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Come watch artists chalk the walks Saturday

Posted at 4:22 pm October 3, 2014
By Carolyn Krause Leave a Comment

Street Painting Festival Einstein

Sidewalk chalk painting of Einstein by a high school student at last year’s Oak Ridge Street Painting Festival at Roane State Community College. (Submitted photo)

The 15th annual Oak Ridge Street Painting Festival is from 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday (rain day on Sunday) at the Oak Ridge Campus of Roane State Community College.

Dozens of artists will be brushing up on their skills as they transform concrete sidewalk squares into colorful chalk paintings. The public is invited to this free festival organized by the Rotary Club of Oak Ridge.

While would-be Rembrandts are chalking the walks, young children will enjoy face painting, chalking, and other free activities from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday in the Kid Zone.

Music will be provided by the Roane State Celebration Singers at 9 a.m. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Arts, College, Community, Education, Entertainment, Nonprofits, Top Stories Tagged With: Oak Ridge, Roane State Celebration Singers, Roane State Community College, Rotary Club of Oak Ridge, scholarships, street painting festival, students

Buzz Aldrin will be among guests on ‘Classroom Under the Sea’

Posted at 12:39 pm October 2, 2014
By Roane State Community College Leave a Comment

Buzz Aldrin

Buzz Aldrin

HARRIMAN—Astronaut Buzz Aldrin, the second person to walk on the moon, will be among the guests appearing this fall on “Classroom Under the Sea,” an online show hosted by two educators living underwater for 73 days.

Roane State Community College biology professor Bruce Cantrell and adjunct professor Jessica Fain will live and work in an underwater habitat from October 3-December 15. The habitat, Jules’ Undersea Lodge, is located 25 feet down in the lagoon at the Marine Resources Development Foundation on Key Largo in the Florida Keys.

While in the habitat, where living space is the size of a dorm room, Fain and Cantrell will host weekly live episodes of “Classroom Under the Sea.” Aldrin will appear in the October 16 episode.

Roane State and the Marine Resources Development Foundation are partnering to present “Classroom Under the Sea” broadcasts. The first episode, titled “History of Man in the Sea,” will be Thursday, October 9 at 1 p.m. Eastern. [Read more…]

Filed Under: College, Education, Top Stories Tagged With: astronaut, Bruce Cantrell, Buzz Aldrin, Classroom Under the Sea, Diversity in Aquatics, Florida Keys, History of Man in the Sea, Jessica Fain, Jules' Undersea Lodge, Key Largo, Marine Resources Development Foundation, online show, Roane State, Roane State Community College, underwater habitat

Los Alamos National Lab director to give talk at UT on Oct. 1

Posted at 11:33 am September 26, 2014
By University of Tennessee Leave a Comment

Charles McMillan

Charles McMillan

Charles F. McMillan, nuclear physicist and director of Los Alamos National Laboratory, will give the Howard H. Baker Jr. Center for Public Policy’s annual Distinguished Global Security Lecture on October 1 at the University of Tennessee in Knoxville.

McMillan will speak on “The Timeline of Technology” at 5:30 p.m. in the Toyota Auditorium at the Baker Center, 1640 Cumberland Avenue. The event is free and open to the public.

McMillan’s lecture will look at how innovations from the previous century are being used to solve today’s national and global security, energy, and environmental issues. Then he’ll pose a question to policy makers: “Are we prepared for the policy needed in the 22nd century with the scientific and technical expertise we have today?” [Read more…]

Filed Under: College, Education, Top Stories, U.S. Department of Energy Tagged With: Baker Center, Charles F. McMillan, Distinguished Global Security Lecture, DOE, energy, environmental issues, global security, Howard H. Baker Jr. Center for Public Policy, Los Alamos National Laboratory, Los Alamos National Security LLC, Matt Murray, New Mexico, nuclear deterrent, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, ORNL, science, technology, The Timeline of Technology, U.S. Department of Energy, University of Tennessee, UT, UT-Battelle, weapons programs

High school seniors can sign up for Tennessee Promise at RSCC on Saturday

Posted at 1:49 am September 18, 2014
By Roane State Community College Leave a Comment

Tennessee Promise Logo

High school seniors can sign up for the Tennessee Promise and fill out their college application as part of Scholarship Saturday on September 20 at Roane State Community College’s Oak Ridge campus.

Computer labs in the new Goff Health Sciences and Technology Building will be open from 10 a.m.-2 p.m., and enrollment counselors will be available to help seniors complete their Tennessee Promise applications and college applications.

Pizza will be provided. The campus is located at 701 Briarcliff Avenue.

The event is designed to encourage students to enroll in Tennessee Promise, the state’s new program that provides two years of community college or technical school tuition-free for any student graduating from a Tennessee high school.

The deadline to apply for the Tennessee Promise is Nov. 1. [Read more…]

Filed Under: College, Education, K-12, Top Stories Tagged With: college application, Drive to 55, Goff Health Sciences and Technology Building, high school seniors, Maria Gonzales, Oak Ridge, Roane State Community College, RSCC, Scholarship Saturday, Tennessee Promise

Street painting festival needs artists, sponsors

Posted at 1:26 am September 18, 2014
By Carolyn Krause Leave a Comment

2013 Oak Ridge Street Painting Festival

Winning chalk painting from the 2013 Oak Ridge Street Painting Festival. (Submitted photo)

 

Artists of all ages will “paint” sidewalk squares with chalk after community supporters “buy” squares by writing checks. In these ways, the 15th annual Oak Ridge Street Painting Festival can be a big fundraising success, organizers say.

In addition, participants in this event can help improve East Tennessee’s economy by giving students the chance to learn valuable technical skills that companies require.

Artists and sponsors are needed for the 15th annual Oak Ridge Street Painting Festival. It will be held Saturday, October 4 (the rain day is on Sunday, Oct. 5), at the Oak Ridge Branch Campus of Roane State Community College, 701 Briarcliff Avenue.

The purpose of the festival, organized and sponsored by the Rotary Club of Oak Ridge, is to raise funds for scholarships for Roane State students. The festival is also a competition for the artists; first-prize winners in a variety of categories and the People’s Choice award winner will get $50 cash awards. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Arts, College, Community, Education, Entertainment, Nonprofits, Top Stories, Uncategorized Tagged With: artists, Melinda Hillman, Oak Ridge Street Painting Festival, Roane State Community College, Roane State Foundation, Rotary Club of Oak Ridge, scholarships, street painting festival, students

ABA re-approves Roane State’s paralegal studies program

Posted at 1:12 am September 18, 2014
By Roane State Community College Leave a Comment

The American Bar Association House of Delegates has re-approved the Roane State Community College Paralegal Studies program.

The re-approval successfully concludes a two-year self-evaluation of the program by the college.

“I am pleased that the ABA has re-approved our program,” said Ken Yager, director of the program. “Re-approval is a designation signifying the college’s adherence to the highest academic standards and ABA requirements. Graduates of our program are fully prepared to enter the workforce.”

The paralegal studies program, which consistently has a 100 percent job placement rate, was first approved by the ABA in 2005. The ABA reapproval lasts through August 2019. [Read more…]

Filed Under: College, Education, Front Page News Tagged With: ABA, American Bar Association, Ken Yager, paralegal, paralegal studies, paralegal studies program, Roane State Community College, RSCC, self-evaluation

New RSCC-ORICL lecture series opens with Thursday talk on Lincoln

Posted at 11:36 pm September 17, 2014
By Carolyn Krause Leave a Comment

James L. "Jamie" Cotton Jr.

James L. “Jamie” Cotton Jr.

Roane State Community College and the Oak Ridge Institute for Continued Learning are jointly launching a free intergenerational lecture series open to the public.

James L. “Jamie” Cotton Jr., author of the book “The Greatest Speech, Ever: The Remarkable Story of Abraham Lincoln and His Gettysburg Address,” will give the first lecture in the inaugural series at 3:30 p.m. Thursday in the lecture room in the new Goff Health Sciences and Technology building on RSCC’s Oak Ridge campus.

The lecture, titled “Abraham Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address: The Greatest Speech, Ever” will be preceded by refreshments at 3 p.m in the new building’s lobby. It will be followed at 4:30 p.m. by an optional tour of the Goff Health Sciences and Technology building.

The lecturers selected will appeal to multiple generations, including Roane State students and the more than 400 retirees who take ORICL classes in RSCC’s Coffey-McNally building on the Oak Ridge campus off Briarcliff Avenue.

ORICL will supplement RSCC’s budget for a lecture series with funds from the John Million Bequest made to ORICL two years ago.

The opening lecture will take the place of ORICL’s fall kick-off. Catalogs and forms will be available for those wishing to register for classes for ORICL’s fall semester, which begins Sept. 22.

Judge Cotton has served as judge for the General Sessions court in Scott County since 1990. He received the Tennessee Award of Merit for his work in the prevention of teenage substance abuse and the Tennessee Medical Association Community Service Award for his leadership in the prevention of domestic violence.

He is a member of the adjunct faculty of Roane State Community College, where he lectures on Lincoln and the law. Judge Cotton is donating profits from all direct sales of his book to two charities—Court Appointed Special Advocates (CASA) for children and the Scott County Christian Care Center.

The late Howard H. Baker Jr.—U.S. senator from Tennessee, chief of staff to President Ronald Reagan and ambassador to Japan—wrote these words in a preface in the book: “Judge Cotton’s book is not only a fascinating and scholarly assessment of the Gettysburg Address and its impact on America but also an absorbing look into Abraham Lincoln’s life—this is a must read for anyone interested in America’s history.”

Thomas Mackie, director of the Abraham Lincoln Library and Museum at Lincoln Memorial University in Harrogate, wrote that the book “demonstrates that Lincoln’s mythic Gettysburg Address continues to be required reading for American citizenship. We are reminded that this very brief but well-crafted speech defines our ideals and national purpose.”

Filed Under: College, Education, Front Page News Tagged With: Abraham Lincoln, Gettysburg Address, James L. "Jamie" Cotton Jr., John Million Bequest, lecture series, Oak Ridge Institute for Continued Learning, ORICL, Roane State Community College, RSCC, The Greatest Speech Ever: The Remarkable Story of Abraham Lincoln and His Gettysburg Address

UT engineering students help ORNL, Local Motors print drivable 3D car

Posted at 12:22 am September 17, 2014
By University of Tennessee 3 Comments

3D Car

John Rogers, co-founder and CEO of Local Motors, left, and Douglas Woods, president of the Association for Manufacturing Technology, drive away from the International Manufacturing Technology Show in Chicago over the weekend in a car printed with the help of UT students. (Photo courtesy UT)

 

KNOXVILLE—The only “car” that most people associate with printers is a “car-tridge” of ink, but that may soon change thanks in part to several students at the University of Tennessee in Knoxville.

UT, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Local Motors, Cincinnati Incorporated, and Oak Ridge Associated Universities teamed up to print a working, drivable car over the weekend at the International Manufacturing Technology Show in Chicago.

The Strati 3D, officially produced by Local Motors, which has an office on Market Square in Knoxville, highlighted the show and placed what sounds like a product of science fiction firmly in the realm of reality.

“This brand-new process disrupts the manufacturing status quo,” said John B. Rogers Jr., chief executive officer of Local Motors. “It changes the consumer experience and proves that a car can be born in an entirely different way.” [Read more…]

Filed Under: College, Education, Oak Ridge Associated Universities, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Top Stories, U.S. Department of Energy Tagged With: 3D car, 3D printer, Aaron Young, additive manufacturing, Alex Roschli, Andrew Messing, Association for Manufacturing Technology, Cincinnati Incorporated, Craig Blue, Douglas Woods, International Manufacturing Technology Show, James Earle, John Rogers, Kyle Goodrick, Local Motors, Lonnie Love, Manufacturing Demonstration Facility, MDF, Oak Ridge Associated Universities, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, ORNL, Strati 3D, Taylor Eighmy, U.S. Department of Energy, University of Tennessee, UT, Volkswagen

Lunch with League: tnAchieves paves path to higher education

Posted at 12:17 pm September 15, 2014
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

Graham Thomas

Graham Thomas

Graham Thomas, tnAchieves director of community partnerships, will be the guest speaker at Lunch with the League at noon Tuesday, September 16, in the Social Hall of the Oak Ridge Unitarian Universalist Church, located at 1500 Oak Ridge Turnpike.

tnAchieves, a partnering organization to Governor Bill Haslam’s Tennessee Promise, serves primarily first-generation, low-income students in an effort to increase this population’s likelihood of earning a college credential. While the funding provided by Tennessee Promise is critical to increased post-secondary access, tnAchieves data confirms that working with a mentor further enhances a student’s likelihood of entering the post-secondary pipeline, a press release said. In fact, the University of Tennessee’s Center for Business and Economic Research found that students participating with tnAchieves are nearly 21 percent more likely to enter college. [Read more…]

Filed Under: College, Community, Education, Front Page News, K-12 Tagged With: Bill Haslam, college, Graham Thomas, League of Women Voters of Oak Ridge, Lunch with the League, mentor, mentoring, Oak Ridge Unitarian Universalist Church, Tennessee Promise, tnAchieves

Gov. Haslam, Bredesen to discuss Amendment 2 at UT on Wednesday

Posted at 11:34 am September 15, 2014
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

Governor Bill Haslam

Bill Haslam

Tennessee Governor Bill Haslam and former Governor Phil Bredesen will discuss a constitutional amendment that could affect the judicial system during a Wednesday celebration of Constitution Day at the University of Tennessee.

Amendment 2 to the Tennessee Constitution will be on the ballot in November. It proposes new checks and balances to the governor’s appointment of Supreme Court and intermediate appellate court judges. It also protects the rights of Tennesseans to vote to retain or replace those judges in retention elections, UT said in a press release.

Haslam and Bredesen will discuss the amendment at 2 p.m. Wednesday in the Toyota Auditorium of the Howard H. Baker Jr. Center for Public Policy. The discussion will be moderated by Doug Blaze, dean of UT’s College of Law.

It’s part of the Baker Center’s celebration of Constitution Day on Wednesday. Free and open to the public, the day’s events will also include: [Read more…]

Filed Under: College, Education, Government, State, Top Stories Tagged With: Amendment 1, Amendment 2, appellate court, Baker Center, Bill Haslam, College of Law, Constitution, Constitution Day, constitutional amendment, Doug Blaze, Howard H. Baker Jr. Center for Public Policy, judges, Mary English, Phil Bredesen, retention elections, Supreme Court, U.S. Constitution, University of Tennessee, UT

UT’s Medal of Honor involvement very special for grad student and her dad

Posted at 11:20 am September 15, 2014
By University of Tennessee Leave a Comment

Peter and Laura Lemon at Medal of Honor Convention

Medal of Honor recipient Peter Lemon, on the right, sits next to his daughter, Laura Lemon, a University of Tennessee doctoral student. They are surrounded by UT public relations students, some of whom are in Laura Lemon’s class. (Photos courtesy UT)

 

KNOXVILLE—Graduate teaching associate Laura Lemon found herself in an interesting spot at last week’s Medal of Honor Town Hall at the University of Tennessee in Knoxville.

On one side of her sat her public relations students, eagerly taking notes to write a press release about the event. On the other side sat her father, Medal of Honor recipient Peter Lemon.

A doctoral student, Laura Lemon said her involvement with UT’s Medal of Honor Project began last year when she went to Assistant Professor Nick Geidner’s office for help in one of his classes that she was taking.

Geidner directs the Medal of Honor Project, which is an award-winning service-learning collaboration between UT’s School of Journalism and Electronic Media and the 2014 Medal of Honor Convention, held last week in Knoxville. (It included a Town Hall Forum in Oak Ridge on Friday.) Through the project, students produced written, audio, and video pieces related to the convention. Although the convention is over, the project will continue sharing stories about Medal of Honor recipients and become a model for other universities that want to partner with future conventions. [Read more…]

Filed Under: College, Education, Federal, Government, Top Stories Tagged With: Afghanistan, Clinton Romesha, Donald "Doc" Ballard, Laura Lemon, Medal of Honor, Medal of Honor Convention, Medal of Honor Project, Medal of Honor Town Hall, Nick Geidner, Peter Lemon, School of Journalism and Electronic Media, Taliban, U.S. Army, University of Tennessee, UT, Vietnam

DOE program funds alloy research led by UT; ORNL collaborates

Posted at 3:40 pm September 11, 2014
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

Haixuan Xu

Haixuan Xu

KNOXVILLE—An international research team led by an assistant professor at the University of Tennessee in Knoxville has received a grant to help with work involving a key component of nuclear reactors.

The U.S. Department of Energy grant is worth $800,000 over three years, and it has been awarded to UT Assistant Professor Haixuan Xu. It’s part of the Nuclear Energy University Programs funding and will be used to work on a pair of particular steel alloys, a press release said.

“Getting support on this will allow us to investigate and understand the defect evolution in these materials,” said Xu, of the UT Department of Materials Science and Engineering. “What we hope to gain is fundamental insight into the effects of radiation on the alloys so that we can better predict and detect how they will break down over time and adjust the materials accordingly.”

The alloys in question would be used in sodium-cooled reactors. Xu’s research is important because little is known about how the materials stand up to high levels of radiation over time. [Read more…]

Filed Under: College, Education, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Top Stories, U.S. Department of Energy Tagged With: College of Engineering, Department of Material Science and Engineering, Department of Nuclear Engineering, Haixuan Xu, Kurt Sickafus, NEUP, Nuclear Energy University Programs, nuclear reactors, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, ORNL, radiation, sodium-cooled reactors, steel alloys, U.S. Department of Energy, University of Lille, University of Tennessee, University of Wisconsin, UT

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