring musicians from 30 countries with over 12,000 attendees per day. He will also be performing several sets for the fifth consecutive year at the four-day Chengdu International Music Festival.

Faculty Present at National Conference of the Asian Studies Development Program

Belmont was recently represented at the 25th anniversary meeting of the National Conference of the Asian Studies Development Program (ASDP) of the East-West Center in Washington, D.C.. The faculty directors from Belmont’s 2015 summer China Trip, which featured an embedded research team of undergraduate psychology students, made presentations of their own research in a panel entitled “Filiality, Social Dominance, and Gender.”

Dr. Qingjun Li, assistant professor of Asian studies and Chinese language, presented “Revival of Filial Piety in China’s Society and Mass Media.” Dr. Pete Giordano, professor of psychology, presented “Social Dominance and Traditional Gender Roles: Findings from China and the U.S.”  Dr. Ronnie Littlejohn, professor of philosophy and director of Asian studies, presented “Transmission of Teachings on Exemplary Filiality in Chinese Popular Culture.”

The Asian Studies Development Program works with faculty from over 600 colleges and universities in the U.S. and over 60 universities in Asia, Europe and Latin America. Belmont is one of 17 universities designated as an ASDP Regional Center in the U.S.

Beasley Blogs for HuffPost

Alex Beasley HuffPostSenior music business major Alex Beasley is a business student turned health and fitness professional who has recently blogged about her expertise on sleep for Huffington Post’s blog, HuffPost. Her two articles thus far are “How to Sleep Like a Caveman” and “You are What You Sleep.”

On April 22, Belmont will host a stop of Arianna Huffington’s “Sleep Revolution” college book tour. The book is about the dangers of sleep deprivation and strategies to counter them. Huffington knows how widespread sleep deprivation is on college campuses, and she wanted to hear from a student on every campus she was visiting about their experiences and what they observe about sleep among students. As Belmont’s Fitness & Recreation Department has worked closely with this event, Director Jaime Zeller asked students to write for HuffPost and Beasley responded. The organization’s director of college outreach felt Beasley was a good match for the content and style of the blog, and her profile was set up and published three days later.

Beasley also runs her own blog, “For the Love of Strength,” providing accessible fitness, lifestyle and nutrition ideas for readers. Beasley explained she began the blog as she realized her lack of a creative outlet for her love of writing and after she noticed the trend in the fitness industry influencing women to realize their capabilities and strength.

“That’s where my blog title comes from. I want to help women love their bodies because they love how strong they are, both physically and mentally – not because they are having to compare themselves to arbitrary societal standards,” she said. “Writing for my blog has not only awakened a creative spirit that I had turned away from, but it has highlighted the importance of human connection and understanding.”

Beasley is a nationally certified personal trainer and is currently continuing her education at level one of NASM Women’s Fitness Specialist and Precision Nutrition. “For the articles on HuffPost, I start with personal experience and then research other people or organizations who are living out those practices as well to cite and give just a little more validity to what I’m putting out there,” she said. “When I began working in the health & fitness field, I made it a point to ‘walk the talk.’ I never tell someone to do something that I hadn’t or wouldn’t if the situation were reversed. Of course there are some exceptions to that rule, but if I put it out there as advice to others, I’m most likely walking the talk.”