4/3/2008 - Belmont Vision
Transcription
4/3/2008 - Belmont Vision
www.belmontvision.com Eric Volz challenges news media to be fair, ethical The student newspaper of Belmont University Vol. 57, No. 10 April 3, 2008 So close, so very, very close By Courtney Drake EDITOR Nashvillian Eric Volz, freed by a Nicaraguan appellate court a year after he was convicted for the murder of his former girlfriend, now reflects on the media coverage of his case. “I had no idea how far they would be willing to go,” Volz said in an interview with Vision staffers after he spoke to a Belmont media ethics class. The Nicaraguan media, he said, launched a campaign against him, calling him a “gringo murderer” even after the court overturned his 30-year sentence. According to a video on his MySpace page, www.myspace.com/freeericvolz, Nicaraguan media reported with a “fierce anti-American sentiment,” using headlines such as “North American detained for horrendous murder” and “What crown does Volz have?” to rally support against him. He even noticed a problem with the American media, saying they wanted to get the story quickly and easily, which ended in a “shallow” report. “We don’t get objective and fair information as a result,” he said. Volz went on to explain how his experience with media has made him wary of what he sees now. “When I see stories, it’s a Volz lot harder for me to trust what I see,” he said, coomenting that he couldn’t believe the Additional recent story regarding New stories, York’s former governor, Eliot page 4 Spitzer and the prostitution scandal that forced him to resign. “I think that media is run by corporate interest,” Volz said, which makes coverage too controlled and even biased. And, he believes, it’s up to the individual journalist to stop it. “Media leaders need to be ethically motivated … it’s a matter of the heart,” he concluded. But media consumers can help combat this corruption of media, too. Volz advised the audience to establish a trusted news source, check facts, cross-reference and write letters to editors. “People listen to that, editors listen to that, because you’re their public,” he said. PHOTO BY CHRIS SPEED The Belmont Bruins played hard in their third visit to the “Big Dance,” leaving them one point away from pulling off the upset against Duke University. ADDITIONAL PHOTOS AND STORY, PAGES 10-11. Klay Kelley next SGA president By Adaeze Elechi MANAGING EDITOR/FEATURES After days of campaigning, junior Klay Kelley emerged as Belmont University’s 2008-2009 student body president. "I appreciate the support of the student body during this year's election,” Kelley said. “I am excited about the opportunities that lie ahead, and I am committed to bettering this community to the best of my abilities.” Kelley, who has been in the Student Government Association since his freshman year, has already laid out plans for the coming academic year, intending to keep the students’ best interest in the forefront. “As president, I intend to increase communication between university leadership and the student body. It is my goal to make sure that the students' voices are heard and their concerns are addressed.” Rising junior Wesley Rainer will be SGA’s vice-president. This year’s election was the first in which presidential and vice-presidential candidates ran together on one ticket. SGA Congress elections also took place. The following students were elected to serve next year: Megan Adams, Brittany Bartley, Kara Bellenfant, Catherine Canlas, Spencer Carter, John-Michael Criswell, Eric S. Deems, Tracy Goldenberg, David Grizzell, Ameshia Cross, Travis Harvey, Christina Inman, Amy Kadish, Daniel R. King Jr., Sarah Mitchell, Zachary Moore, Annie Musacchio, Allison Pellicciotti, James Ridley, Katherine Rote, Hayley Rose, Tyler Schlandt, George Scoville, Margaret Shehan, George Shifflett, Spence Tomlinson, January Utermahlen, Melissa Wheatley, Allie White, Robert Woolsey and Adam Zinke. Page 2 The Belmont Vision, April 3, 2008 Feelings mixed on CMT awards By Jennifer Bauder STAFF WRITER Once again, the CMT Awards are being held at Belmont University’s Curb Event Center. While the event brings yearly concerns about parking and building access for students, it also brings opportunities for student participation. Students who experienced the changes on campus during the awards in previous years felt the impact of areas restricted for event use; Grace Wilson, a 20-year-old junior, recalled that the “parking is insane,” and Ashley Weyhmeyer, a 22year-old senior, remembered that “for those students not involved, it was a little intrusive, and I kind of felt like I was being a nuisance in my own territory.” Weyhmeyer also added that “it was a little annoying that throughout the day students were not allowed in certain areas of our own campus (which we kind of pay a lot for).” However, despite the inconvenience that the awards show inevitably seems to bring, both students were quick to point out that they realized the show brought opportunities to Belmont students. Wilson took advantage of the free wristband passes to attend the show in 2006 and enjoys Belmont hosting the awards. Her experience was a good one. “Being in that environment is exciting. There is so much effort that goes into a four-hour show; it amazes me, the technology. I would do it all again,” Wilson said. Even Weyhmeyer saw pluses in hosting the awards. “It probably looks good for connections in the music industry if we hold big events. It also gives us opportunities to be involved in the entertainment industry,” she said. Ron Jackson, general manager of the Curb Event Center, is aware of the concerns about parking and building restrictions. “We are accommodating as much as we can be. There is really only one day students are affected. Unfortunately, it’s the cost of doing business,“ Jackson said. He pointed out what he considers to be “intangible” benefits of having events like this and others that draw national attention: -Students work on the show. -Rental revenue from CMT that goes back to the general fund of the college. -National exposure creates relationships in the city and the United States as the NCAA Tournament has and the 2008 presidential debate will. Finally, Jackson had this to say: “We don’t exist in a vacuum. It’s important for us in the city to have relationships in the city with corporations like CMT or Healthways.” Check BIC for updates on building and road closures. Neighbors still oppose Rose Park complex By Liz Hunton SENIOR WRITER The Organized Neighbors of Edgehill are challenging the Nashville Metro Council’s decision to allow Belmont to renovate Rose Park. A hearing on March 28 aimed to dismiss ONE’s attempt to appeal the Metro Council’s decision to approve the lease between Belmont and the Metro Board of Parks and Recreation before it goes to trial, said Jason Rogers, vice president for administration and university counsel. Although Rogers doesn’t know when he will know the results of the hearing, he thinks it went well. “We are expecting a favorable ruling.” “We have joined in supporting Metro,” Rogers said. Belmont was present at the hearing to support Metro’s decision. Edgehill, a neighborhood that has faced all sorts of outside development, has been fighting against expansion of areas like Music Row and the Gulch and institutions including Vanderbilt University and now Belmont since the 1960s. The problems with ONE began when Belmont proposed to renovate Rose Park, which is wedged between Carter Lawrence Elementary School and Rose Park Middle School, in January of 2006. Many residents feared that Belmont would take over the park. Members of ONE voiced concerns throughout the following year concerning student safety and neighborhood use of the park, but the Metro Board of Parks approved Belmont’s plan to upgrade the park and use it jointly with the neighborhood. Belmont’s proposed renovations include baseball, softball, soccer and track fields (which meet NCAA Division I standards), additional parking, locker rooms, rest rooms and concessions, all of which will cost about $7 million. Metro approved Belmont’s plans in August of 2007. While Belmont’s proposed development is said to be just as much for the neighborhood as it is the university, many neighbors are doubtful and are trying to overturn Metro Council’s decision to approve Belmont’s lease. Construction is set to begin this summer. “The timing of the ruling and whether there is an appeal will affect the decision about when construction starts,” Rogers said. But Rogers is confident the case will be dismissed. “The legal standard for overturning a decision is very difficult,” he said, “For that reason we are very confident that the decision will be upheld by the court.” practice safe storage use bubble wrap APRIL 18–19 • ALUMNI LAWN B_b@edIfeed close to campus cool modern <[_ij9ebX_[9W_bbWj :@AeebEbZ9hemC[Z_Y_d[I^em =hWY[Fejj[hWdZj^[DeYjkhdWbi BWZo7dj[X[bbkcJ^[7l[jj8hej^[hi HWdZoHe][hi8WdZ >_bb9ekdjhoH[lk[F DEHJ>C?II?II?FF?7BBIJ7HI EATURING MEMBERS OF @[h[coB_ij[hBehZJWdZ;be_i[ M_bZIm[[jEhWd][7bWdW=hWY[>#8[Wc LE ON SA T IC K E T S NOW OPEN TO GENERAL PUBLIC ADVANCE: $45 WEEKEND PASS DAY of SHOW: $55 WEEKEND PASS Children under 10 admitted FREE Tickets on sale at all Ticketmaster locations, 615.255.9600, www.ticketmaster.com; or tickets can also be purchased with cash or check, with no service fees included, only at Sarratt Box Office on Vanderbilt campus. Tickets can also be purchased at the Ticketmaster location inside F.Y.E. on West End Avenue. For more information call 615-343-3361 or visit w w w. r i t e s o f s p r i n g . c o m 516 SIXTH AVE SOUTH NASHVILLE, TN 37203 615.780.2000 CONVENIENT • Auto Debit Available • Boxes and Packing Supplies • Monthly Leases • No Administration Fees • Open 7 Days a Week SECURE • 100% Heated & Air Conditioned • 24/7 Video Surveillance • Electronic Keypad Access • Pick Resistant Locks • Super Clean & Well Lit Convenient to Belmont-Hillsboro Areas and Vanderbilt-West End www.amerisitestorage.com The Belmont Vision, April 3, 2008 Page 3 Page 4 The Belmont Vision, April 3, 2008 A life-changing experience Eric Volz embraces freedom after harrowing imprisonment By Melanie Bengtson MANAGING EDITOR/NEWS The relationship between the United States and Nicaragua has been tumultuous, often more strained than strong. Anti-American sentiment is prominent on the streets of Nicaragua, a country in Latin America with a landmass slightly smaller than New York state. When Eric Volz found himself locked in a Nicaraguan prison and accused of murdering his ex-girlfriend, being an American added challenges to his trial. The Nicaraguan press played upon the anti-American feelings of the public, and they responded with riots and death threats, among other “I was set up...it things. was an effort to Volz doubts that his initial conviction was based on his nationality. protect the iden“I was set up,” he said. “It didn’t have anything to do with tity of the main the fact that I was an American citizen as much as it was an effort to protect the identity of the main perpetrator of Doris’ perpetrator of murder.” Still, American officials in Nicaragua had to balance help- Doris’ murder.” ing Volz with the difficult relationship the U.S. already has Eric Volz with the country. Officials at the embassy “had to be very careful,” Volz said. The United States has a long history of intervention in Nicaragua. In 1856 an American named William Walker took over Nicaragua. Though his presidency did not last long, American forces returned to Nicaragua in 1909 to support a resistance movement against the current president. American troops stayed in Nicaragua until 1933 (with a brief exodus for a few months in 1925). The Sandinista National Liberation Front took control of the country at that point, causing a break in all relations with the US. Relations remained mildly strained until the Reagan administration, when Reagan cut off aid to Nicaragua and imposed a trade embargo. In 1990, Nicaraguans elected a nonSandinista president. The U.S. and Nicaragua began a new era of stronger cooperation, until 2006, when a Sandinista candidate, Daniel Ortega, was elected as president. Ortega has pursued an anti-U.S. agenda and has allied himself with Chavez of Venezuela, creating tension with the United States. PHOTO BY LANCE CONZETT Nashvillian Eric Volz visited a media ethics class at Belmont to discuss the lack of ethics that surrounded coverage of his case and take questions from members of the class. Volz says he holds no resentment toward Nicaragua By Adaeze Elechi MANAGING EDITOR/FEATURES Some may expect a year in Tipitapa, the maximum security prison just outside Managua, Nicaragua, would turn a person sour. But for Eric Volz, the reverse is the case. “I don’t have any anger or resentment,” said Volz in an interview with the Belmont Vision. Even before the Nashville-native was convicted of a murder that evidence and alibis say he did not commit, the Nicaraguan media began labeling him a murderer. The country’s sensational media painted him as someone who was in Nicaragua, not to help make the country a better place, but to steal and strip their culture as they stereotyped “gringos” as doing. But the American media, which began reporting the story after he was convicted, didn’t do much better in the way of giving an honest portrayal of him and his situation. Volz said the American media painted him as the adven- turous surfer kid caught up in a romantic tragedy, which, according to him, was not accurate. Volz’s friends and family formed a support team that raised awareness about his situation, which, in turn got people taking action to raise money and even more awareness. People who normally wouldn’t be connected worked together for the success of his case. After more than a year’s worth of tangoing between Volz’s support team, the American media and the Nicaraguan Appellate Court, Volz was released from prison Dec. 21, 2007. He was then deported to the United States by the executive arm of the Nicaraguan government. Volz has been affected by his severance from the country in which he invested his passion and years of his life, both as an American adventurer who enjoyed the surf and scenery, as a successful real estate agent and as founder and publisher of a magazine that focused on the beauty of Nicaragua’s natural environment. “[Not currently being able to go back to Nicaragua] is strange,” said Volz. “I miss my friends.” While Volz is in the United States, his case is still being processed in Nicaragua. But he’s not just sitting around, waiting for the verdict. Volz is reworking the Web site that was originally created by his support team to inform people about his situation. The site, www.friendsofericvolz.com, now has a full and detailed description of his case, the procedures, the injustices, pictures and a blog where he will be able to share his perspectives and create a dialogue with the interested public about similar injustices around the world. He is also still pushing for justice for his murdered exgirlfriend, Doris Ivania Jiménez, who seems to have been forgotten in all the din. And after everything he has been through, Volz takes resilience into his life as a free man. “I don’t feel like [what happened] is unfair,” said Volz. “There is a lot of beauty that has come from it.” 1900 Belmont Blvd., Nashville TN, 37212 Phone: (615) 460-6433 E-mail: vision@mail.belmont.edu Editor: Managing Editor: News Editor: Online Editor: A&E Editor: Photo/Graphics Editor: Advertising: Faculty Adviser: Online/Graphics Adviser: Courtney Drake Adaeze Elechi Melanie Bengtson Lance Conzett Andrew Cole Sarah Mitchell Karen Bennett Linda Quigley Angela Smith Senior Staff: Chansin Bird, Ameshia Cross, Liz Hunton Contributors: Jennifer Bauder, Erin Carson, Jason Hardy, Will Hoekenga, Abby Hollingworth, Alana Kreegel, Tabitha Metcalf, Abby Selden, Joseph Shelby The Belmont Vision, April 3, 2008 Page 5 ‘Belmont is opening to change’ University chooses first black Homecoming queen in ‘08 By Adaeze Elechi MANAGING EDITOR/FEATURES Brittney Mitchell’s hair is short and natural with tight, unrelenting curls. But just a year ago, this is not what one would have found when he saw her. The senior from Memphis, Tenn., had chemically straightened (or relaxed) shoulder-length, silky smooth hair before she decided to cut it all off and start afresh. It was after this image-altering decision that she made history at Belmont University as its first black Homecoming Queen in all its 57 years. “I felt honored, happy to represent and a little undeserving,” Mitchell said of her Homecoming Queen nomination from the Black Student Association. After the nomination, she was among the Student Government Association’s selected nominees to appear on the Homecoming court during a basketball game on Feb. 9. But even then, it wasn’t until people started coming up to her, excited about her nomination that she began to “think that this might actually happen.” And when it did, it got her thinking about what this might mean on a grander scale. “It opened my eyes to see how much Belmont has grown and the way we think about society,” Mitchell said. “When there is a prominent race, they tend to draw to their own race, but the majority chose a black queen.” According to CollegeforTN.org, a college-search engine, Belmont is about 90 percent white, with approximately 7.5 percent shared by blacks, Asians (or Pacific Islander), Hispanics, Native Americans and Alaska Natives. The other 2.5 percent represents unreported races. This racial imbalance has come to Belmont’s attention. The school’s students and administration have been making some effort to remedy the situation. Over the past year, Phi Beta Sigma (a black fraternity) and Delta Theta Sigma Sorority, Inc. (a black sorority) have come onto campus and have recruited black as well as white members into their brother and sisterhoods. And other students are noticing. “I think Belmont is opening [itself] to change,” said senior Jocelyn Werst. “Belmont is trying to become a more diverse campus. I’ve enjoyed seeing the changes that have taken place, and I think, in the future, Belmont will continue to embrace more diversity. I look forward to seeing this take place.” Mitchell has noticed the growth in the black community as well and is grateful for it, but there are things attached to her race and her identity that she has to work out. “I went through this phase where I tried to find out who I am as a black person on a predominantly white campus,” Mitchell said. “So I made some changes: changes with my hair, changes with speaking openly. My parents made me feel appreciated and comfortable in my black skin… [but] there are complexes and so much stuff fed to you through the media.” Werst also sees that while some individuals and institutions may be making an effort to embrace diversity, society as a whole needs to catch up. “Our society is not as far as it should be. Unfortunately, we are not comfortable with race in our country,” said Werst. “We like to pretend that we are secure in the different races, but when we’re challenged, society proves that we’re not comfortable.” Mitchell wrestled with stereotypes surrounding black people and education. She has struggled to be the “perfect student,” overcompensating for the stereotyped below-standard students, wanting to be able to think critically and “challenged like my white peers were being challenged.” But that’s not all: she wanted to really see herself. In her quest for self-discovery, she hacked off her relaxed hair. “It was an unveiling of my natural self, seeing what was beneath my permed hair,” Mitchell said. “I had never seen it, never seen my true self.” Mitchell says that Belmont has given her the space to express herself freely. :H1HHG+HDOWK\9ROXQWHHUV 7KH9DQGHUELOW+,99DFFLQH3URJUDPQHHGVKHDOWK\XQLQIHFWHGDGXOWYROXQWHHUV IURPDOOEDFNJURXQGVWRSDUWLFLSDWHLQDUHVHDUFKVWXG\WRKHOSÀQGDYDFFLQH WRSUHYHQW+,9LQIHFWLRQ7KHUHLVQRULVNRI+,9LQIHFWLRQIURPWKHYDFFLQHV 9ROXQWHHUVPXVWEHDYDLODEOHORFDOO\IRUPRQWKVDQGZLOOEHFRPSHQVDWHG IRUWKHLUWLPH)LQGLQJDSUHYHQWDWLYH+,9YDFFLQHLVDQLPSRUWDQWSDUWRIWKH HIIRUWVWRFRQWURO$,'6,QRUGHUWRGHYHORSDYDFFLQHZHQHHG\RXUKHOS 7RJHWKHUZHFDQÀJKW+,9$,'67ROHDUQPRUHDERXW+,9YDFFLQHUHVHDUFK Brittney Mitchell “I’m not the Homecoming queen type at all,” Mitchell said. “That’s what I love about Belmont: they look at the person. They still chose me, flaws and all. It’s refreshing.” Mitchell sids her journey to understand who she is beneath the layers is far from over and is glad to help who she can on her way. “I’m not Miss America, but, in some way, I’m changing Belmont. I hope being in this position helps open the eyes of other minorities who didn’t think they had a chance,” Mitchell said. “I’m trying to pave my own path regardless of history and structures.” LOOKING FOR A PLACE TO WORSHIP CLOSE TO SCHOOL? PLEASE JOIN US AND COME LIVE LIFE AT FIRST EVANGELICAL LUTHERAN CHURCH. WE’LL EVEN PICK YOU UP! Location: 113 8th Avenue South, Downtown Nashville, half block south of Broadway on 8th Avenue South. &DOO+23(RUYLVLWZZZKLYYDFFLQHUHVHDUFKFRP Worship Times: 8:15 and 10:30 a.m. Shuttle Schedule for Sunday Mornings For those attending Education Hour 9:00A Leave the Aviary 9:05A Leave Hail Hall For those coming for Worship 10:00A Leave Aviary 10:05A Leave Hail Hall There will be time for Christian Fellowship and Refreshments Following Worship Return Schedule; Approximately: 12:15P Arrive at Aviary 12:20P Arrive at Hail Hall Join us this Sunday! Bring a Friend! 9DQGHUELOW+,99DFFLQH3URJUDP FREE parking in the lot across McGavock St. Please call 256-7580 for more information, or visit www.first-lutheran-nashville.org Come Live Life! Page 6 The Belmont Vision, April 3, 2008 Running: a beginner’s thoughts Ten months, three days and four hours* ago, at the completion of a dear friend’s first marathon experience (and I quote): “I will never have it in me to run like that.” Four weeks, one day, and 13 hours* ago, far earlier than I should have been awake (to myself): “Today you begin training for (dun dun dun) the half-marathon.” What, you may ask, inspired such a drastic change in my mindset on the subject? How, I ask myself often, did I manage to trade in a cavalier “marathons-are-for-maniacs” attitude for an optimistic “I think I can; I think I can” outlook? The answer is three-fold: I found out the company I intern with “strongly encourages” its employees to participate in the Country Music Half Marathon. Translation: they would like me more if I did it. On top of liking me more, they said they would pay my entry fee and there would be “additional incentives.” Translation: this would be the only time in my life that anyone will pay me to run. I suddenly found myself in dire need of a catalyst for exercise. Translation: I want to be in the best shape possible for a certain wedding in August. So, I did it. I signed up for the race. I even weaseled two roommates into joining me in my quest to the finish line. We taped a “training schedule” to the wall by the door, to simultaneously encourage us with how far we’ve come and make us feel terribly guilty if we skipped out on a scheduled run. Since our inaugural scoot down Belmont Boulevard, I must say we’ve come a long way. We can run longer and harder with fewer breaks and far less cursing under what little breath we have. I’ve gone from an ex-high school athlete who vaguely remembers running after a soccer ball for fun to one of those maniacs who runs, well, just for the heck of it. Along the way, my running amigas and I have picked up a few handy lessons off the well-pounded pavement of Nashville. Share them? Well, okay. If you insist. Anyone can run. Really it’s true. I didn’t believe it either until I witnessed it firsthand. It’s not only the super fit, ironabs out there that take to the streets. One older man on West End does a very entertaining combination run/dance. Moms run, dragging babies along in super aerodynamic strollers. Mullets run or rather bounce as the body they are unfortunately attached to runs beneath them. Instead of having to fight our way into an exclusive running club, my roomies and I discovered that the running community welcomes any and all types. Bienvenidos! Wardrobe choices are endless and inspiring. At first I was a bit intimidated by the amount of super expensive, high-end running gear I saw on the streets. It’s true, there are runners out there in full body spandex suits and belts with endless running supplies, but I quickly became more interested in alternative wardrobe choices. ABBY HOLLINGSWORTH Sweatbands, it seems, can be used for actual sweat and not just as an Indie accessory. Middleaged men wear tights, and that’s okay. Although jean shorts don’t strike my fancy as the most comfortable choice, they apparently are a favorite of one avid runner. Cold mornings inspire a personal preference for layers that unfortunately must end up tied around my waist in true 90s middle-school fashion. All in all, the message here is the same. Wear what you want. Be who you want. When you run, you earn the respect to be yourself wardrobe-wise; maybe that camo tank top is what gets you over the 5-mile bump. Big hills, big aches, big smiles, big muscles. As painful as it is to remember, we’ve tackled a few monstrous hills. I wish there were words to adequately describe the feeling in my calves half way up the biggest hill I’ve ever seen. The only words I can think of are either too vivid or too graphic to share here, so let’s just say it burns! Interestingly enough, the few big hill runs have been my favorite looking back. The Belmont Student Government Association wants to amend its constitution by adding a Campus Events Coordinator to Executive Cabinet and by making the Chaplain an appointed Congress member. There will be a campuswide vote on this issue on Blackboard April 7th and 8th. Check out the full text of the amendment on our website: campus.belmont.edu/sga Accomplishment seeps from every pore as you realize- “I really did that.” Maybe we can stretch this metaphor to apply to other times equally strenuous physically, emotionally, mentally or spiritually. Building muscles in all these areas is hard work, but big hills make for biggie-sized feelings of accomplishment in the end that are – dare I say – worth it. Three really is company. There is something to this, something bigger than Suzanne Somers and John Ritter could have imagined. While running solo has its advantages – peace and quiet, time alone, etc – it also carries with it the intense temptation to stop whenever you feel like it, often far short of your decided goal. Running in pairs is nice, I’m sure. But I can’t help but feel forced into coupledom by the sideby-side situation. There is also an awkward bumping routine that happens a lot with two people as they squeeze on a sidewalk, as if two bodies cannot propel themselves forward without also being drawn magnetically to each other in an attempt to throw off any rhythm each body has managed to get into. No, two won’t do. Three, it seems, is the perfect number of running buddies. A trio can take turns leading, make cool shapes like triangles and other three-sided shapes, and chances are someone always has enough energy to huff out a word of encouragement. A group of three runners also makes you look more official. Like you are the beginnings of a team – people know not to mess with a trio. You don’t have to jog in place at stoplights unless you enjoy looking silly. This one is simple. It’s not required. You may even dance at stoplights instead. I recommend it. Drivers need entertainment in traffic. Needless to say, I’m learning a lot. About running, about dedication, about my roommates, about Nashville. I only hope I can keep up the momentum as we sprint towards race day: Five weeks, two days, and six hours from now*, with muscles aching I am not now aware exist, perhaps in words unintelligible to those around me: “I did it! Never again!” *all times estimates, based in a round-about way on the time you may be reading this, approximately Abby Hollingsworth is a junior English writing major. E-mail: abby.hollingsworth@gmail.com. THE STRENGTH TO HEAL and learn lessons in courage. The pride you’ll feel in being a doctor increases dramatically when you care for our Soldiers and their Families. Courage is contagious. Our Health Professions Scholarship Program (HPSP) helps you reach your goal by providing full tuition, money towards books and lab fees, a $20,000 sign-on bonus, plus a monthly stipend of more than $1,600 (more than $1,900 as of July 2008). To learn more about the U.S. Army Health Care Team, call 888-568-9828, or visit healthcare.goarmy.com/info/mchpsp1. ©2007. Paid for by the United States Army. All rights reserved. The Belmont Vision, April 3, 2008 ideas Page 7 Let us know what you think. Send a signed letter, 400 words maximum, with your local telephone number, to The Editor, Belmont Vision, 1900 Belmont Blvd., Nashville, TN 37212. E-mail submissions are also accepted; send them to vision@mail.belmont.edu. This issues’s letters are on page 8. E Latest homecoming queen Foundation for journalism inspires racial healing must be ethics When Eric Volz walked into the media ethics classroom, he seemed like any other guy. Jeans, a long-sleeved sage shirt and gold chain around his neck. Okay, maybe there were more people fussing over him than your average person, but on the outside he looked like your regular Joe. But Volz has had more than his fair share of media coverage in the past year and a half, especially that of one-sided, biased reporting. He was arrested in Nicaragua for the murder of ex-girlfriend Doris Jimenez and sentenced to 30 years in jail in 2007, despite 10 witnesses that placed him more than two hours from the crime. Since then, a Nicaraguan appeals court overturned the decision and he was free to leave the prison where he’d spent more than a year, but not before most of the Nicaraguan media labeled him as the gringo murderer, refusing to show the possibility he could be innocent. In an interview with Vision staffers, Volz said, “I had no idea how far they’d be willing to go,” responding to what he believed to be unfair media coverage of his trial. COURTNEY DRAKE Sounds like he’s talking about tabloids and paparazzi, not professional media that’s supposed to be fair and unbiased, reporting only the facts and not the writers’ opinions. During the interview, I couldn’t stop thinking about how horrible it was that media would disregard ethics so they could make a story sound the way they wanted it to. And few media outlets, Nicaraguan or American, even interviewed his family to get the other side of the story. I’m not writing this to argue why Volz is or is not innocent; rather, I’m responding to the lack of media ethics that surrounded the case. There is no contract to sign when you become a journalist stating you agree to abide by the Society of Professional Journalists’ Code of Ethics, which state a journalist should seek the truth and report it, minimize harm (treat people with respect, in other words), act independently and be accountable. It’s on an individual basis to uphold those values, and for the most part, there are no consequences if you screw up (although the editor of Vanderbilt’s student newspaper, The Hustler, was recently fired for fabricating poll results). For the most part, the media that covered Volz’s case did not maintain these ideals. According to them, the truth was that Volz was the murderer; there were no ifs, ands or buts. But what about the other side of the story? Volz’s family, friends and coworkers who may have been able to shed light on Volz’s real personality? I guess reporters just didn’t feel like doing any more work. When media no longer care to tell a balanced story, when they’re too lazy to talk to people who have a different way of seeing a story, there’s something very wrong. Journalism is about presenting facts and letting people make up their own minds, not declaring which set of facts will present the truth. I’m worried about where the media is headed when it comes to ethics. It’s no wonder the majority of people don’t trust the media based on their recent actions in letting the standards of journalism slip. Overall, I think the values listed in the Code of Ethics are being put on hold while other principles, like profit, take the front seat, which is very disappointing to me. As Volz said, “It’s a matter of the heart” when it comes to being ethical in today’s society. I just hope there are more people out there who have the heart to make the right decisions and start getting journalism back on the right track. Courtney Drake is a junior journalism major. E-mail: drakec@pop.belmont.edu. I have a sickness that has festered and metastasized inside me ADAEZE since childhood. I picked it up from living in society and no matter how much I try, I can’t seem to cure myself of it. I like to call it the “Black Woman Complex” (or BWC for short). It is the societal cancer that makes me self-conscious when I walk into a room full of white people (which is every day, several times a day). It is the disease that makes me first question race in everything. It is the monster that has made me believe that mine is a cursed race as far back as I can remember. It began when I was a child growing up in Holland, when I realized that the blond-haired and blue-eyed girls were generally considered prettier than me no matter how straight Mama’s hot-comb made my hair. It began when I realized that I had the hardest time making friends on the playground, not necessarily because of anything I did, but because of something I had no control over. Then I began noticing it in the media. I saw it in movies, on TV, in magazines: the thin white woman with long flowing hair and azure eyes who was the epitome of everything beautiful. And those women who were not quite as white as they could be were airbrushed and done up so they would fit the mold. From then on I would look at myself in the mirror and it would hit me time and again that I would never be beautiful to the world. And so the epic battle with my image began and to this day, has not ended. I have fought with my hair: I have tried to love it in all its nappy glory, but even I have noticed that I get more compliments when it is straight and looks more Caucasian. I have struggled with my frame: I know in my heart of hearts that I will never be toothpick-thin: I will always have noticeable curves, but it doesn’t stop me from fantasizing about it, hoping that maybe one day, I could be thin enough to be magazine-beautiful. I have struggled with everything on my body, but the greatest struggle of all is with my skin. But I know I’m not the only one. In Nigeria many women are so deep in battle that they have taken to a strange habit: bleaching. It is the process of making oneself lighter in complexion by applying bleaching cream to the skin regularly. Bleaching creams contain acids that gradually burn off the dark upper layer of the skin, exposing a lighter layer underneath. While they know that this makes them prone to skin cancer, orange-looking skin after some time, and flesh so weak it will not hold stitches after surgery, the sacrifice to them is worth it. As bizarre as this sounds, I understand where they’re coming from. I would be a liar if I said I haven’t wanted at some point in my life to be white, or at least want to know what it felt like, just for a minute – the strange inherent power that comes with it, the security, the feeling of being part of the majority and not having to hide or tone down your race or ethnicity. I would have the absolute freedom to flaunt my identity without fear of being ostracized. Then along came Brittney Mitchell. Brittney is Belmont University’s first black homecoming queen. While this is an amazing fact in itself (she’s made history), this is not what struck me about her. It was the fact that Brittney stood in the Curb Event Center in front of a crowd of Belmont students (whose black population you could maybe count on two hands), baring her race on her sleeve, and people not only rooting for her, but loving her. When she won, it got me thinking: perhaps the age of white-equals-good, black-equals-bad is ending. If Brittney Mitchell, with her hair rich, black and natural and her skin dark and glowing, could stand proud and secure in front of Belmont with all her guards down, perhaps there is hope yet for women like me. Brittney does not hide that she has struggled with her image as a black woman (perhaps not exactly as I have struggled; every woman’s fight in life is different) and has had to make peace with herself. I know that because in today’s world, with the media constantly hammering concepts into our minds, this is easier said than done, but now, I am able to tell myself, “If Brittney Mitchell could do it, why should I continue to fight and damn myself for the way I was created?” Now is the time to make peace with our bodies, with our skin and with our self image. Now is the time to end the war. Adaeze Elechi is a junior journalism major. E-mail: adaezeelechi@yahoo.com. ELECHI What others are saying Here are topics other college newspaper columnists are dealing with, from political power to romantic films. “Political power is an aphrodisiac. It’s probably always been this way, from Cleopatra to Clinton. There’s a devastating problem that lies beneath the surface of promiscuous politicians, and it’s one we haven’t solved yet.” – The Tiger, Clemson University “In the rush to stamp out illegal immigration, we cannot lose sight of the common sense ideas and freedoms that make living in America so wonderful. Illegal immigration is a problem that must be dealt with, but it must be combated with a rational and reasoned response.” – The Crimson White, University of Alabama “Romantic films, one of the most durable of film genres, has evolved from its beginnings in the battle of the sexes to a noticeable penchant for sexual conquest. Apparently, as women’s liberation declares victory, films progress in the opposite direction.” – The Daily Reveille, Louisiana State University Page 8 The Belmont Vision, April 3, 2008 Letters to the Editor A note from an adjunct professor To the editor: As an adjunct faculty member who dearly loves teaching at Belmont, I am once again proud of our students. Bravo to the the Vision and to writer Liz Hunton for your article on the university’s use of adjunct faculty members. The mathematic calculation of the budgetary advantage we provide was a bold move. The dependence of American universities on hosts of part-time professors at a time of rising enrollment is a complex issue affected by various factors. Those factors include a fluctuating student demographic and the high cost of the excellent benefits already extended to full-time faculty and administration (medical, dental, retirement, college tuition credits for children). That said, I must add that the exploitation of teachers by a school has no good excuse. At least as qualified and experienced as their colleagues in the nearby halls, the adjunct faculty who teach many of the required BELL Core courses carry the business of the university on their backs. With no certainty of employment semester to semester, paltry pay and no benefits in sight, we are a quiet labor force of teachers who can be easily, quickly and cheaply replaced by other teachers needing work. As much as I would enjoy it, an uprising would do us little good. Let us consider academic dissent for a moment. In the sixteen years that I taught in Georgia, I saw from afar two professors take stands against injustices they saw at their universities. One is now running a pizza joint in South Carolina and the other is teaching at a secretarial school — hardly the dreams that got them through graduate school. I observed in these examples that while academics praise acts of civil disobedience, they often squash those who expose an ugly underside of the school biz. (Barista work at the coffee counter may be in my future.) Plugging inexpensive adjunct professors into multiple sections of required courses has become a national bad habit. Belmont is far from the worst offender. Occasionally, Belmont extends a full-time semester offer to members of the adjunct ranks, this member included. For these opportunities and for my colleagues who advocate for them, I am appreciative. May my words here not ring with ingratitude. Unfortunately, universities have no incentive to break the adjunct habit. Many capable, well-educated career teachers do not land in the few open tenured positions — and for myriad reasons. The teachers at the bottom of this caste system are swept into the bargain buy that is the adjunct pool; they are not lawyers, music producers or financiers in their “other lives.” Teachers are the ultimate “for the love of the game” players. That a university with its own lofty goals, values statement, a mission, even, cannot take steps toward equity in the teaching arena — the heart and soul of a school — stuns me. Ghandi once said that no great cause could survive without a journal, a paper; I know you all join him and me in our fervent belief in the power of the pen. Thank you again, Belmont Vision, for the public forum in which you raised an issue no one wants to own. Keep brandishing those pens. Wyeth O. Burgess adjunct faculty, department of English Proofreading questioned To the editor: For quite some time I have been disappointed in the lack of attention the Vision writers and editors have given to proofread- ing the paper. I am speaking specifically of the February 28, 2008 issue, sporting the conspicuous page 6 headline: “Ring show promise to remain chaste.” I do understand that a newspaper staff sometimes must be creative in choosing words to fit a particular space, but elementary subject-verb agreement should apply despite space constraints. In the same article, following a highlighted quote, Todd Lake’s title is missing not only its capitalization, but also the “d” in “development.” This lack of attention is lazy at best and demonstrates a fundamental disregard for both the conventions of the English language and the small details that really are important. In a publication produced by an educational institution, this is inexcusable, especially with all the spelling and grammar checks available in the 21st century. Pamela Howell call center director, Admissions Editor’s note: This is not to minimize the other errors that you called to our attention. Regarding the capitalization issue, however, our newspaper follows the Associated Press Stylebook, the standard for newspapers. For academic titles, the rule is to “capitalize formal titles such as chancellor, chairman, etc., when they precede a name. Lowercase elsewhere.” Graduate to a Mac Educational Discounts on Apple Computers for Students, Faculty and Staff Save $200 on MacBook Pros, $100 on MacBooks and up to $145 on iMacs (University ID Required) Ask us about • Trade-ins • Pre-Owned • iPod Repair • Warranty Service • Rentals • Software Titles & • Unadvertised Specials MacAuthority, Nashville 2018 Lindell Ave. (Off 65 & Wedgewood) MacAuthority, Franklin Cool Springs Galleria 615.383.1010 Monday-Friday 9AM-7PM Saturday 10AM - 6PM 615.435.3209 Monday-Saturday 10AM - 9PM Sunday 12 PM - 6PM REPAIR Note to Seniors: Educational discounts expire upon graduation. Apple Campus Reseller For inquires please contact: edu@macauthority.com The Vision is HIRING We don’t want to see your resume. We want to see your face! Come talk to us. Our office is on the second floor of Gabhart. You can also email us at vision@mail.belmont.edu. We are ready to hire: MENU OF SERVICES Starting At Haircut (includes shampoo and dry) ......$9 2710 Old Lebanon Road ~ Nashville, TN 37214 www. Ts p a Na s hv ille.c om NOW ENROLLING For May Classes $2,000 Scholarship Available for those who qualify ENROLL TODAY! 615-828-1866 Child’s Cut (Ages 12 and under) ........ $5 Special Occasion Style .... $19 Editors, Writers for: news, sports and features Color & Style ................ $19 Highlights .................... $29 Manicure .......................$9 Pedicure ...................... $19 All services performed by supervised students COSMETOLOGY ~ ESTHETICS~ NAILS Production/ Graphic Artists Web Assistants Photographers The Belmont Vision, April 3, 2008 Page 9 sports Athletes successful in classroom Belmont basketball senior Justin Hare was named Honorable Mention Mid-Major All-American by CollegeHoops.net. Hare will graduate in May as the most decorated student athlete in Belmont history and plans to attend medical school. Bruins, you made us proud By Shardé Burkhead STAFF WRITER This year Belmont student athletes have made history with one of their most successful semesters in the classroom. The department of athletics registered Belmont athletes as having a GPA of 3.254 last semester, the highest GPA in the department since Belmont moved to NCAA Division I in 1997. Not only is it the highest GPA in the department, but it is also one of the three highest GPAs since spring 2002. At the top of the list with GPA averages were women’s cross country with 3.619, women’s golf with 3.538 and men’s golf with 3.503. “It’s all about time management and staying focused in what you’re doing,” said Mollie Schlarman a junior member of the women’s cross country team. “I have to remember it’s not athlete-student, it’s studentathlete, so doing well in class is always my first priority.” Student athletes at times find it hard balancing sports and academics with games and being on the road. Athletes are forced to miss classes due to traveling. “Being an athlete you have to stay ahead in your classes because once you get far behind its too hard to catch up,” said Brooke Sunday, a senior on the women’s basketball team, whose GPA this semester was a 4.0. “Now that I am a senior, the advice I would give to other student-athletes is making sure to bring homework on all your road trips and always ask your teachers for the work you might miss.” As Belmont students continue their journey of success, the athletic department is in hopes of continuing what is now a new beginning of a higher standard for Belmont students and student athletes to follow. “To help keep our GPA high, requiring our athletes to attend study hall is very important,” said women’s cross country coach Seth Sheridan. “Keeping our athletes eligible is a must.” PHOTO BY CHRIS SPEED The men’s basketball came close to beating Duke University in their third consecutive appearance in the NCAA. However, in the last seconds of the game, Duke scored, leaving the Bruins trailing by one point, with a final score of 71-70. Brett Favre a hero on the field and off March 6, 2008 will live on in the memory of NFL fans everywhere as the day the league lost one of its most beloved players to retirement. Everyone had an inkling that Favre would retire at some point; we were all just hoping that that day would never arrive. As a Mississippian raised on country food, country music and football, I felt an innate heartache when Mississippi’s own Brett Favre called it quits. But instead of dwelling on that seemingly disastrous moment, I would like to remember the former Green Bay Packers quarterback for not only his football glory, but his humanitarian efforts as well. Looking at me, most people don’t see an avid NFL fan; but those who know me know that I live for the game. One of the main reasons I became attracted to the sport was my love for Brett Favre, who became a hero to me early on. Growing up in small-town Mississippi, kids seek heroes, and Favre was mine. He established the Brett Favre Forward Foundation in 1995. The foundation works to provide aid to disadvantaged and disabled children in Mississippi and Commentary Wisconsin. Growing up in a house with a disabled older brother, I felt a special connection with an organization that provided help for children like my brother. Brett Favre was the epitome of strength not only as an athlete, but as a man, a father and a husband. He became a dad while attending the University of Southern Mississippi and playing football for the Golden Eagles. It had to be difficult managing family life, school and playing hard as hell in order to make it to the NFL. But through hard work and perseverance, he did it all. Brett married his high school sweetheart, Deanna. But good times were often sporadic in Brett’s life. On July 14, 1990 he nearly died from a car accident. After the accident, many doctors told him he’d never play again, Favre refused to accept that prognosis. He became heavily dependent on pain killers and his addiction nearly cost him his life and his marriage, but Favre pulled himself together. Having lost a parent, I can understand the heartache Favre felt when his dad died. Irven Favre died December 21, 2003 in a car accident near the same place Brett had crashed years earlier. The event became one of Favre’s most defining moments. The very next day he played in a finals game against the Oakland Raiders. He was recorded as saying, “I knew that my dad would have wanted me to play. I love him so much, and I love this game. It’s meant a great deal to me, to my dad, to my family, and I didn’t expect this kind of performance. But I know he was watching tonight.” If that isn’t the mark of true character, I don’t know what is. Just ten months after the death of his father, Favre’s brother-in-law was killed in an ATV accident. Appearing battered and broken emotionally, Favre somehow mustered the strength to carry on. Just when it seemed he’d gotten through the worst, in mid-2004 his wife was diagnosed with breast cancer. Favre handled the situation with the uttmost care and respect, even helping Deanna create the Deanna Favre Hope Foundation supporting breast cancer education and early detection. I had the joy of traveling to Mississippi after Hurricane Katrina, and the first place I stopped was the home of my favorite football player in Kiln. The city had been ravaged, and the only thing really left standing was a statue of Brett in the courtyard. His family’s home was now a distant memory amassed in debris. Favre worked alongside Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour to rebuild the place that reared him. People can talk for days about the awards, accolades, touchdown passes and quotes made by Brett Favre; even though all those things are worth noting, I believe that it is more important to look at the man for more than his football record. Favre’s life is a true testament of faith and courage in the face of adversity, and even though I won’t see his bright smile and enthusiasm on Monday Night Football next season, I am still satisfied in calling him my hero. Ameisha Cross is a junior political science major. E-mail: crossa@pop.belmont.edu. Page 10 The Belmont Vision, April 3, 2008 “ I told the guys as far as game pressure goes, this had to rank in the top three or four, and hopefully, the people at Belmont take that as a real compliment because they should be complimented. ” —Duke Coach Mike Krzyzewski With all due respect, Blue Devils and legendary Coach K, Belmont and its unheralded crop of bluecollar players led by humble coach Rick Byrd, on the 20th night of March 2008, belonged to a Bruin nation. Belmont suddenly became everybody’s favorite team for at least 40 minutes. Make no mistake; Belmont didn’t get lucky draining treys and catching Duke on a bad day. The Bruins stood toe to toe with a cast of AllAmericans, and by the end of the game, Duke was the lucky team. Belmont certainly had a believer in the all-time winningest coach in the NCAA Tournament, Coach K. “I’ve coached in 89 of these games now,” he said. “I told the guys as far as game pressure goes, this had to rank in the top three or four, and hopefully, the people at Belmont take that as a real compliment because they should be complimented.” This statement came from a man whose team is a staple in the deep rounds of the tournament. The atmosphere was nothing short of surreal at the game. The Vision’s sports videographer, Rudy Lindsey, and I were sandwiched between Duke Basketball–behind Coach K and his posse of cookie-cutter coaches in training and in front of the entire Krzyzewski family. Rudy and I tried our best to contain our emotions for fear of a late night knock on our apartment doors and our friends and family seeing only a red rose left behind– courtesy of a mob that would put fear in our hearts. Needless to say, however, it quickly became apparent that we were Bruins. It also became apparent that the entire arena – minus the Dookies – were Bruins. When Andy Wicke drained a three from the baseline to pull the Bruins within one with two and a half minutes remaining, every single sports fan in the world suddenly had a second favorite team. From every little sports bar in the Caribbean to YMCAs to maybe even the Southern Baptist Convention’s lobby, people crowded around the television to witness a little piece of magic. It only got better when Belmont took the lead on free throws by Justin Hare– in what turned out to be his last college game before he heads to med school– and peaked when Henry Harris grabbed a Duke miss with less than a minute left. Of course, the balance of power shifted to the team everybody loves to hate, Duke, at the bitter end. Crushing disappointment showed in every Belmont player and coach. I hate to play the “what-mighthave-been” card, but a Bruin jersey would have graced every major newspaper and Web site’s front page– if only Hare’s mid-court prayer had been answered as time ticked away. But this game and this Belmont team will be remembered forever as the catalysts for something special brewing. It is no stretch of the imagination to look up when the brackets are revealed to see the Bruins as a No. 11 or 10 seed. It just so happened that the No. 10 seed Davidson was one shot from going to the Final Four this year. And next year, Belmont will gush with experienced talent. From electrifying guard Alex Renfroe to A-Sun Tournament MVP Shane Dansby, the Bruins will be the clear-cut choice to make four straight NCAA Tournaments and perhaps pull the upset. Throw in seniors Andy Wicke, Matthew Dotson and Henry Harris, and you’ll have a senior section that could start for most mid-major teams– maybe even major teams. The younger Bruins will have another year under their belt as well. Yet, maybe the best news for next year’s team is the addition of 6-foot-9, 225-pound Mick Hedgepeth. Word is that the power forward is an absolute beast. If he can be a force down low, the puzzle is complete for the Bruins. I am not only excited for next year but for the next five, 10, 20 years or so of Belmont Bruin basketball. When the seniors graduate, the Bruins will probably re-load with even better talent. Think about it. If you are a high school player who is a half-inch or five pounds from playing for Vanderbilt, Memphis or UT, wouldn’t you want to come to a school that’s making the NCAA Tournament on a yearly basis to show that you really do belong? The only thing that could hold Belmont back is losing their hunger and getting cocky. But, under the guidance of Coach Byrd and the near taste of worldfame turned sour from the last trip, there is zero chance of that happening. The sports world has only glimpsed the tip of the iceberg. Jordan Drake is a junior entrepreneurship major. Email: drake.jordan@gmail.com. JORDAN DRAKE PHOTOS BY CHRIS SPEED The Belmont Vision, April 3, 2008 Page 11 PAGE 12 APRIL 3, 2008 Belmont’s going GREEN ‘Going green’ part of new dorm plan By Erin Carson STAFF WRITER When Belmont made the decision to build a new residence hall behind Hail Hall, the new era called for an updated element of construction to take under consideration: going green. The dorm, set to open in the fall of 2008, will house freshmen. According to the university Provost Dan McAlexander, it will cost approximately $12.5 million. Part of this cost comes from more environmentally sustainable choices, such as the heating and cooling system of water source heat pumps. According to McAlexander, that reduces energy consumption and is the most significant feature in making the dorms green. When it was settled upon, the expected cost of the system was a half million dollars. Though the decision has not been made yet, the new system does provide the opportunity to switch over to thermal heating and cooling down the road, making the air easier to heat or cool given a more “normal” temperature around 55 degrees. McAlexander also discussed the “significant attention paid to storm water runoff,” explaining how the water will be routed to pre-existing pools instead of washing whatever is on the asphalt into the sewer. “We will look at green for everything we do and try to do the responsible thing in each one,” McAlexander said. As far as building materials themselves, McAlexander said they tried to use “materials from recy- clables or less polluting materials.” The insides of the dorms will be painted with low emission paints and green materials will be used for the flooring and carpeting. “The university recognizes the appeal of environmental issues as a criteria for students to come here,” said residence life director Anthony Donovan. A green university will “become more of an expectation” and as that happens, it will be “easier to justify the cost.” Donovan also went on to explain the idea of “saving on the backend” with regards to paying more now in favor of long term savings. Judy Skeen, a professor in the School of Religion, has been active in the push to get Belmont to go green after reaching ‘enlightenment’ while on sabbatical. She came back and taught a class on environmental justice and formulated a five-year plan with the class to present to senior leadership. According to Skeen, the question was whether “Belmont [was] willing as an institution to take a stand and change [its] behavior.” Skeen referenced discussions about possibly trying to retrofit the dorms already built with electronic thermostats and light switches with motion detectors that would turn off the lights if there was no movement for a while. As for the new dorms, Skeen talked about “start[ing] them off more green” and anticipating that the next dorms to be built “will be even more green.” While constructing an environmentally sustainable building remains in the hands of administration, students on campus have taken it upon themselves to bring a little green to the housing that already exists. Drew Belk, residence director for the Belmont Commons, said environmentally friendly practices have been in place for the past year and a half. “The fall 2006 RA staff, namely Sarah Willadsen, had a recycling dumpster brought onto campus. This was the second recycling dumpster brought on after the Beaman dumpsters,” Belk said. The same year, “Nicole Loveless worked with Lowe’s to arrange a discount to have recycling bins placed in every apartment in the Commons and Compton Avenue houses.” The most recent addition has been that of a clothesline outside of the Commons clubhouse to “offer an alternative to using dryers to dry clothes,” Belk said. Even their bulletin boards “have almost exclusively dealt with issues surrounding recycling, energy use and new sources of energy.” Skeen has also been active in the effort to get a campus-wide recycling program established, hoping that by the fall “it will just be a part of life at Belmont.” With reference to the dorms as well as the effort to engage students in green practices like recycling, Skeen said, “We realize that it’s not just what we build with and how we build it, it’s the people VISION PHOTO who live in it.” A new freshman residence hall is on schedule to open in fall 2008. The building, adjacent to older dorms, is part of a plan to house all freshmen in the central campus. Celebrate Earth Day with festival, tour By Tabitha Metcalf STAFF WRITER Earth Week 2008 is April 21- 25 and there are many ways you can get involved both here at Belmont and in the Nashville community as the global effort begun with the first Earth Day in 1970 continues. On April 19, Nashville Public Works will host the annual Nashville Earth Day celebration at Centennial Park – the actual worldwide Earth Day is April 22, although the biggest celebrations in the United States are on Sunday, April 20. “This Earth Day, it’s time to change the forecast for global warming,” Kathleen Rogers, president of the inter- national Earth Day Network, said in a press release. “Climate change must rise to the top of the national agenda this election year. On April 20th, Americans will be hearing our global warming message and we will be mobilizing support for solutions.” The theme for this year’s celebration is "Local Living for Global Change – It all starts with me!" As part of the celebration in Nashville, there will be informational booths, children's events, entertainment and food. Visit www.nashville.gov/earthday for more information about the festival and to learn how to volunteer. Volunteers are needed for event set-up, T-shirt sales, recycling and clean-up. Volunteers will receive a free T-shirt. If you’re looking for a Belmont event, a group of students will be traveling to Summertown, Tenn. for a tour of an eco-village on April 26. Part of the “Hillside Goes Green” initiative, the tour will be led by Albert Bates, director of the Ecovillage Training Center. So whether you want to rock out with fellow Nashvillians in Centennial Park while celebrating Mother Nature or pull some exotic plants, make sure you get involved. Page 13 The Belmont Vision, April 3, 2008 Environmental issues O.N.E. club’s focus “We’re looking to help make Belmont a more environmentally friendly campus and also to provide the students a place to learn Before Belmont even went “green” last about environmental issues,” said senior year, there was a group of environmentally biology major Jill Neblett, the president of concerned students who met regularly to the club. discuss current environmental issues and The group formed in the fall of 2004, how to become involved in solutions to and their biggest accomplishment is the environmental problems. They’re called progress they’ve helped make with recyO.N.E., Our Natural Environment, and they cling on campus. Each week O.N.E. club still meet each month. students empty the recycling bins from Hitch and Wheeler into the recycling dumpster. A fraternity takes care of the recycling in Thrailkill and some in the library and Massey, while other dorms and apartments are independent. Before the O.N.E. club, C. Steven Murphree, a professor in VISION FILE PHOTO the biology department, The O.N.E. club is responsible for emptying the recyhad been cling bins from Hitch and Wheeler into the dumpster. doing recyBy Chansin Bird SENIOR WRITER cling of aluminum cans on campus for years. He had students from the Tri Beta club, a biology honors society, help him. “Then the O.N.E. club put the rest of the bins in Hitch and Wheeler,” Neblett said. “We’re the ones who got the dumpster out here and the ones who have been able to recycle cardboard and plastic and cans and paper. Recycling takes a lot of the focus of the club because it is time consuming. The eight bins have to be taken out at least once a week. “It takes a couple hours a week which may not sound like a lot, but it is when you’re busy and you don’t have a lot of workers,” Neblett said. There are about 10 active members in O.N.E. The club and other professors are working on getting recycling institutionalized so that the university and not the students carry it out. It has been a slow process. “We don’t have dates when that is actually going to happen, but it is something the university is working on,” Neblett said. She hopes this can happen so that O.N.E. will be able to concentrate on other issues. “I think it would be good if we could focus more on events that more students could be involved with – like having more speakers come and more educational events on campus,” Neblett said. Her favorite event with O.N.E. has been volunteering at the Nashville Zoo with Ghouls at Grassmere. The members passed out candy, helped with the hayride and did face painting. They also host several convos through- TIPS FOR LIVING ‘GREEN’ Adapted from thegreenguide.com by National Geographic -When reheating leftovers in the microwave, always put them in glass dishes. This eliminates waste from plastics prevents chemicals from plastic packaging leaking into your food. -When it is cold outside, don’t let your car warm up before you drive – it wastes gas. Always scrape ice and snow off and don’t wait for your defroster to do it for you. -Use powder laundry detergent instead of liquids, which can contain up to 80% water. Powders save packaging and shipping. out the year. One recent convo was about environmental issues in voting and in government policy. “We also had a speaker come talk about being an environmental Christian and someone come talk about global climate change,” Neblett said. Whether taking out the recycling bins or having discussions about fossil fuel consumption, the O.N.E. club would love to have more members. “We could always use more help,” Neblett said. “Right now help with recycling is a big deal. But in general, it’s good to have more people involved.” To get involved with O.N.E., attend their meeting on April 7 at 10 a.m. in HSB 409 or talk with a member at any of their convocation events. Page 14 The Belmont Vision, April 3, 2008 One man hopes to bring healing to small West African village all their food, their mattresses, their home, everything, and now they had nothing and didn’t know when they would be traveling. So they borrowed and asked friends for help until Sept. 26 when word came that it was time for them to go to America. “I didn’t know we were coming to Nashville until we got to immigrations,” Kabia said. At the Nashville airport, Catholic Charities of Tennessee, Inc. received them. “Catholic Charities helped us find a place to stay and a job for three months,” Kabia said. After that they were on their own. They helped Kabia find a job at Belmont University working in landscaping. He met Belmont’s director of international education, Kathy Skinner, who was able to have his college credits transferred from Sierra Leone to Belmont for him to do his undergraduate studies in business administration. Beginning in 2002 when he began his classes, he has helped tend Belmont’s gardens. Belmont paid for his undergrad studies, a benefit to university employees. “[The job] serves a dual purpose for me,” Kabia said. “It is a job I get paid for, and it allows me to go to school here: I wouldn’t be able to pay [the fees] otherwise.” Kabia says his boss is also very flexible with his hours, which helps him juggle school life as well as home life. Kabia is also grateful to be working outdoors because he always worked indoors as a teacher back home and he appreciates the different environment. By Adaeze Elechi Getting There MANAGING EDITOR/FEATURES Samuel Kabia drags a buggy behind him full of soil, plants and trash bags. Smiling, he goes on his way to tend to Belmont’s landscape. He is slow and gentle as he passes the Pembroke boys throwing a Frisbee in the quad and the girls lying on blankets in the early spring warmth. Kabia passes these students unnoticed, but on another side of the world, in another country, in the village of Rufoindu, Sierra Leone, Samuel Kabia is more than noticed: he brings hope; he brings change. But be sure to note that he didn’t achieve this status on an easy road. Sierra Leone, 1991 The diamond-rich nation had imploded into a civil war between the Revolutionary United Front rebels and the military government over control of the diamond mines (which meant control of the country’s economy and eventually, the nation as a whole). The RUF went on a murdering, mutilating rampage, leaving their signature mark on the villages and communities they attacked: severed limbs, lips, ears and the recruitment of child soldiers. The war would last until Jan. 18, 2002. In the meantime, tens of thousands of people would be slaughtered and approximately two million people (more than a third of the nation’s population) would flee their homes and become refugees in neighboring countries. Kabia, a high school economics and geography teacher at the time, and his wife Kabia and child were among the two million. “In a war situation, everyone moves for their lives,” Kabia said. The young family took what they could and fled by foot. They walked through the day and through the night in the The village of Rufoindu is a small community, a few miles from the capital of Freetown, in Sierra Leone in West Africa. The country, rich in diamonds, was devastated by a civil war that began in 1991 and was resolved in 2002. Belmont staffer and graduate student Samuel Kabia’s family still lives in the village that he left as a refugee from the war. He is using donor resources as well as money he earns working two jobs to establish a school in the village. A benefit rock concert will allow Belmont students to sing, play music and raise money for the orphans in Rufoindu in West Africa. The show will be held in the Curb Café from 8-9:30 p.m. Thursday, April 10. bush for months until they reached the small peaceful nation of The Gambia. Here, because the Gambians couldn’t tell who was a rebel and who wasn’t, Kabia’s family was scrutinized and questioned before being put in a refugee camp with about 300 others like them. Even here, things would not be easy. “In the camp, you had to fight for your food. You had to go into to the bush and hunt to feed your family,” Kabia said. A while later, the United Nations recognized and registered the camp and began sending food, but 50 bags of rice for 300 people was still not enough. Kabia continued to teach, this time in The Gambia at Hermitage High School, the only government-funded high school in the country. In 1995, Kabia applied to Catholic Charities of Tennessee, Inc., a humanitarian organization that had been helping refugees in The Gambia, for relocation to the United States. It took six years, five interviews and a barrage of health screenings before they approved the Kabias, who had added one more child to the family. Sierra Leone, 2005 In 2005, he graduated and decided to go back “to visit my people.” What he found in Rufoindu in Sierra Leone was not the village he remembered. “[The rebels] had burned the whole village… [and] many children had become orphans,” Kabia said. The war had left the people with nothing but “extreme poverty, diseases” and little or no educational resources. The Catholic Charities had built some houses for some families, but one fact was clear: The village would never be as it once was. Kabia decided to do whatever he could to help the orphans who had survived the war. So he returned to See VILLAGE, page 15 America, 2001 And on Sept. 11, 2001, the Kabias waited in the Gambian airport to catch a flight to the United States. Of course, the series of terrorist attacks in America that day would not allow them to travel. “It was the worst time I had experienced in my life,” Kabia said. “I have no words to describe it.” Before they left the camp, certain they would not be returning, they had sold SWEDEN RUSSIA FINLAND ESTONIA North Sea DENMARK Labrador Sea Hudson Bay North Atlantic Ocean LATVIA LITHUANIA NETH. CANADA IRELAND POLAND U. K. BELGIUM GERMANY LUX. CZECH English Channel Bay of Biscay BYELARUS SLOVAKIA UKRAINE AUSTRIA HUNGARY MOLDOVA SWITZ. SLOVENIA CROATIA ROMANIA ITALY BOSNIA SERBIA Black Sea BULGARIA MONTENEGRO MACEDONIA KAZAKHSTAN Caspian Sea FRANCE PORTUGAL GREECE SPAIN U. S. A. Aral Sea GEORGIA ARMENIA AZERBAIJAN UZBEKISTAN TURKMENISTAN TURKEY KYRGYZSTAN TAJIKISTAN ALBANIA A t l a n t i c O c e a n SYRIA CYPRUS TUNISIA N o r t h IRAQ LEBANON Mediterranean Sea MOROCCO AFGHANISTAN ISRAEL JORDAN Canary Islands ALGERIA IRAN KUWAIT PAKISTAN EGYPT THE BAHAMAS Gulf of Mexico WESTERN SAHARA LIBYA QATAR Gulf of Oman U. A. E. SAUDI ARABIA CUBA Red Sea JAMAICA BELIZE HONDURAS HAITI SUDAN BURKINA GUINEA BISSAU GUINEA PANAMA COSTA RICA Conakry VENEZUELA GHANA BENIN TOGO SIERRA LEONE Gulf of Aden DJIBOUTI NIGERIA IVORY COAST GUYANA SURINAME YEMEN ERITREA CHAD GAMBIA NICARAGUA OMAN NIGER MALI SENEGAL Caribbean Sea TEMALA EL SALVADOR Arabian Sea MAURITANIA DOM. REP. CAMEROON CENTRAL AFRICAN REPUBLIC ETHIOPIA FRENCH GUIANA SOMALIA LIBERIA COLOMBIA UGANDA EQUATORIAL GUINEA ZAIRE SAO TOME & PRINCIPE ECUADOR SIERRA LEONE KENYA RWANDA GABON CONGO BURUNDI PERU Freetown TANZANIA I n ANGOLA BRAZIL ZAMBIA BOLIVIA NAMIBIA ZIMBABWE MALAWI MADAGASCAR BOTSWANA PARAGUAY MOZAMBIQUE CHILE SWAZILAND ARGENTINA SOUTH AFRICA URUGUAY S o u t h A t l a n t i c LIBERIA Ruofindu FALKLAND ISLANDS SOUTH GEORGIA ISLAND Monrovia O c e a n LESOTHO The Belmont Vision, April 3, 2008 Page 15 VILLAGE, from page 14 America, began graduate school at Belmont, and founded the non-profit organization, “Rufoindu Education Project for Orphan Children.” Its mission is to “provide functional literacy for orphans and vulnerable children and educational resources to communities in Africa.” Essentially, Kabia would start a school in Rufoindu from American soil with the help of the American people. The first group of people Kabia turned to for assistance was the Belmont community. Belmont gave him chairs, tables and school supplies to fill 10 suitcases. But the problem came when he didn’t have enough money for shipping. Kabia went into overdrive, working in landscaping from 7 a.m.- 3 p.m., then from 4:30 p.m. to midnight, he would work at Burger King and then deal with homework and class projects through the wee hours. “I would sleep between one and three hours a day, sometimes I didn’t sleep at all,” Kabia said. “All I could think of was getting the money to pay for the shipping.” In 2006, he shipped the supplies. He wrote letters to people and organizations that he thought could help, trying to get them to understand the situation in Rufoindu and the importance of education for the orphans in a few paragraphs. He worked hard to get the organization approved as a non-profit with 501(c)(3) status so any funds donated to its cause are tax-deductible. In the letters, he coaxed people with this fact; he let them know exactly where their money was going and what it was being spent on. Any extra money he made, he sent to the development of the school. Rufoindu provided labor to build what is now a fiveclassroom school, and he provided the money for the material that would be used, food, and other needs. The current project on the site is a library. Kabia acknowledges that it is a challenge to keep this up and running, but he is willing to make the sacrifices because he realizes the importance of education. “I want to make [the orphans] self-sufficient,” Kabia said. “If somebody is hungry you do not just send food to them all the time, you teach them how to make food.” A family’s future, 2008 Kabia also uses this project to remind his three children – the last was born in America – of where they come from. “I don’t want them to forget about Africa. I always want them to remember that we came from a poor family. I want to give them culture and responsibility and let them know that America is not everything: there are people suffering in the world.” Kabia hopes that one day he will be able to take his children to Rufoindu to see their home for themselves. But these are not the only people he hopes to take to the once-crippled village. He is trying to organize an exchange program where people interested in teaching as well as people who have contributed to the school in some way will be able to visit the school. “It is important for them to see where their money is going,” he said. This is still in the works. Now he is trying to raise money to ship the 20 computers Belmont donated to his school. Then a Belmont student from Kenya, Kipkosgei Magut, got involved. “I helped Samuel with coming up with ideas for the fundraising event, we had many meetings on deciding what was a good event for [the] Belmont community,” said Magut. “At first we thought of having a running competition, but that didn’t sail through. We wanted something that would capture the talent in Belmont and would also enhance its learning.” They settled on a rock show scheduled for April 10 where Belmont students will be able to sing, play music and raise money for the orphans in Rufoindu. Magut and Kabia are trying to make it so that students can get convo credit. For Magut, this project is more than a pastime. “I got involved with this program because I was so touched by what Samuel Kabia is doing,” said Magut. “I felt that the orphan children of Sierra Leone need someone to stand for them. They need me… and they need us: they need [all] of Belmont to help them attain their goals in life.” As for Kabia, as he still tries to scrub images of the war from his memory, he does what he can to make the memory of the war fade for the orphans as well. “I am alive and that is all. There is no point in carrying the sorrow of it on my head,” he said. “Many people are dead now and those people who have been killed suffer more than I do because they cannot help make the world better. Now is the time to move ahead. All I can do now is help those who are alive.” PHOTOS COURTESY OF SAMUEL KABIA Members of the village community in Rufoindu, just outside of Freetown in Sierra Leone, surround Idrisa Kabia (front right). Kabia is the older brother of Samuel Kabia, a Belmont graduate student. The school building that has been built in Rufoindu has been created by community labor, which includes making bricks from a combination of clay, sand and cement, the latter sent from the United States. Samuel Kabia, who founded the school to help his native community, uses his money from his job and from donors to send supplies – nails, for example – that are simply unavailable in the village. The village community school provides education for students in grades 1-6, but Kabia’s hope is that high school classes can be added in the future. Page 16 The Belmont Vision, April 3, 2008 a&e iTunes Top Downloaded Songs 1. “Touch My Body” - Mariah Carey 2. “4 Minutes” - Madonna feat. Justin Timberlake 3. “Bleeding Love” - Leona Lewis 4. “You’re Gonna Miss This” - Trace Adkins 5. “Lollipop” - Lil Wayne Dual ‘Millies’ shine with style By Andrew Cole A&E EDITOR For Millie Dillmount, arriving as a freshfaced young woman on the streets of 1922 New York is a thrilling, if daunting, first lesson in the art of making it big. The experience is very much the same for Paige Salter and Mallory Gleason, who share the title role in “Thoroughly Modern Millie,” the latest PHOTOS BY SARAH MITCHELL Paige Salter,, above, and Patrick Shaw, far right, rehearse a scene from “Thoroughly Modern Millie.” The musical plays in the Troutt Theatre April 5-6 and 10-13. offering from the Belmont musical theatre program opening this weekend. “I can relate [to Millie’s journey] because I am from Chattanooga which is a fairly small town,” said Salter, who plans on pursuing musical theatre professionally after graduation. She looks forward to the day she can make her own mark on the Big Apple, very similar to the first scene of the show in which Millie arrives in Gotham. Gleason, who fills Millie’s tap shoes on alternating nights, can also see herself in the musical’s familiar storyline. “I strive for what is above and beyond what is normally expected of people that come from where I am from,” said Gleason of Millie’s journey. “I know that feeling of having a lot of strength and then having a reality check when it really doesn’t pan out.” Millie is a girl of modern sensibilities – as modern as her 1922 setting will allow. She decides to marry for money instead of love and finds herself in the employment of the wealthy Trevor Graydon, who puts her on a tongue-twisting stenography speed test before even hiring her. The addition of another suitor, Jimmy Smith, provides for a juicy love triangle. By the time Mrs. Meers, a hotel owner running an underground white slavery ring, is thrown into the mix, the plot is thick with great comedic potential set to a backdrop of prohibition-era flappers and speakeasies. Part of relating such a big story to the audience is having a cast that can tell it with energy to spare. For that, director Marjorie Halbert double cast many of the principal roles. Those performers have learned at least two completely different tracks since the production started rehearsals in January. This means that in addition to learning the songs, lines and choreography of one major role in the full-scale musical, all of these students have also learned an entirely different role they will perform the next evening. “We get half the rehearsal time we normally should,” said Gleason. “Having to develop four minor characters and a major character [is] definitely a challenge.” “It’s been pretty crazy at times,” said Salter. “Sometimes I’ve felt kind of lost on stage.” However, all of the actors involved are grateful for the process in the long run as it allows more people to have key roles on their resumes before entering the professional world. “I think we’ve got some really talented singers and the choreography that Anne [McAlexander] has done is incredible,” said Salter. “It has been really challenging but I think that it will make the stage explode with movement and energy. It’s going to look great.” “Millie is the hardest role I’ve ever played in that she’s an ingénue but not your typical ingénue because she has a lot of spunk,” said Gleason. The show, which took home six Tony Awards in 2002, has a handful of complex songs, difficult both for the musicians who play them and the performers who sing them. “My favorite is the song ‘Gimme, Gimme,’” said Salter, “which is really the climax for Millie’s character. It’s the point in her journey when she makes a definite deci- sion and she finally knows what she wants.” “Gimme, Gimme” also inspired the nicknames (“Fly Dove” and “Sing Sparrow”) the two casts have dubbed themselves in order to keep straight which roles they are responsible for at each performance. It’s an intricate system that ought to provide an increased layer of enjoyment for audience members who decide to see both casts interpret the show. The entire experience has been a rewarding process for the actors. “It was really wonderful working with Paige,” said Gleason, who counts collaborating with her talented peers as the most satisfying part of the production. “I share the part with her [. . .] and we can both relate to the experience. We are both there and we are both doing it.” Lórien plots next career move By Will Hoekenga STAFF WRITER Lórien and Belmont University have always seemed to have a symbiotic relationship. All five band members (Kaleb Jones, Thomas Doeve, David Deaton, Chase Gregory and Cara Pollock) attend Belmont and began playing together two and a half years ago. Their first show was the 2005 Pop/Rock Showcase. “It was kind of a disaster, but no worries, it got better as time went on,” said singer Kaleb Jones. And it appears things have become better for them. Since their formation, they have had many accomplishments, including the recording and self-release of a six-song EP entitled “The Ghost in the Parlor.” Most recently, they were named the winner of the 2008 Rock Showcase. Of course, the fact that they are all fulltime college students doesn’t make things any easier, especially when trying to plan tours. “For any kind of extensive out-of-town [touring], we just wait until we have a good block of time off from school and then we cram as much into that as possible,” said Jones. The time they do spend in class is still mostly devoted to music. Jones, Gregory and Deaton are all majoring in music business. er, is not the case with Lórien; they plan on are self-producing the album with Doeve Pollock is a commercial music major and focusing all of their effort on the band. engineering the recording sessions at Paper Doeve an audio engineering technology “After we graduate, our two main goals Swan, the band’s home studio, and major. are to finish the record, make it as perfect as Starstruck Studios on Music Row. While Jones did admit that his education we possibly can,” said Jones. The band also Although the band has traded e-mails has taught him quite a bit about what not to plans on devoting several weeks to developwith different labels and participated in varido in the music industry, he also said, “I’ve ing their live show and turning it into a true ous showcases, they are not making a record learned more about the music industry being in a band and taking it seriously and being professional about it than I have sitting in class. [. . .] I think the best experience is just doing it and going out and making it happen yourself.” Using a combination of the knowledge they have gained from experience and from the classroom, Lórien have started recording a new, full-length album entitled “Esque.” “It’s based on the whole idea that all of our music is this amalgamation of experiences and reactions and interactions and we can’t really be without being a product of PHOTO BY FANTASTIC PHOTO everything around us—our experiences and Lórien, from left, Cara Pollock, Chase Gregory, David Deaton, Kaleb Jones and our friends and our loves and hates. Our Thomas Doeve. Their next gig is the Best of the Best Showcase on April 5. music is basically just a reflection of everyproduction, citing bands such as Mute Math contract their top priority at this time. thing we see and react to,” said Jones. and Muse as examples. “Right now, labels can only do so much With “Esque,” Lórien plan to join the Whatever the future holds, Lórien seem that we can’t do for ourselves, so we’re ever-growing population of independent determined to continue and better what they going to build our equity for as long as posartists exercising complete control over their are doing. sible until people are lining up for us,” said music. They are no longer working with “After [the album’s completion], we’re Jones. Andy Hunt, who produced their “The Ghost going to jump into touring and get part-time It’s not unusual for a college band to in the Parlor” EP and who has also worked jobs and be poor [. . .] and then go on the break off from one another and go their own with well-known artists such as Jars of Clay, road.” separate ways after graduation. This, howevBuddy Guy and Smash Mouth. Instead, they The Belmont Vision, April 3, 2008 Page 17 De Novo Dahl has major label CD By Lance Conzett ONLINE EDITOR When the band was founded in 2001, it is highly unlikely that anyone in De Novo Dahl expected that seven years later they would be signed to one of the most prolific metal labels in the business. Considering that Roadrunner Records is filled with bands named things like “DevilDriver” and “Cradle of Filth,” it would surprise anyone that a quirky pop quintet from Nashville would be anywhere near their radar. Nevertheless, De Novo Dahl was signed to the label in 2007 in an attempt to diversify the label’s output in a bout of signings that included non-metal acts like Airborne, Dresden Dolls and New York Dolls. They have since gone on tour supporting Hot Hot Heat, played at Next Big Nashville, made two music videos, released an EP entitled “Shout,” and performed at an official Roadrunner showcase at the annual South by Southwest Festival in Austin, Texas, all hot on the heals of their major label debut. Bassist Keith Lowen, a former Belmont student, spoke with The Vision about their first fully produced music video and the explosively hateful reaction to it from metal fans. Vision: Since you’ve been on this big tour, how is the world outside of Nashville treating the band? Keith Lowen: The world outside of Nashville has been treating the band very well. Every show we play, I think, goes over really well. We haven’t been selling our new album yet, obviously, but all the stuff we’ve had to sell has been selling well. We’ve been getting a good reaction; people are always surprised that we’re from Nashville because we’ve got that country stigma to it. But, yeah, its been going over really well. Vision: The metalheads online are really not happy about De Novo Dahl or the “Shout” video. Did you expect that kind of reaction? Lowen: I don’t know. We’re on a metal label, it’s been a very traditional metal label with very hardcore metal fans— of the label itself—that have been trained that anything that comes out of Roadrunner is going to be metal and it’s going to be hardcore and its going to be good—good metal. And we’re kind of the opposite of that, so it’s not surprising at all that there’s a reaction. We’ve been kinda going around as a joke saying, “March 25 is the day that metal is going to die.” When we’ve got all these metalheads around we talk to them about the album and it’s that old saying that “no publicity is bad publicity.” We’ve definitely used their hate to our advantage. Vision: There’s some other bands on Roadrunner that aren’t metal bands like Dresden Dolls. Do you know if they’ve faced the same kind of anger. Lowen: Not Dresden Dolls, really. They’re scary enough that they get respect, I think. But I think that since we’re clearly the most different, we get more heat than anybody else. But I think a lot of those real hardcore Roadrunner fans are just mad in general about the change in direction of the label and it’s just that De Novo Dahl is the most clear example of it. Vision: There were also a lot of nice things said by supporters, so there is a balance. Lowen: When you get anybody passionate about anything, that’s a good thing. If you can make someone hate something enough, there are probably going to be people out there that are going to love it. De Novo Dahl’s major label debut, “Move Every Muscle Make Every Sound” released on March 25 at most major record stores including Grimey’s. The band also plans on performing live throughout the summer, including festival appearances at Lollapalooza, Bonnaroo and All Points West. READ MORE For Lance Conzett’s complete interview with De Novo Dahl, go to BelmontVision.com. PHOTO BY LANCE CONZETT De Novo Dahl bassist and Belmont alum Keith Lowen performs at a recent Grimey’s in-store appearance. The band’s first major label effort released last week. , s n a f l l o r ’ ’n k c o Dear r re also know that the very natu d up once the show starts. And stan L WIL may you you of ts have t ues ces fron req in r rien r/mothe you—recent expe ly cancel out any angry-fathe We need to talk. I’ll be honest with of rock music will automatical to stifle my fun at the U2 your ranks. The behavior I tried ng fans amo ind elf unk mys e ber thos num en to Wh left me ashamed y’s ‘n’ roll make of those around you. ing from Edge’s guitar and Larr we’ve lost touch with what rock sage of righteous rebellion com nings have seen is appalling. I feel like mes groa the y , that mp cert gru And . con the cert con than a er, at e should be ing, not to mention loud vinc con e mor ch ect to is and what our role as an audienc mu exp e , wer Man drums So if you act like The me. Rock music is rebellious. ind beh makes me sad. from of ing ns com mea l sica inherently phy Here’s the deal: rock ‘n’ roll is an she be rebelled against. is not the chief of sinners. He/ of the major differences between One this. w kno You on. essi e-hill concertgoer, however, r-th avior ove ry artistic expr beh ang her that his/ The is so , ir” aim shm s o and listening to “Ka ia that is rock ‘n’ roll’ listening to a Mozart violin concert ate s forgotten the youthful euphor r ticip hap latte par per the to e has sal whil ce refu rien the is expe eric listening find absolutely inexcusable the former inspires a static, esot that, my is almost excusable. What I who insist on looking “cool” bang your head to the beat. And and up get teens and twenty-somethings to t late wan ing you es look mak hipby d . cert ibite con exh rock a at y ld do—especiall the rest of us. friends, is exactly what you shou instead of participating with was shocked to see so many al events, meaning that the at the Ryman on March 2, I play o You see, rock concerts are soci Wilc saw I we en be Wh May erly. ughout the entire show. prop l for them to work their seats in the balcony thro in ng sitti y call stoi audience participation is essentia requisite age to my people hipster gentleman wearing the this because we’re always listening for example, was the perfect me, sat in have a hard time understanding ind He . beh the ous ted rced jeal Sea divo mo Cuo thus earbuds and have would make Rivers music in the isolated world of our ctious shirt and sporting glasses that infe ap the rock rl-sn n But pea eve ic. Not . mus of cert ce con rien re our expe throughout the enti concept of social interaction from his seats with his arms crossed posed stasis. experiences from listening to an music expert from his self-im this stir ld cou ck” concerts are categorically different Bla tle g, Ket t alon “Po ing sing l disability, you should be , sica cing phy dan a standing up, eptable. Unless you have acc not is this iPod—experiences that require because ple, Peo have I ly, w you like what you’re hearing ience members. Unfortunate ping your fist to the beat. I kno and interacting with fellow aud pum you this, feet told r r you eve on it. has rd one towa no and even hostility see it if you didn’t. I guess to $40 paid e hav noticed a lack of such behavior express t lly ldn’ bers sica wou you ing a good time and phy several aged audience mem for you to act like you are hav Two years ago at a U2 concert, OK trying is ds it han ) r me: let you word so on rent e diffe ther a (I think they used can’t be happy sitting You . feel you es mak and sic petitioned me to sit my buttocks s mu al arm the arriv the joy flail my scrawny stood up to welcome the band’s ws I look like an idiot when I back down in my seat after I had to look sophisticated. God kno ests from audience ing a better time than you requ hav lar I’m simi d that tere tee oun ran enc gua onstage. Since then, I have top of my lungs, but I can out, the at me r sing hea , Now d. nde atte s I have members over 40 at other concert e at words have are. Seriously, I welcome your presenc I hope you don’t think that my ple. peo old on ing pick not am of that said, dear audience, I all . I am deeply With love they in h ts, trut even al the ak soci concerts are insult, but rather to spe to aim not do I any concert I attend. Since rock sh. I know that har ing too and n Hav bee of artistic expression, rent backgrounds together. er of rock music as a means pow the function to bring people from diffe place. to ed first nec mitt the con in com f my es stuf forc this ion beside me rein er the reason we liked someone from a different generat too. So please, let’s rememb to us. And I are up ism. It’s you tion d. isola dea not iPod is bats rock com thus show the world that tion with the culture at large and Let’s get out of our seats and the whole concert might not be y, understand that standing up for erel for Sinc ul body. I don’t look down on you possible for your less-than-youthf Jason Hardy sitting down to rest. I as , that t ticke your hase purc major with a music minor. But please, understand when you people on is a junior English writing the Jas and , tion icipa part l sica phy have said, rock concerts involve The Belmont Vision, April 3, 2008 Page 18 Bradshaw relies on talent, not name By Amanda French STAFF WRITER She’s a 20-year-old blue-eyed blonde who drives a Mercedes CLK350; she’s an aspiring country music singer and cast member in the reality show “Nashville”; her dad, Terry Bradshaw, is a former Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback and “FOX NFL Sunday” co-host; the Google search engine generates over 24 pages of press releases, photo galleries and stories about her life. But beneath all the glitter and glam, Rachel Terry Bradshaw is a small-town girl with a heart for adventure. “I moved to Nashville from my hometown of Westlake, Texas, right out of high school, and when I got here I didn’t know anyone. I was overwhelmed thinking, ‘Where do I begin?’” Bradshaw said. Currently a junior at Belmont University, she’s pursuing a bachelor’s degree in business while working at RCA Records under A&R representative Jim Catino. “I spend most of my time playing guitar, taking voice lessons and writing songs,” she said. “It’s been my dream since I was 10 years old to be a performer.” Bradshaw took lessons from her first vocal coach, Pat Borden, until she passed away in 1999. “I’ve wanted to keep singing for her,” Bradshaw said. Her father also had an aspiration to sing. The two have done some duets in the past including “Crazy” by Patsy Cline. Bradshaw said her favorite artists are George Strait, Brad Paisley and Miranda Lambert. “They’re in the business for all the right reasons,” she said. “It’s about authentic music.” Erin Bradshaw, 18, remembers when her older sister learned how to yodel to LeAnn Rimes. “Rachel blew us all away with it,” she said. “I have no doubt in my mind that in 10 years she will be singing in big stadiums and taking home CMA awards.” Aside from working hard to achieve her dreams, Erin says Rachel enjoys spending time with friends and family. “She’s a social butterfly, I guess you could say,” Erin said. “But when she comes home to visit, she wants to spend all her time with our family.” The Bradshaw sisters have a tradition of watching Rachel’s favorite TV show, “Friends,” and talking about their lives. “She’s my best friend,” the two said of one another. Growing up in a family that was always in the eye of the media, Rachel and Erin Bradshaw remember times being difficult. “Just because of our last name, people CLASSIFIED ADS UNDERCOVER SHOPPERS. Earn up to $150 per day. Shoppers needed to judge retail and dining establishments. No experience needed. Call 800-722-4791 MOVIE EXTRAS. New opportunities for upcoming productions. All looks needed. No experience required for casting calls. Call 877-218-6224 The Vision is Hiring We are ready to hire: ✖ Editors ✖ Writers for news, sports, and features ✖ Video producers ✖ Production/graphic artists ✖ Web assistants ✖ Photographers Come talk to us. Our office is on the second floor of Gabhart, directly above the security office. You can also email us at vision@mail.belmont.edu. “I spend most of my time playing guitar, taking voice lessons and writing songs. It’s been my dream since I was 10 years old to be a performer. ... When people hear the name ‘Bradshaw,’ they definitely turn their heads. But it just means that I have to impress them twice as much because they already have high expectations.” Rachel Bradshaw Belmont junior would say we were ‘snobs’ in middle and high school,” said Erin. “We never really understood the impact our dad’s fame had on our lives until we started getting judged like that.” Rachel said, “It’s still hard a lot of times because many people are fake, and I can’t tell if they want to be friends with me for the right reasons.” Bradshaw says her dad is supportive of her dream to succeed in the entertainment industry. “He gives great advice because he knows so much,” she said. “I’m so proud of him; he’s worked so hard to get to where he is today.” It is a common presumption that it is Rachel’s last name that has influenced her success thus far. In response, Rachel said, “When people hear the name ‘Bradshaw,’ they definitely turn their heads. But it just means that I have to impress them twice as much because they already have high expectations,” she said. PHOTO COURTESY OF FOX Rachel made a splash on reality TV last fall as a cast member of the shortlived “Nashville” on Fox. As a child, Bradshaw grew very close to her mother in the time her dad was working and traveling. “My mom and I have a great relationship,” she said. “I can talk to her about anything.” Young Bradshaw sang at Texas fairs and weddings, rode horses, participated in several sports including basketball, volleyball, cheerleading and track. But, according to her sister, Erin, their favorite memories were made going on family vacations. “I’ve learned so much from my sister,” Erin said. “She’s taught me how to stand up for myself and my family, and how to work hard to achieve my dreams.” Erin described Rachel as independent, fearless and strong. “She’s a lot like our dad,” she said. “In watching her over the years she’s taught me not to be afraid to venture out and achieve my dreams. She’s always had a ‘get out there and accomplish it’ attitude.” Bradshaw recently got a lot of publicity starring in the reality show “Nashville,” which aired last September. “It was kind of unexpected that I was Research Study of the Effect of Genes on the Brain Scientists at Vanderbilt University Medical Center are conducting a research study to see how genes affect the function of the brain. There are two parts to the study. Subjects participating in the first part of the study will have their blood drawn for gene analysis and will answer brief questions about their mental and medical health. The results of the first part of the study will decide eligibility for the second part. If eligible, you will be asked to take part in a second, more extensive study. The first visit takes about 30 minutes. We are recruiting healthy females age 18-25 who are not using hormonal birth control and who do not smoke. You may earn up to $25 for the first part of the study and up to $225 if you are eligible for the second part. Please call Casey 936-1013 chosen,” Bradshaw said. “I auditioned for the part after I heard about it from my agency and surprisingly they called me back.” Bradshaw enjoyed being on the show, but said she does not feel it portrayed her as the person she really is. “I was shown as the mean girl,” she said. She has also done guest appearances with her father at the premiere of “Failure to Launch,” “The Tonight Show with Jay Leno” and “The Best Damn Sports Show Period.” As her career continues to escalate, Bradshaw is holding on to her dreams of singing to sold-out arenas in luminous spotlights. “I want to use fame to raise money for people in need,” she said. “My grandpa has cancer, and it is my hope that I can honor him and other patients by contributing to cancer charities.” With a passionate love of music, a strong work ethic and a heart for helping others, Bradshaw has hopes for the future. She carries her father’s name with pride and is determined to let it shine. Lil John, Spoon headline Vandy’s Rites of Spring Vanderbilt’s Rites of Spring will bring everything from crunk to folk to Nashville, as the annual event brings another eclectic lineup to its stage. This year’s festival, scheduled April 18-19 on the university’s Alumni Lawn has indie rockers Spoon at the top of its line-up for Friday’s show and rapper Lil John on Saturday. Other acts include Colbie Caillat, Old Crow Medicine Show, Feist, Hill Country Revue, the Avett Brothers, DJ Kool, Jeremy Lister, Randy Rogers Band, HBeam and Grace Potter and the Nocturnals. Rites of Spring, an effort of the Vanderbilt Programming Board’s Music Group, told inside- vandy.com, “I think Lil John will bring a fantastic level of energy for the Vanderbilt student community as well as the greater Nashville area that hasn’t been seen on Alumni Lawn. And Spoon will bring a twist to the rock ’n’ roll sound I think everyone will enjoy.” Tickets are available at all Ticketmaster locations at ticketmaster.com or Ticketmaster outlets throughout Nashville. Tickets may also be purchased by cash or check, with no service fees, at Vanderbilt’s Sarratt box office. Admission on a one-day pass is $35; a weekend pass purchased in advance is $45; and a weekend pass purchased April 18 is $55. -- Staff reports The Belmont Vision, April 3, 2008 Page 19 The College of Business Administration and The Mike Curb College of Entertainment and Music Business congratulate the 64 students who were recently inducted into Beta Gamma Sigma – the international honor society for students enrolled in programs accredited by AACSB International (The Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business). Beta Gamma Sigma is the business equivalent of Phi Beta Kappa (liberal arts honor society) and membership is the highest honor bestowed upon graduate and undergraduate business students at these institutions. To be eligible for membership, the academic ranking of those being considered must place them in the upper 10 percent of the junior or senior class and the upper 20 percent of the graduating master’s class. Congratulations to the 2008 BGS Inductees Jacqueline Marie Allinder Erik W. Anderson Jennifer M. Bischoff Jonathan L. Bradberry Connie L. Brais Kelsey E. Breault Sierra M. Briggs Ephraim T. Brown, IV Lindsay E. Browning Evelyn (Betsy) E. Bruington Adam S. Bryan Karisa N. Butler-Hurst Charles M. Canon, IV Allison P. Champagne Beth A. Clayton Nicholas A. Connell Lauren E. Cooper Joshua C. Curd Katherine Nicole Curtis Maurissa G. Davis Elizabeth L. Dawson Rachel M. Dooley Matthew P. Durdel James I. Elliott J. Seth Estep Jennifer H. Foster Kenneth N. Gaines Thomas J. Gephart Mara B. Greenberg Christopher Chase Hamby Keena C. Harris Clinton D. Hill Joseph V. Hofflinger Adam J. Hogan Sarah C. Irby Benjamin S. Kann Nathan J. Klages Stephanie W. Lambring Kristen M. LaScola Kari E. Lennon Christine M. Lewis Danara D. Lowery Ryan T. Malloy Andrew E. Mills Matthew P. Nicholson Ryan H. O’Hern Allison M. Pellicciotti Dain C. Penzhorn Merrick M. Pickens Laura A. Rathgeber Libby A. Reed Matthew J. Robinson James M. Rosano Tanner A. Scott Amber M. Slifer Matthew R. Spiess Tessa B. Stratton Blake M. Tidwell Mary Lauren Walden Katherine N. Williams Lauren A. Williams Laura E. Wright Julie E. Zaloba Adam C. Zinke The Belmont Vision, April 3, 2008 Page 20