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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National Register of Copyright Speaks at Ocean Way

National Register of Copyright Maria Pallante spoke to an audience of students, professors and industry professionals at Belmont’s Ocean Way Recording studio on Wednesday.

Pallante spoke about the unique blend of business, music and legal resources in the city that allow Nashvillians to contribute in a powerful way to ongoing copyright efforts. She acknowledged that the current tools provided to help combat copyright infringement are insufficient.

“We need a 21st century solution to a 21st century problem,” she said about issue of rampant online piracy. The laws and technology used to combat copyright infringement have not been significantly updated for decades, nor have the punishments. However, copyright infringement has been evolving.

“Years ago, there wasn’t a need to heavily penalize streaming, because it wasn’t a threat. Who was going to watch the game or a movie online, over a slow connection?” she said. “Now, that’s a viable option, and we need to find a way to combat that.”

Alumna Selected to Serve as ‘AmbassadOREO’

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Belmont alumna Michele Keil has been selected as an AmbassadOREO winner. In celebration of Oreo’s 100th anniversary, the AmbassadOREO campaign asked Oreo-eaters to submit videos that showcased their love for the sandwich cookie and selected munchers who “[did] the best at celebrating the kid inside” as the winners.

It was not until the night before the submission deadline that Keil said she decided to enter because of her brother’s insistence. After a brainstorming with her brother, his wife and his wife’s sister, Keil ultimately came up with an idea.

“Being a Nashville resident and Belmont alum have always loved music and writing songs so I thought I’d do a bit of a spin off Taylor Swift’s song “Love Story” and just wrote my own Oreo version,” she said. She admitted that she was surprised that she won, and is still “a little shocked.”

AmbassadOREOs from all over the world will be flown to New York City for the  100th anniversary celebration.

For more information on the AmbassadOREO campaign and to see Michele’s video, click here.

Kaita: Scientists Also of Faith

Faith and religion can be believed in tandem, according to Robert Kaita, the principal research physicist for the Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory. Kaita spoke on this “One Truth” during Wednesday chapel in the Neely Dining Hall.

“My parents taught me about the world around us and the Bible in the same way,” said the Princeton University professor. “God wrote the book of nature when he created the world and he created the book of the Bible when he gave people his Word.”

During his lecture, Kaita outlined several early scientists that believed in God. Among them was Johannes Kepler, who authored the three Laws of Planetary Motion.

“When he has returned from church and entered on the study of astronomy, may he praise and glorify the wisdom and greatness of the creator. Let him not only extol the bounty of God in the preservation of living creatures of all kinds by the strength and stability of the earth, but also let him acknowledge the wisdom of the Creator in its motion, so abstruse, so admirable,” Kepler wrote in Astronomia Nova.

Student to Open for Singer Brantley Gilbert

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Belmont junior Ben Gallaher has won Snabajob’s Hourly Gig Contest and will open for country-rock star Brantley Gilbert on Sept. 19 at the Innsbrook After Hours Concert in Richmond, Va.

The contest invited hourly employees and job seekers to submit videos of their original songs. Out of over 600 total submissions, five finalists were selected. The final winner was chosen through a public voting process. Gallaher won the contest with a video of him performing his original song “Hold onto Me” live.

Click here to read more about Gallaher and The Hourly Gig.

College of Pharmacy Celebrates the Addition of a SNPhA Chapter

The College of Pharmacy celebrated the establishment of the Student National Pharmaceutical Organization (SNPhA) on Belmont’s campus on Sept. 14.  Student organization advisers Edgar Diaz-Cruz and Angela Hagan presented each officer with a pin recognizing his or her service in the establishment of this organization on Belmont’s campus.

Officers within SNPhA are Tiffany Lin (president), Saransh Midha (vice president), John Shenoda (treasurer), Lauretta Onuoha (secretary), Shaikat Banerjee (service chairman) and Tracy Okoli (historian).

The mission of SNPhA is to increase the number of minorities or underrepresented students in the pharmacy profession and to increase awareness of underrepresented populations in health care.  This semester SNPhA will focus on a HIV/AIDS national initiative in conjunction with Nashville CARES.  As part of this initiative, SNPhA will host speakers and participating in the Nashville AIDS Walk on Oct. 6.  The SNPhA organization is open to not only pharmacy students but also pre-pharmacy students as well.

For more information about upcoming events or membership contact Edgar Diaz-Cruz at edgar.diaz-cruz@belmont.edu.

Puffenberger Appointed to County Foster Care Review Board

Senior Director of Auxiliary Enterprises Fred Puffenberger was appointed to a two-year term as a Davidson County Foster Care Review Board member.

The Davidson County Foster Care Review Board Program is a cooperative effort between the Juvenile Court, state agencies who hold custodial rights of dependent children and the Nashville community. Board members review cases of children in out of home placements and make recommendations to the court and to custodial agencies to facilitate permanent homes for the children.

Puffenberger previously served on the Foster Care Review Board in Michigan for eight years.

Small Invited to Serve as Guest at String Teachers’ Conference, Clinic

Assistant Professor of Music and Coordinator of Strings Elisabeth Small has been invited to be a panelist for two sessions at the National American String Teachers Association Conference. The two sessions in which she will participate are:

  • Kreutzer Cubed:  A Trio of Pedagogues Share and Compare Teaching Strategies with fellow panelists Brenda Brenner from Indiana University School of Music and James Lyon from Penn State University
  • Strings Performance at the Heart of the University with Fellow Panelists Mark Rudoff from Ohio State and Michael Heal

Small has also been invited to serve as “special guest” to do clinics, master classes and perform for the South Carolina ASTA State Conference, as well as work with the South Carolina Governor’s School for the Arts string program.

 

 

 

Belmont Receives Nomination for Healthcare Workforce Development Award

Belmont University has been nominated for the Healthcare Workforce Development award, to be presented by the Tennessee HIMSS (Healthcare Information and Management Systems Society) at the 2012 Summit of the Southeast being held on Oct. 16 and 17 at the Nashville Convention Center. The 2012 HIMSS Summit of the Southeast is a two-day conference joining together the Arkansas, Alabama, Kentucky, Mississippi, South Carolina and Tennessee chapters of HIMSS, which allows healthcare IT professionals to discuss the state of the industry, as well as share thoughts and ideas on future technologies and endeavors.  Speakers include prominent healthcare IT and medical professionals, and the event will also feature technology forums displaying leading-edge products from vendors.

The Healthcare Workforce Development award recognizes an outstanding company or organization with an organized program to foster and develop new healthcare IT professionals. Glenn Acree, director of Pathways to Science, Technology and Mathematics at Belmont University, has served for the last year on the TNHIMSS Workforce Development Committee, providing a voice for academics, encouraging internship development and recognition of the role of higher education in the development of the healthcare technology workforce pipeline.

Murphree Leads Workshop at Owl’s Hill Nature Sanctuary

Biology professor Steve Murphree led a workshop on Sept. 15 at the Owl’s Hill Nature Sanctuary.  The workshop was titled The World of Invertebrates:  Pollinators, Predators, Pests and Parasitoids and had 25 adult student participants. The students learned about the characteristics and life cycles of insects, how to identify insects using keys, had an overview of other arthropods (spiders, isopods, mites, etc.), discovered methods of collecting and observing insects and other arthropods and learned about the ecological roles of arthropods. The workshop was part of the  2012-13 Tennessee Naturalist program at Owl’s Hill Nature Sanctuary. This is the third year Murphree has been an instructor in this program.

Parry Has Book Review Published

Pam Parry, chair man of the Communication Studies Department, had a book review published in The South Carolina Historical Magazine in January 2012. She reviewed Robert B. Cuthbert’s and Stephen G. Hoffius’ Northern Money, Southern Land: The Lowcountry Plantation Sketches of Chlotilde R. Martin. This magazine is published by the South Carolina Historical Society and the College of Charleston.

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