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Cheatham Moves Up As Dean - Middle Tennessee State University

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The Year in Review<br />

by Richard Detmer<br />

Big news<br />

from the department<br />

is that we<br />

were able to hire<br />

three great new<br />

faculty for fall<br />

2002! Openings<br />

were created by<br />

Dr. Nancy Wahl’s<br />

resignation and Dr. Tom <strong>Cheatham</strong>’s<br />

promotion to dean, plus a new<br />

position. It seemed as if our search<br />

process lasted forever, and in fact<br />

it did take two years and consumed<br />

much time and energy as we interviewed<br />

many candidates who<br />

turned out not to fit well with our<br />

department. We were delighted<br />

when Dr. Suk Seo, Dr. Medha Sarkar,<br />

and Dr. Joseph Driscoll applied<br />

late in the search process, and<br />

they turned out to be perfect for<br />

us. More about them appears elsewhere<br />

in this newsletter.<br />

One of our successes in 2001-<br />

2002 was that Dr. Jungsoon Yoo<br />

was promoted to full professor.<br />

Congratulations, Professor Yoo!<br />

Our redesigned Web site went<br />

online in December 2002. Dr. Detmer<br />

built it using Dreamweaver.<br />

Check it out at www.mtsu.edu/<br />

~csdept.<br />

Since our last newsletter we<br />

have offered two new graduate<br />

cont. on p. 2<br />

<strong>Cheatham</strong> <strong>Moves</strong> <strong>Up</strong> <strong>As</strong> <strong>Dean</strong><br />

by Judy Hankins<br />

In our last newsletter we reported<br />

that Tom <strong>Cheatham</strong> was serving as interim<br />

associate dean for the College of<br />

Basic and Applied Sciences during the<br />

2000-2001 academic year. A search was<br />

being conducted for a new dean and<br />

associate dean. The search was not complete<br />

at the end of summer 2001, so Tom<br />

was asked to step up and become interim<br />

dean for 2001-2002. During that year,<br />

Tom decided to apply for the permanent<br />

dean’s position. The pool of candidates<br />

included several talented external candidates<br />

who were interviewed along with<br />

Tom. In spring 2002, the search committee<br />

announced that Tom<br />

would be dean of Basic<br />

and Applied Sciences.<br />

Tom has a long history<br />

in education. He obtained<br />

his bachelor of<br />

science degree at Campbellsville<br />

<strong>University</strong> in<br />

Kentucky in 1966. He<br />

received the master of<br />

science degree in 1968<br />

and the Ph.D. in 1971<br />

from the <strong>University</strong> of<br />

Kentucky. He taught<br />

mathematics and computer<br />

science at Samford<br />

<strong>University</strong> in Birmingham,<br />

Alabama, from 1971 to<br />

1980. In 1980, he accepted a position in<br />

the Department of Computer Science at<br />

Western Kentucky <strong>University</strong>, where he<br />

taught computer science until 1990,<br />

when he became chair of MTSU’s<br />

Computer Science Department. During<br />

his years as chair (1990– 1998), the<br />

department was first accredited by the<br />

Computer Science Accrediting Board; the<br />

Student Advisory Board and the Corpor-<br />

ate Advisory Board were formed; the<br />

local chapter of <strong>Up</strong>silon Pi Epsilon (UPE,<br />

the honorary computer society) was<br />

formed; and many other changes and<br />

accomplishments positioned the department<br />

to become one of the most soughtafter<br />

institutions in <strong>Tennessee</strong> for computer<br />

scientists.<br />

Teaching has always been a big part<br />

of Tom’s life, and he has committed<br />

much energy and time to be an inspiring<br />

teacher. In 1987, he was selected as<br />

Western Kentucky <strong>University</strong>’s Outstand-<br />

ing Teacher, an honor he still cherishes.<br />

MTSU computer science alumni still comment<br />

about how instrumental he has<br />

been in their lives (see Spotlight on an<br />

Alumnus in this newsletter). This semester,<br />

Tom has reentered the classroom for<br />

the first time in two years, teaching<br />

Computer Science I. It was great to pass<br />

by his classroom and see him engaging<br />

the students in learning.<br />

cont. on p. 2


2<br />

The Year in Review…<br />

classes. In summer 2001, Dr. Detmer<br />

taught a class in functional programming<br />

language theory. In summer<br />

2002, Dr. Li taught a class in mobile<br />

robotics. The latter was much more<br />

popular than the former! Although not a<br />

new class, Dr. Untch offered our senior/<br />

graduate software testing class in summer<br />

2002.<br />

Most of our classes continue to be<br />

filled to capacity, but overall enrollments<br />

are slightly down. The main reason<br />

is that classroom capacity has declined.<br />

Last year there was a major<br />

campus effort to replace old classroom<br />

furniture, and the department got nice<br />

new desks and chairs. However, because<br />

of a change in fire codes, the<br />

number of seats in each classroom had<br />

to be reduced as they were refurbished.<br />

We were unable to add enough<br />

sections to compensate for the smaller<br />

seating capacity.<br />

There is also a national trend<br />

toward decreasing numbers of computer<br />

science majors. This is happening at<br />

least partially because the dot-com bust<br />

has made jobs in computing more difficult<br />

to find. Although most schools<br />

reported declining numbers of majors<br />

as early as two years ago, the trend just<br />

hit MTSU this year—our count of 394<br />

majors is the lowest since 1997. Fall<br />

2001 had the highest-ever number at<br />

457. Computer science being the challenging<br />

discipline that it is, our number<br />

of graduates has always been smaller<br />

than one might expect from the number<br />

of majors, but so far these counts have<br />

continued to show slow increases.<br />

There were 35 bachelor’s and 13 master’s<br />

graduates in 2001-2002.<br />

The department is dealing with<br />

cramped quarters and budget uncertainty.<br />

However, we still produce topquality<br />

graduates that we’re proud to<br />

send out to be computing professionals.<br />

�<br />

Editor: Judith A. Hankins<br />

Editorial <strong>As</strong>sistant:<br />

Michelle Higdon<br />

Layout: MTSU Publications and<br />

Graphics<br />

Printing: MTSU Printing Services<br />

The Internet at MTSU<br />

by Richard Detmer<br />

In 1991, Professor Al<br />

Cripps received a National<br />

Science Foundation grant for a<br />

56kbps link to the Internet via<br />

SURAnet (Southeastern Universities<br />

Research <strong>As</strong>sociation<br />

Network). Through Dr.<br />

Cripps’s efforts, MTSU<br />

received a class B<br />

address space, now virtually<br />

unobtainable. Originally,<br />

MTSU reached the Internet via<br />

a leased phone link to Vanderbilt<br />

<strong>University</strong>.<br />

Internet access has improved each<br />

year at MTSU. There are now several T1<br />

lines connecting the campus to the<br />

world. The on-campus standard today is<br />

100 Mbps switched Ethernet to the desktop,<br />

providing a full 100 Mbps dedicated<br />

connection to the campus data network.<br />

A gigabit switch provides even faster<br />

connections within the Computer Science<br />

Department itself.<br />

In 2002, Dr. Richard Detmer, department<br />

chair, received another NSF grant,<br />

this time to provide MTSU with a highperformance<br />

network connection. A highspeed<br />

connection to Abilene, the network<br />

that is the backbone for the Internet2<br />

consortium, was established in<br />

February 2003. Abilene is a high-speed<br />

communications network separate from<br />

the “regular” Internet. The connection<br />

is the result of collaboration<br />

between MTSU departments, MTSU’s<br />

<strong>Cheatham</strong> <strong>Moves</strong> <strong>Up</strong>…<br />

Information Technology<br />

Division, and Vanderbilt <strong>University</strong>.<br />

Internet2 is a consortium led by 200<br />

universities working in partnership with<br />

industry and government to develop and<br />

deploy advanced network applications<br />

and technologies, accelerating the creation<br />

of tomorrow’s Internet. Internet2 is<br />

recreating the partnership among academia,<br />

industry, and government that fostered<br />

today’s Internet in its infancy. The<br />

primary goals of Internet2 are to<br />

• create a leading-edge network<br />

capability for the national<br />

research community;<br />

In addition to Tom’s duties as dean and his teaching, he has been extremely active<br />

in grant writing. He (together with other co-PIs) has received over $1.2 million in<br />

grants for projects ranging from NSF CSEMs grants to a U.S. Department of Education<br />

Student Support Services grant. He has always been active in research, and since<br />

becoming dean of the college, things haven’t changed. He found time to publish<br />

(together with coauthor Ray Phillips) “Focused Recruiting and Mentoring of Faculty by<br />

Chairpersons” in the Proceedings of the Academic Chairpersons Eighteenth Annual<br />

Conference.<br />

In his leisure time, Tom enjoys a game of racquetball with his students and friends,<br />

going boating on the lake, and watching <strong>University</strong> of Kentucky basketball. The faculty<br />

in the department would like to say that we have appreciated all of Tom’s work for our<br />

<strong>University</strong> in the past, and we look forward to working with him in this new capacity in<br />

the future. Congratulations!! �


• enable revolutionary Internet<br />

applications; and<br />

• ensure the rapid transfer of<br />

new network services and<br />

applications to the broader<br />

Internet community.<br />

Generally, connectivity to Abilene is<br />

reserved for Internet2 members. Vanderbilt<br />

<strong>University</strong> is an Internet2 consortium<br />

member and has agreed to sponsor<br />

MTSU. Although MTSU will not initially be<br />

a consortium member, the partnership<br />

will allow MTSU to have high-speed, 45<br />

Mbps network access to all Internet2<br />

institutions and their sponsored partners.<br />

Four coprincipal investigators on the<br />

new NSF grant will use the high-performance<br />

network for research: Dr. Ralph<br />

Butler (computer science), Dr. Ngee-Sing<br />

Chong (chemistry), Dr. Preston J. Mac-<br />

Dougal (chemistry), and Dr. Zachary Sinkala<br />

(mathematics). <strong>As</strong> part of the proposal,<br />

the Information Technology<br />

Division created a network-engineering<br />

plan to integrate existing <strong>University</strong> network<br />

services with Internet2 connectivity.<br />

Everyone on campus has access to<br />

Internet2; it is not limited to projects<br />

identified for the NSF grant. While commercial<br />

Internet traffic is prohibited<br />

from using the Internet2 connection (Internet2<br />

cannot be used as a backup for<br />

commercial Internet connectivity), there<br />

are no mandated restrictions for traffic<br />

between connected Internet2 institutions.<br />

Data travels on either the commercial<br />

Internet or Internet2 based on<br />

best performance calculations. End users<br />

will not see any difference, only increased<br />

performance. By having a direct<br />

connection to Internet2 members and<br />

their sponsored partners, important research<br />

information can be exchanged<br />

with minimal delay and without the possibility<br />

of interference from commercial,<br />

Internet-based hack attacks. �<br />

SPOTLIGHT ON FACULTY<br />

by Judy Hankins<br />

Ralph Butler joined the department as a professor<br />

in fall 2000. Ralph was born and raised in<br />

Columbia, <strong>Tennessee</strong>. He received his B.S. degree from<br />

<strong>Tennessee</strong> Technological <strong>University</strong> and worked for<br />

three years as a data systems analyst at AT&T, where<br />

his work included all areas of development of large<br />

software systems, including user interfaces, system<br />

design, implementation, and testing. Next, Ralph<br />

received the M.S. and Ph.D. from the <strong>University</strong> of<br />

Missouri–Rolla and joined the Department of Computer<br />

Science at the <strong>University</strong> of North Florida. While there,<br />

he was a research associate at the Supercomputer<br />

Computations Research Institute from 1994 to 1996.<br />

He also became a research associate for Argonne<br />

National Labs and is classified as an STA Research Scientist with Argonne today.<br />

Researchers from all over the world visit Argonne regularly to work on a variety of topics.<br />

This work has allowed Ralph to collaborate and work on many interesting problems<br />

which he invariably brings to the classroom to enhance his teaching.<br />

Since 1999, Ralph has served as a consulting research scientist with Integrated<br />

Genomics. His efforts there led to the development of software to perform parallel<br />

searches of genomic data and programs that attempt to detect new genes in genomes.<br />

Ralph has an established research record in the areas of parallel processing, automated<br />

reasoning, logic programming, and computational biology. He is involved in a<br />

number of research projects in both parallel processing and computational biology and<br />

has published more than 30 papers in these fields.<br />

In the three years that Ralph has been a computer science faculty member, he has<br />

had a big impact on the department and the <strong>University</strong>. Since coming to MTSU, he has<br />

taught undergraduate and graduate courses in operating systems, Python programming<br />

language, and algebraic and symbolic manipulation. He serves as faculty supervisor to<br />

students working on the departmental Beowulf cluster. He has served on several<br />

departmental and university committees, including a task force on biotechnology. The<br />

goal of the task force was to develop relationships with external agencies and corporations<br />

regarding research in biotechnology and to develop interdisciplinary research<br />

areas within the college which can pursue external funding. This work may eventually<br />

lead to an interdisciplinary major in bioinformatics. Ralph served as co-PI on an NSF<br />

grant that brought Internet2 to MTSU’s campus (see the article on p. 2).<br />

Ralph and wife Tracey live in Murfreesboro. He and his children love to “play” with<br />

Lego MindStorm kits, and they have held several experiments to learn more about Lego<br />

robots. Ralph has an instrument rating for flying but hasn’t gotten to fly much in recent<br />

years.<br />

Ralph’s many areas of expertise and his willingness to share his knowledge have<br />

been invaluable to the department and <strong>University</strong>. Thank you, Ralph, for all of your<br />

efforts on behalf of the department. �<br />

3


4<br />

Computer Science Welcomes Three New Faculty<br />

by Judy Hankins<br />

We have been extremely fortunate<br />

to hire three talented faculty in fall<br />

2002, and we want to introduce them.<br />

Joseph Driscoll, assistant professor,<br />

moved here from Phoenix, Arizona,<br />

but is originally from <strong>Tennessee</strong>. Joe and<br />

wife, Alice, are living in Smyrna. Prior to<br />

coming to MTSU, he<br />

was a software developer<br />

at Genetics<br />

Squared, where he<br />

researched and reported<br />

on the functional<br />

genomics sector<br />

of the bioinformatics<br />

industry. He<br />

developed software for the analysis of<br />

genetic and other types of data. He also<br />

used neural networks, statistics, and<br />

evolutionary algorithms to analyze highdimensionality<br />

data sets.<br />

He received his M.S. and Ph.D. in<br />

electrical engineering from Vanderbilt<br />

<strong>University</strong> in 1998 and 2000, respectively.<br />

Dr. Driscoll’s research interests include<br />

intelligent robotics, evolutionary algorithms,<br />

and artificial intelligence. He has<br />

been a researcher in Vanderbilt’s Intelligent<br />

Robotics Laboratory, at the Electrotechnical<br />

Laboratory in Tsukuba, Japan,<br />

and at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center<br />

in Huntsville, Alabama. He was an<br />

instructor and teaching assistant at Vanderbilt,<br />

teaching in the departments of<br />

electrical engineering and computer science.<br />

Since coming to MTSU, Joe has been<br />

extremely active. He has taught CSCI<br />

3160 (<strong>As</strong>sembly Language) and CSCI<br />

4350/5350 (Artificial Intelligence). He<br />

has served on the undergraduate curriculum<br />

committee and the institutional<br />

effectiveness committee. He gave a<br />

presentation on evolutionary robotics to<br />

MTSU’s local ACM chapter and has served<br />

on two master’s student committees. He<br />

has submitted an invited paper to the<br />

Genetic Programming: Theory and Practice<br />

Workshop held at the <strong>University</strong> of<br />

Michigan and has been working with Cen<br />

Li to develop a robotics lab to be used to<br />

enhance teaching and to further research<br />

activities. In spring 2003, he entered the<br />

Faculty Leadership Academy. The purpose<br />

of the academy is to develop and enhance<br />

the leadership potential of faculty<br />

who will be carrying MTSU’s academic<br />

programs into the next decade.<br />

Medha Sarkar finished her B.S. in<br />

computer science and her M.A. (master’s<br />

in computer application) at Sardar Patel<br />

<strong>University</strong> in India. She finished her M.S.<br />

and Ph.D. at<br />

Queen’s <strong>University</strong><br />

in Kingston,<br />

Canada.<br />

Prior to coming<br />

to MTSU as<br />

an assistant professor,<br />

Medha<br />

worked at the<br />

Department of<br />

BioMedical Informatics,<br />

Vanderbilt <strong>University</strong> Medical<br />

Center, as a software engineer. Her areas<br />

of interest are software engineering,<br />

programming languages, rewriting systems,<br />

and graph manipulations.<br />

Medha has taken responsibility for<br />

CSCI 4700/5700 (Software Engineering),<br />

and has taught Computer Science<br />

Orientation. She served on the graduate<br />

curriculum committee, the student advisory<br />

committee, and the institutional<br />

effectiveness committee. She presented<br />

“Source to Source Transformations” to<br />

MTSU’s local ACM Chapter. She has also<br />

been preparing a journal article to be<br />

submitted for publication.<br />

Medha was born and raised (except<br />

for a few years in the United <strong>State</strong>s) in<br />

Gujarat, India. She is fluent in four languages—Gujarati<br />

(her mother tongue),<br />

Hindi (the Indian national language),<br />

Bengali (her husband’s mother tongue),<br />

and English. Her husband is a faculty<br />

member in the Department of Mechanical<br />

Engineering, Vanderbilt <strong>University</strong>.<br />

They have a four-year-old son, Arpan.<br />

Medha loves to read, travel, and cook.<br />

Recently she has found that audiobooks<br />

make her commute to Murfreesboro from<br />

Brentwood quite enjoyable.<br />

Suk Jai Seo comes to us from the<br />

<strong>University</strong> of Alabama in Huntsville,<br />

where she not only received her M.A.<br />

and Ph.D. degrees in computer science<br />

but also taught for five years. Her teaching<br />

experience included courses in introductory<br />

programming in C/C++, data<br />

structures, discrete structures, and<br />

analysis of algorithms. Suk’s areas of<br />

interest include graph theory, algorithms,<br />

and complexity as well as computer<br />

graphics.


At MTSU she has taught Computer<br />

Science I as well as a graduate course<br />

(Symbolic and Algebraic Manipulation).<br />

She is scheduled to teach a senior/graduate<br />

course on a special topic, “Object<br />

Oriented Design,” in the summer of 2003<br />

and computer<br />

graphics in the<br />

fall of 2003. She<br />

has also served<br />

on the library<br />

committee and<br />

the undergraduate<br />

curriculum<br />

committee.<br />

Suk is active in<br />

research. She<br />

works with Drs.<br />

R. Luo, Donald Nelson, and Xiaoya Zha in<br />

the Mathematical Sciences Department<br />

through a weekly seminar on graph theory<br />

at MTSU. She is also working on several<br />

graph theory research problems with<br />

Dr. Peter Slater at UAH. The problems<br />

include “Couple Labeled Domination in<br />

Graphs” and “Competitive Optimization<br />

Parameters in Graphs.” She published a<br />

paper with coauthor Dr. <strong>As</strong>hok Amin entitled<br />

“On Extremal Oriented Trees” in<br />

Congressus Numerantium and is working<br />

on a paper with Dr. Amin entitled “Optimal<br />

Acyclic Orientations of a Graph” with<br />

plans to submit it to the Journal of<br />

Graph Theory.<br />

Suk is originally from Korea, where<br />

four of her five siblings live. One of her<br />

sisters resides in Seattle, Washington.<br />

Before moving to the United <strong>State</strong>s, Suk<br />

worked in secondary education for seven<br />

years.<br />

Suk’s husband, C.H., is president of<br />

Stellar Corporation. Suk and C.H. have<br />

been househunting and expect to be<br />

homeowners in Murfreesboro soon. They<br />

have two children, both attending Harvard<br />

<strong>University</strong>. Their daughter, Aram, is<br />

a freshman majoring in psychology and<br />

their son, Sung, is a senior majoring in<br />

economics.<br />

Suk loves to play tennis and has<br />

recently taken up golf. She commented,<br />

“I am very happy to be working in the<br />

friendliest department in the South.<br />

Although I am new, I already feel at<br />

home!” �<br />

One Window Closes…<br />

Sharon Huffman began as a temporary<br />

employee in the fall of 1997 and<br />

became a full-time department secretary<br />

in the summer of 1998. Sharon’s husband,<br />

David, was pastor of St. Mark’s<br />

Methodist Church in Murfreesboro. During<br />

their last year here, David was diagnosed<br />

with Parkinson’s disease and, as a result,<br />

retirement came a few years earlier than<br />

planned. Before receiving the news<br />

about his health, they had bought a<br />

retirement home in North Carolina.<br />

Sharon’s oldest daughter, Heather, is a<br />

real estate agent there and found them<br />

the perfect home right in her neighborhood!<br />

(Was that a coincidence or what?)<br />

Sharon and David had to leave their<br />

youngest daughter, Hillary, and her family<br />

in the Nashville area to make the<br />

move to North Carolina. Sharon has<br />

reported they love having their own<br />

home to tend to, and she’s enjoying<br />

babysitting her grandchildren. Sharon<br />

was cared for by many and will be<br />

missed. We wish her well and look forward<br />

to hearing from her.<br />

…Another Opens<br />

The CS Help File by Richard Detmer<br />

Every time we put together a newsletter<br />

it seems that <strong>Tennessee</strong> is having a<br />

budget crisis. This year is no exception,<br />

and the department really appreciates<br />

financial help from alumni and friends.<br />

From April 2001 to February 2003,<br />

the MTSU Foundation received almost<br />

$19,000 in contributions for the department.<br />

These gifts, from 19 individuals or<br />

organizations, have been designated for<br />

a variety of purposes. Some, like major<br />

donations from Square D, are to be<br />

awarded immediately in scholarships.<br />

Some are used to increase the principal<br />

for scholarship funds. Still other funds<br />

are designated for the department<br />

Enrichment Fund, which is used in a variety<br />

of ways to enhance quality. All contributions<br />

are greatly appreciated.<br />

I realize that not all contributions<br />

are monetary. Thanks to everyone who<br />

In the summer of 2002, Dianne White<br />

assumed the position of full-time secretary<br />

to replace Sharon Huffman. Dianne<br />

and her husband, Jeff, have two sons,<br />

Jared and Brad. Jared is a junior here at<br />

MTSU majoring in<br />

athletic training.<br />

Brad is a junior at<br />

Riverdale High<br />

School. Dianne’s<br />

husband<br />

is senior pastor at<br />

First Church of<br />

God. (Being a pastor’s<br />

wife seems to<br />

have been a prerequisite for this job!)<br />

She desires to live by the guideline of<br />

“whatever your hand finds to do, do it<br />

with all your might.” We welcome<br />

Dianne to the department! �<br />

supports us in any way—serving on the<br />

Corporate Advisory Board, speaking to a<br />

class, hosting a field trip, offering expertise,<br />

or just staying in touch.<br />

Here is a list of known contributors<br />

from April 20, 2001, through February<br />

23, 2003. I apologize if I have accidentally<br />

omitted your name. Blame it on the<br />

computer, but please let me know, too!<br />

Mary Adams<br />

BellSouth<br />

Telecommunications<br />

Richard C. Detmer<br />

Gayle Helton Duke<br />

Linda Ann Edwards<br />

Joanne Marie Elston<br />

Fidelity Investments<br />

J. C. Hankins<br />

Judith Hankins<br />

Johannes Johannsson<br />

Larry Randall Lane<br />

MTSU Student<br />

Chapter of ACM<br />

Brenda Parker<br />

Square D Foundation<br />

Theresa Tang<br />

Nancy and Robert Wahl<br />

Jungsoon and Sung Yoo<br />

5


6<br />

Chairperson’s Book<br />

Used in <strong>As</strong>sembly<br />

Language Class<br />

by Richard Detmer<br />

Computer architecture, in the traditional<br />

definition, refers to the aspects of<br />

a computer that can be seen at the<br />

machine language/assembly language<br />

level: registers, memory (addressed multiple<br />

ways), and the computer’s instruction<br />

set. Introduction to 80x86 <strong>As</strong>sembly<br />

Language and Computer Architecture<br />

gives undergraduate students<br />

an introduction to<br />

computer architecture<br />

using basic Intel 80x86<br />

architecture as a concrete<br />

platform. The<br />

accompanying CD has<br />

a software package<br />

including Microsoft’s<br />

Macro <strong>As</strong>sembler, a<br />

linker that will generate<br />

32-bit flat memory model programs (the<br />

one with MASM won’t), and a Windows<br />

debugger for these programs. The debugger<br />

permits students to “see inside” the<br />

computer, watching how registers and<br />

memory change as instructions are executed.<br />

The software also includes a simple<br />

input/output package to facilitate<br />

string I/O, plus conversion of strings to<br />

integer format and integers to strings.<br />

This enables students to write “real”<br />

programs without worrying about operating<br />

system details.<br />

This book is the product of a long<br />

evolution including a 1990 book, Fundamentals<br />

of <strong>As</strong>sembly Language Programming<br />

Using the IBM PC and Compatibles,<br />

completed after Dr. Detmer arrived at<br />

MTSU in 1998 and published by Jones and<br />

Bartlett in 2001. Using Introduction to<br />

80x86 <strong>As</strong>sembly Language and Computer<br />

Architecture, students complete MTSU’s<br />

Introduction to <strong>As</strong>sembly Language<br />

course knowing basic 80x86 architecture,<br />

understanding how high-level languages<br />

are implemented at the machine level,<br />

and undoubtedly better appreciating the<br />

ease of use of high-level languages. �<br />

$50,000 in Equipment Stolen<br />

by Michelle Higdon and Richard Detmer<br />

Sometime between Friday, November<br />

30, and Sunday, December 2, 2001,<br />

$50,000 in equipment was stolen from<br />

the department.<br />

Chairperson Dr. Richard Detmer first<br />

noticed the theft as he entered the<br />

office on Monday, December 3, at<br />

approximately 7:30 a.m. and saw that<br />

the blinds on the window and office door<br />

had been closed. Shortly thereafter,<br />

department secretary Michelle Higdon<br />

entered the office. <strong>As</strong> part of the daily<br />

routine, Michelle began to unlock the key<br />

box. The lock fell out and Campus<br />

Security was called immediately. Dr. Detmer<br />

returned to the office after beginning<br />

his class to report stolen overhead<br />

projectors from KOM 321 and 323. The<br />

labs and other offices were also checked.<br />

Much to our dismay, the KOM 350 lab<br />

area had a missing overhead projector,<br />

and two quad processor computers were<br />

missing from our Beowulf cluster area.<br />

Each item stolen was valued at approximately<br />

$10,000.<br />

Campus police officers examined<br />

each area that was burglarized and took<br />

reports from various staff members.<br />

Student Advisory Board<br />

by Richard Detmer<br />

Each year, computer science faculty<br />

nominate students to the Student Advisory<br />

Board. The students are at all class<br />

levels, freshman through graduate. They<br />

meet with the chairperson and two other<br />

faculty members (Dr. Judy Hankins and<br />

Dr. Jungsoon Yoo during 2001-2002 and<br />

Dr. Medha Sarkar and Dr. Sung Yoo during<br />

2002-2003) twice during the academic<br />

year to gather opinions about what is<br />

being done well and what could be<br />

improved.<br />

The fall 2001 Student Advisory Board<br />

meeting was held November 30 at Dr.<br />

Detmer’s house. A chili supper preceded<br />

formal discussion. The spring 2002 meet-<br />

They also dusted<br />

for fingerprints.<br />

The Information<br />

Technology<br />

Division helped<br />

by getting three<br />

used overhead projectors mounted for<br />

use within a 24-hour period.<br />

There were similar thefts during this<br />

time in the Midgett Business Building and<br />

the Business and Aerospace Building that<br />

specifically involved overhead projectors.<br />

It was suggested that they were<br />

being used for home entertainment<br />

systems.<br />

Shortly thereafter, the executive vice<br />

president and provost’s office informed<br />

us that all stolen inventory would be<br />

replaced through state theft reimbursement<br />

monies. This was very good news!<br />

Since the burglary, everything stolen<br />

has been replaced with new equipment.<br />

To our knowledge, the thieves have not<br />

been caught. <strong>As</strong> a department, we are<br />

taking various measures to provide more<br />

security throughout our area as funds are<br />

available. �<br />

ing was held in Kirksey Old Main on April<br />

22. The students enjoyed their favorite<br />

food, pizza! During fall 2002 students<br />

again came to Dr. Detmer’s home on<br />

October 29, this time eating hamburgers<br />

and sharing their ideas.<br />

Issues discussed at the meetings<br />

ranged from lab/classroom physical environment<br />

to suggestions for new courses.<br />

Some questions are answered at the<br />

meetings and some issues are assigned to<br />

departmental committees for review and<br />

recommendations. The department welcomes<br />

this opportunity for valuable input<br />

from students. �


MTSU Student Chapter of ACM<br />

by Cen Li<br />

The student chapter of the <strong>As</strong>sociation<br />

for Computing Machinery (ACM)<br />

had two busy yet successful years. We<br />

held twelve meetings each year. These<br />

included informative talks, parties, and<br />

games. Thanks to Ms. Parker who drafted<br />

the invitation letter (including the top 10<br />

reasons for joining ACM). We had a<br />

record number of students join and all<br />

meetings were very well attended. We<br />

enjoyed pizza, drinks, and good talks,<br />

and door prizes were given out to lucky<br />

members as well. Most prizes were<br />

donated by faculty members. If you<br />

would like to donate any items that we<br />

can use as door prizes, please contact<br />

me, Ms. Parker, or any of our officers.<br />

In fall 2002, after three years of hard<br />

work, Dr. Jungsoon Yoo stepped down<br />

from the ACM advisor position. Ms.<br />

Parker and I became the new ACM advisors.<br />

At the same time, new ACM officers<br />

were elected. Scott Farr was elected<br />

president, Scott Hovis was elected vice<br />

president, Julian McBride was elected<br />

secretary, and Karen Soh and Naomi<br />

Philips were elected treasurers. John<br />

Lemon, who has served as president for<br />

the previous two years, was elected photographer.<br />

ACM organized the first Computer<br />

Science Jeopardy in September 2002.<br />

Four teams, each with three players,<br />

participated. The categories included CS<br />

History, CS Acronym, Operating System,<br />

Software Engineering, Artificial<br />

Intelligence, Famous People, and Famous<br />

<strong>University</strong>. Questions were submitted by<br />

faculty members in the department.<br />

Graduate assistant Jeff Anderson<br />

Michael Peters, Chris Stout, and Mike<br />

Vire were members of the winning team.<br />

In December 2002, ACM participated<br />

in the Toys for Tots program and donated<br />

more than 10 toys to boys and girls in<br />

the region.<br />

The ACM-sponsored .NET user group,<br />

led by John Lemon, held regular meetings<br />

throughout the year. The campuswide<br />

Microsoft.NET 2003 launch was held<br />

in the Tucker Theatre on March 26, 2003.<br />

Scott Farr, John Lemon, and Julian McBride<br />

<strong>As</strong> sponsor for the ACM student organization,<br />

I have enjoyed meeting and<br />

interacting with the students. We invite<br />

alumni to drop by any of our meetings.<br />

Meetings and contact information are<br />

posted on our Web site at www.mtsu.<br />

edu/~csacm. Our students are interested<br />

in meeting alumni and listening to their<br />

success and horror stories.�<br />

Corporate<br />

Advisory Board<br />

by Richard Detmer<br />

The Computer Science Department<br />

tries in many ways to keep up with what<br />

is happening in the world. For several<br />

years we have held a Corporate Advisory<br />

Board meeting each spring, welcoming<br />

this contact with our corporate representatives<br />

and sharing ideas with them.<br />

However, the number of people able to<br />

attend this dinner meeting has declined<br />

each year, and each year there have<br />

been “no-shows” and last-minute cancellations,<br />

so that it does not seem practical<br />

to continue the Corporate Advisory<br />

Board in this format.<br />

In 2003 we are launching a new<br />

effort to share ideas with our corporate<br />

friends. We propose to visit our board<br />

members’ work sites at mutually convenient<br />

times. Our delegation will come<br />

with two or three computer science faculty<br />

and with College of Basic and<br />

Applied Sciences <strong>Dean</strong> Tom <strong>Cheatham</strong><br />

(former department chairperson) if he is<br />

available. We will briefly tell corporate<br />

representatives what is new in the<br />

department. Mostly we want to listen<br />

and discover how we can work together<br />

to serve their needs. The format of the<br />

meeting is flexible. The key for us will<br />

be to continue getting corporate input<br />

about our programs, our graduates, and<br />

the needs of our corporate partners.<br />

With our other responsibilities, it will<br />

probably only be possible to schedule<br />

three or four of these visits each year.<br />

Please let Dr. Detmer know if you’re<br />

interested in participating in a Corporate<br />

Advisory Board with this new format. �<br />

7


8<br />

SPOTLIGHT ON STUDENTS<br />

UPE<br />

by Richard Detmer<br />

The Paul Hutcheson <strong>Tennessee</strong> Delta<br />

Chapter of <strong>Up</strong>silon Pi Epsilon (UPE) held<br />

its ninth annual initiation banquet in the<br />

James Union Building’s Hazlewood Dining<br />

Room Monday, April 15, 2002. John Lemon<br />

was elected to serve as the 2002-2003<br />

president and Julian McBride was elected<br />

to serve as vice president.<br />

To qualify for UPE membership<br />

• an undergraduate student must<br />

be a computer science major,<br />

must have completed at least 64<br />

hours of college credit with an<br />

overall grade point average (GPA)<br />

of at least 3.0, and must have<br />

completed at least 18 hours of<br />

computer science courses toward<br />

the major with a major GPA of at<br />

least 3.4<br />

• a graduate student must be a<br />

computer science major, must<br />

have completed at least 16 hours<br />

of graduate CS courses, and must<br />

have a GPA of at least 3.5 on all<br />

CS graduate work.<br />

In 2002, 21 students were invited to<br />

join UPE and 11 accepted the invitation.<br />

�<br />

High School<br />

Programming<br />

Contest<br />

by Mack Thweatt<br />

The 2002 Twenty-first Annual Computer<br />

Contest featured programming<br />

competition only. Teams from as far away<br />

as Memphis and a couple of counties in<br />

Kentucky competed. There were fewer<br />

teams overall than in years past, largely<br />

due to elimination of the Web competition.<br />

The final standings follow.<br />

1. Daviess County, Ky., Team #1<br />

2. Daviess County, Ky., Team #2<br />

3. Franklin County, Tenn., Team #1<br />

4. Margolin Hebrew Academy, Tenn.,<br />

Team #1<br />

5. Warren County, Ky.<br />

6. Margolin Hebrew Academy, Tenn.,<br />

Team #2<br />

7. Franklin County, Tenn., Team #2<br />

There will be no contest held in 2003. �<br />

Regional<br />

Programming<br />

Contest<br />

by Sung Yoo<br />

John Lemon, Julian McBride, and<br />

Michael Peters took fifth place in the<br />

2002 ACM programming contest held on<br />

November 2, 2002, at <strong>Tennessee</strong> Tech<br />

<strong>University</strong>. A second team of MTSU students<br />

consisting of James Hargis, Joseph<br />

Horton, and Justin Sunley took sixth<br />

place. Fourteen teams competed: MTSU’s<br />

two teams were joined by two from<br />

Austin Peay <strong>State</strong> <strong>University</strong>; two from<br />

<strong>Tennessee</strong> Tech; two from the <strong>University</strong><br />

of <strong>Tennessee</strong>–Knoxville; two from Western<br />

Kentucky <strong>University</strong>; and one each<br />

from Belmont <strong>University</strong>, Central Piedmont<br />

Community College, Union <strong>University</strong>,<br />

and the <strong>University</strong> of the South.<br />

<strong>Tennessee</strong> Tech (Team B) finished first.<br />

�<br />

Academic Awards Ceremony, Spring 2003<br />

Row 1 - Scott Farr, John Lemon, and Julian McBride<br />

Row 2 - Judy Hankins, Chad Lloyd, Brenda Parker, and Suk Jai Seo<br />

Row 3 - Tom <strong>Cheatham</strong>, Ray Johnston, Mack Thweatt, and Jungsoon Yoo


y Judy Hankins and Michelle Higdon<br />

In this section, we like to brag about<br />

our students’ accomplishments. Several<br />

have presented, published, won awards,<br />

and received scholarships. We have listed<br />

accomplishments of which we are aware.<br />

Each of these students is to be commended<br />

for his/her achievements.<br />

Jeff Anderson (M.S. expected in 2003)<br />

presented “Perl and CPAN” in spring 2003<br />

to the local chapter of ACM.<br />

Kay Anthony (B.S. ’98) presented “What<br />

I Have Learned Since Graduation—The<br />

Good, the Bad and the Ugly” in spring<br />

2003 to the local chapter of ACM.<br />

John Lemon (B.S. expected in 2003) participated<br />

in the Student Paper Competition<br />

at the ACM Mid-Southeast Conference<br />

in Gatlinburg, <strong>Tennessee</strong>, November<br />

2002. The title of John’s paper in the<br />

Bachelor Division was “Pinned Down? Try<br />

Emulation.”<br />

Chad Lloyd (M.S. expected in 2003) participated<br />

in the Student Paper Competition<br />

at the ACM Mid-Southeast Confer-<br />

ence in Gatlinburg, <strong>Tennessee</strong>, November<br />

2002. The title of Chad’s paper in the<br />

Graduate Division was “An Approach to<br />

Embedded Technology: Outside the Box.”<br />

Justin Milling (M.S. ’01), Brenda Parker,<br />

and Tom <strong>Cheatham</strong> published a paper<br />

titled “Using Technology to Teach Technology”<br />

that was presented at the Eighth<br />

Annual CCSC Central Plains Conference in<br />

Kansas City, Kansas, April 2002.<br />

Bradley Palmquist (B.S. ’02) participated<br />

in the Student Paper Competition at the<br />

ACM Mid-Southeast Conference in Gatlinburg,<br />

<strong>Tennessee</strong>, November 2002. The<br />

title of Brad’s paper in the Graduate<br />

Division was “Reduced Neighborhood<br />

Mutation Testing.” Brad won first place.<br />

Jon Price (B.S. ’97)<br />

published five<br />

papers in Visual<br />

Basic Developer:<br />

“True Love: A Match<br />

Made in Computer<br />

Heaven” (September<br />

2001); “Anticipating<br />

Entry<br />

2002 Scholarship and Award Winners<br />

Outstanding Freshman in Computer<br />

Science: Terrence Jamaal Locke and<br />

Desira Nicole Stover<br />

Outstanding Sophomore in Computer<br />

Science: Peter Joseph Speltz<br />

Outstanding Junior in Computer<br />

Science: Kimberly Anne Hatcher<br />

Outstanding Senior in Computer<br />

Science: John Thomas Grzegorczyk<br />

Nancy Wahl Computer Science Scholarship:<br />

Jennifer Lynne Dennison,<br />

Kimberly Anne Hatcher, Naomi<br />

Phillips, and Jessica Ellen Spies<br />

Computer Science Alumni Award:<br />

John K. Lemon<br />

Computer Science Scholarship Award:<br />

Fabian D. Story<br />

Paul H. Hutcheson Computer Science<br />

Graduate Award: Stephen Todd<br />

Kirkpatrick<br />

Square D Computer Science Scholarship:<br />

Charles Michael Baes, Patrick<br />

Joseph Flannigan, John Thomas<br />

Grzegorczyk, Christopher Ryan Hammonds,<br />

Kimberly Anne Hatcher, John<br />

K. Lemon, Terrence Jamaal Locke,<br />

Jeremy Brandon Mathes, Stephen<br />

Bradley Pennington, Joshua Lee<br />

Phillips, Stefan H. Pinson, Wade Eric<br />

Rohrbach, Peter Joseph Speltz,<br />

Timothy Wayne Stallman, Fabian D.<br />

Story, Desira Nicole Stover, Jason<br />

Nathaniel Wells, and Johnathan<br />

Lindley Williams<br />

Ronald E. McNair Scholar: Rhonda<br />

Suzanne Earl<br />

2002 Fall NSF CSEM Undergraduate<br />

Scholarship Recipients: Anhminh<br />

Phuong Do, Ray Charles Duke,<br />

BRAG CORNER<br />

Errors” (January 2002); “Making<br />

Connections” (February and March<br />

2002); “A Basic Lesson on Income Tax”<br />

(April 2002); and “Making a Combo<br />

Box Searchable” (May 2002).<br />

Brad Rudnik (M.S. expected in 2003),<br />

Thomas Naughton (M.S. ’00), Ralph<br />

Butler, and Chrisila Pettey published<br />

a paper titled “A Rapid Recovery<br />

Beowulf Platform” that was presented<br />

at the 15th International Conference<br />

on Systems Engineering in Las Vegas,<br />

Nevada, August 2002. The same four<br />

also published a paper titled “Simple<br />

Maintenance of Beowulf Clusters in an<br />

Academic Environment” that was presented<br />

at the Southeastern Consortium<br />

for Computing Sciences in Colleges<br />

Sixteenth Annual Southeastern<br />

Conference at Greenville, South Carolina,<br />

November 2002. �<br />

Stephen D. Farmer, Scott Lee Farr,<br />

Rosia Marea Harper, Ray Morris<br />

Johnston, Christopher David Kelly,<br />

Mary Anne Maulbeck, Julian Scott<br />

McBride, Jason Thomas Perkins,<br />

Peter Joseph Speltz, Tran HuyenTran,<br />

and Edwin Vargis.<br />

Graduate Scholarship Recipients:<br />

Richard Paul Alexander, Lisa Dawn<br />

Boyce, Rhonda Suzanne Earl, Chad<br />

Andrew Lloyd, Farzan J. Mufti,<br />

Christopher Chad Mullis, Jon William<br />

Price, Bradley Allen Rudnik, and<br />

Christopher Ellis Stout.<br />

Faculty coordinator was Dr. Jungsoon<br />

Yoo. �<br />

9


10<br />

2003<br />

Scholarship and<br />

Award Winners<br />

Outstanding Freshman in Computer<br />

Science: Michael Vincent O’Brien<br />

Outstanding Sophomore in Computer<br />

Science: Alice Wai-sie Quan<br />

Outstanding Junior in Computer<br />

Science: Michael Joseph Larkin<br />

Outstanding Senior in Computer<br />

Science: John K. Lemon and Naomi<br />

Phillips<br />

Nancy Wahl Computer Science<br />

Scholarship: Jennifer Lynne Dennison,<br />

Kimberly Anne Hatcher, and<br />

Naomi Phillips<br />

Computer Science Alumni Award: Peter<br />

Joseph Speltz<br />

Computer Science Scholarship Award:<br />

Julian Scott McBride<br />

Paul H. Hutcheson Computer Science<br />

Graduate Award: Chad Andrew Lloyd<br />

Square D Computer Science<br />

Scholarship: Tina Nemarnik, Michael<br />

Vincent O’Brien, Michael Thomas<br />

Jaynes, Desira Nicole Stover, Michael<br />

Joseph Larkin, Peter Joseph Speltz,<br />

John K. Lemon, Julian Scott McBride,<br />

Bina Mohanlal Patel, and Karen Soh<br />

Ronald E. McNair Scholar: Rhonda<br />

Suzanne Earl<br />

2003 Spring NSF CSEM Undergraduate<br />

Scholarship Recipients: Anhminh<br />

Phuong Do, Ray Charles Duke, Scott<br />

Lee Farr, Ray Morris Johnston,<br />

Christopher David Kelly, Mary Anne<br />

Maulbeck, Julian Scott McBride,<br />

Kenneth R. Oberleitner, Jason<br />

Thomas Perkins, Peter Joseph Speltz,<br />

and Edwin Vargas.<br />

Graduate Scholarship Recipients:<br />

Richard Paul Alexander, Lisa Dawn<br />

Boyce, Rhonda Suzanne Earl, Chad<br />

Andrew Lloyd, Christopher Chad<br />

Mullis, Bradley Allen Rudnik, and<br />

Christopher Ellis Stout.<br />

Faculty coordinator is Dr. Chrisila<br />

Pettey. �<br />

FACULTY REVIEW<br />

by Judy Hankins and Michelle Higdon<br />

Ralph Butler (see the article “Spotlight<br />

on Faculty”)<br />

Al Cripps continues to be noted by<br />

students as a “Faculty Member Making a<br />

Difference.” He received recognition for<br />

20 years of service at MTSU during the<br />

Annual Service Awards Luncheon held in<br />

November 2001. He chaired the college<br />

peer evaluation committee, the department’s<br />

undergraduate program committee,<br />

and the departmental retreat. He<br />

also served on the department’s graduate<br />

program and institutional effectiveness<br />

committees. He continues to consult<br />

with K–12 schools, nonprofit organizations<br />

such as Cheekwood Botanical Garden<br />

and Museum of Art, and industry. Al<br />

and coauthor Nghiep Nguyen had two<br />

papers accepted by the National Science<br />

Journal: “Application of the AAHE’s Seven<br />

Principles for Good Practice in Undergraduate<br />

Education to Online Teaching”<br />

and “Accelerating the Transformative<br />

Learning Process in Online Teaching.”<br />

He and Nguyen also presented the paper<br />

“Fostering Transformative Learning in<br />

Online Courses” at the National Social<br />

Science Conference (April 2002, Las<br />

Vegas, Nevada) and published the corresponding<br />

paper in the National Social<br />

Science Proceedings. The two will be<br />

presenting a paper titled “Using Multiple<br />

Intelligences for Effective Online Teaching”<br />

at the Hawaii International Conference<br />

on Business in June 2003. Cripps<br />

was a reviewer for the ACM Journal on<br />

Educational Resources in Computing<br />

(JERIC) and for the SIGCSE conference.<br />

He published an article in MTSU’s January<br />

issue of The Record and the January<br />

issue of the College of Basic and Applied<br />

Science’s newsletter, The Basic Facts. He<br />

will be presenting (with coauthors Nguyen<br />

and Kaburlasos) a paper titled<br />

“Three Improved Fuzzy Lattice Neurocomputing<br />

(FLN) Classifiers” at the July<br />

2003 International Joint Conference on<br />

Neural Networks in Portland, Oregon. He<br />

will also be presenting (with coauthors<br />

Nguyen, Kaburlasos, and Papadakis) a<br />

paper titled “Improved Experimental<br />

Results Using Fuzzy Lattice Neurocomputing<br />

(FLN) Classifiers” at the Machine<br />

Learning, Models, Technologies, and<br />

Applications Conference, June 2003, in<br />

Las Vegas. Al and coauthors Osama El-<br />

Temtamy and E. Anthon Eff presented a<br />

paper, “Bankruptcy Prediction: How Good<br />

Are Neural Nets?” at the July 2002 Global<br />

Conference on Business and Management<br />

in Paris, France.<br />

Richard Detmer continues to work<br />

hard as our fearless leader. His assembly<br />

language book, Introduction to 80X86<br />

<strong>As</strong>sembly Language and Computer Architecture,<br />

is now in publication and being<br />

put to good use in our assembly language<br />

courses. He serves on numerous department<br />

and <strong>University</strong> committees. In the<br />

department, he is on the undergraduate,<br />

graduate, and scholarships and awards<br />

committees. Richard chaired the institutional<br />

effectiveness, facilities planning,<br />

and student advisory board committees.<br />

He also sponsors the Paul Hutcheson<br />

Delta Chapter of UPE (<strong>Up</strong>silon Pi Epsilon).<br />

He was noted as a “Faculty Member<br />

Making a Difference.” He served as principal<br />

investigator on the $150,000 NSF<br />

grant that brought Internet2 to campus<br />

this year. To help prepare, he attended<br />

a National Science Foundation Highperformance<br />

Networking Connection<br />

Proposal Preparation workshop in Kansas<br />

City, Kansas. Each year he attends the<br />

Academic Chairpersons’ Conference in<br />

Orlando, Florida, and the annual SIGCSE<br />

meeting. He has undertaken a tremendous<br />

responsibility by agreeing to serve<br />

as director of the <strong>University</strong>’s upcoming<br />

SACS accreditation review. He is also<br />

president of the <strong>University</strong>’s Chairs’<br />

Council. Each year he takes an exciting<br />

trip, and last summer he went to Italy.<br />

We are beginning to suspect why Richard<br />

was chosen as department chair: it could<br />

be because of his ability to play racquetball<br />

in the same league as the new dean<br />

of BAS, Tom <strong>Cheatham</strong>.<br />

Joe Driscoll (see the article “New<br />

Faculty”)<br />

Judy Hankins remains a pillar of the<br />

department. She (together with Brenda<br />

Parker) is a pioneer for our first online<br />

course, Computer Literacy, CSCI 1000.<br />

She was co-principal investigator on a<br />

$30,000 NSF planning grant for the<br />

Women in STEM Undergraduate Program


(WISUP) along with Judith Iriarte-Gross<br />

(PI), Brenda Parker, Chrisila Pettey, and<br />

Ginger Rowell. She participated in a<br />

poster demonstration at the combined<br />

Kentucky and <strong>Tennessee</strong> Academy of<br />

Sciences conference concerning the<br />

grant, and she gave a presentation called<br />

“Women in Computer Science—A Work<br />

in Progress” at the annual ACM Mid-<br />

Southeast Conference. <strong>As</strong> her part in the<br />

grant, she developed the Web site<br />

wisor@mtsu.edu (Women in STEM Online<br />

Resources). She and coauthor Brenda<br />

Parker presented a paper, “The Joys and<br />

Sorrows of Teaching Computer Literacy<br />

Online” at the NECC 2002 conference in<br />

San Antonio, Texas. The two also had a<br />

paper, “AAHE’s Seven Principles for Good<br />

Practice Applied to an Online Literacy<br />

Course,” published in the 8th Annual<br />

CCSC Central Plains conference proceedings.<br />

She coauthored—with Ginger Rowell,<br />

Diane Perhac, Brenda Parker, Chrisila<br />

Pettey, and Judith Iriarte-Gross—a paper<br />

titled “Computer-related Gender Differences”<br />

accepted by SIGCSE 2003. Judy<br />

remains in charge of our annual newsletter<br />

and maintains the alumni database.<br />

She is course coordinator for CSCI 1170<br />

and upgraded the 1170 online lab manual<br />

with the help of many faculty members.<br />

She now has release time to upgrade the<br />

2170 online lab manual (what a glutton<br />

for punishment). She maintains her<br />

church Web site as well as the ACM Mid-<br />

Southeast site. She held two workshops<br />

to teach girls how to create a Web page<br />

at the annual Expanding Your Horizon<br />

workshops. She presented a workshop on<br />

“Building a Church Web Page” at the<br />

Computer Technology Seminar, a seminar<br />

for Christian preachers, leaders, and<br />

teachers across the south. She was noted<br />

by a student as a “Faculty Member<br />

Making a Difference.” She served as co-PI<br />

on a recently submitted NSF CCLI grant<br />

titled “Adaptive Online Laboratory in<br />

Computer Science Education.”<br />

“The Wild Bunch”—<br />

Drs. Pettey, Hankins, and<br />

Parker at SIGSCE in Nevada.<br />

Cen Li has a newfound research interest<br />

in mobile robotics. She reviewed<br />

journal papers submitted to the special<br />

issue of the IEEE Robotics and Automation<br />

Magazine on “Robotics in Education.”<br />

She received a grant to purchase<br />

equipment for our very first robotics<br />

class, taught in summer 2002. Due to<br />

the efforts of Cen and Joe Driscoll, the<br />

department has received money for a<br />

robotics lab. (Her office has been very<br />

clean lately. Maybe with her knowledge<br />

of robotics, she knows something we<br />

don’t?) She recently submitted an NSF<br />

ITR grant titled “HMMbased<br />

Temporal Data<br />

Clustering and Modeling<br />

for Ecological<br />

<strong>As</strong>sessment” as PI (co-<br />

PI Ralph Butler). She<br />

served as co-PI on<br />

another NSF CCLI grant<br />

submission titled<br />

“Adaptive Online<br />

Laboratory in Computer<br />

Science Education.”<br />

She received<br />

release time to complete<br />

her research on<br />

“Applying Temporary<br />

Data Clustering to Real<br />

World Data: Building<br />

Models of Ecological<br />

Dynamics—A Case<br />

Study.” She published<br />

an article, “Building<br />

Models of Ecological<br />

Dynamics Using HMMbased<br />

Temporal Data<br />

Clustering, in Advances<br />

in Intelligent Data<br />

Analysis” coauthored by G. Biswas, M.<br />

Dale, and P. Dale in the lecture notes of<br />

the Fourth International Symposium on<br />

Intelligent Data Analysis. Cen was awarded<br />

two research grants in 2001-2002. She<br />

was scheduled to make an oral presentation<br />

at the Fourth International Conference<br />

on Intelligent Data Analysis in<br />

Brenda Parker and Nancy Wahl at<br />

Brenda’s “grandmother” shower.<br />

Brenda and Chrisila, bottom photo.<br />

Cascais, Portugal, of a research paper<br />

titled “Building Models of Ecological<br />

Dynamics Using HMM-based Temporal<br />

Data Clustering—A Preliminary Study”<br />

coauthored by Gautam Biswas, Mike<br />

Dale, and Pat Dale. The paper was one<br />

of 23 chosen out of 146 submissions. The<br />

trip was cancelled due to the September<br />

11 terrorist attacks. She was noted as a<br />

“Faculty Member Making a Difference.”<br />

Cen served on the undergraduate program<br />

and institutional effectiveness committees,<br />

chaired the departmental<br />

library committee, and agreed to serve<br />

as faculty advisor for ACM (jointly with<br />

Brenda Parker) after Jungsoon Yoo<br />

stepped down from that position.<br />

Brenda Parker continues to supervise<br />

all aspects of our computer literacy<br />

class. She was a pioneer for our first<br />

online course, Computer Literacy, CSCI<br />

1000, and has taught it several times.<br />

She supervises all graduate<br />

assistants teaching<br />

the literacy class and<br />

meets with all of the literacy<br />

classes each semester<br />

for an orientation<br />

session. She had two<br />

papers published in the<br />

8th Annual CCSC Central<br />

Plains conference proceedings<br />

and presented<br />

these papers at the conference<br />

in Kansas City,<br />

Kansas. The first paper,<br />

“Using Technology to<br />

Teach Technology,” was<br />

coauthored by Tom<br />

<strong>Cheatham</strong> and Justin<br />

Milling. The second paper,<br />

“AAHE’s Seven Principles<br />

for Good Practice Applied<br />

to an Online Literacy<br />

Course,” was coauthored<br />

with Judy Hankins. She<br />

and Hankins presented<br />

the paper “The Joys and<br />

Sorrows of Teaching<br />

Computer Literacy Online” at the NECC<br />

2002 conference in San Antonio, Texas.<br />

She was noted as a “Faculty Member<br />

Making a Difference” on multiple occasions.<br />

Brenda was awarded an Eisenhower<br />

Grant in the amount of $40,500.<br />

Codirectors are Drs. Patricia Patterson,<br />

11


12<br />

Cindi Smith-Walters, Marilia Gerges, and<br />

Kim Sadler. The title is “A Teacher Enhancement<br />

Partnership for Maury, Lewis,<br />

and Williamson County <strong>Middle</strong> School<br />

Science Teachers.” She held two workshops<br />

to teach girls how to create a Web<br />

page at the annual Expanding Your Horizon<br />

workshops. She served as co-PI on an<br />

NSF planning grant in the amount of<br />

$30,000 for the Women in STEM Undergraduate<br />

Program (WISUP) along with<br />

Judith Iriarte-Gross (PI), Judy Hankins,<br />

Chrisila Pettey, and Ginger Rowell. She<br />

was coauthor with Ginger Rowell, Diane<br />

Perhac, Judy Hankins, Chrisila Pettey, and<br />

Judith Iriarte-Gross on a paper titled<br />

“Computer-related Gender Differences”<br />

accepted by SIGCSE 2003. She participated<br />

in a poster demonstration concerning<br />

the WISUP grant at the combined Kentucky<br />

and <strong>Tennessee</strong> Academy of Sciences<br />

conference. She presented a talk titled<br />

“Using WebQuests in the <strong>Middle</strong> School<br />

Science Classrooms” at Columbia <strong>State</strong><br />

Community College to a group of 25 middle<br />

school teachers. She chaired the high<br />

school teachers/ secondary education<br />

committee. Brenda was thrilled to<br />

become a grandmother this year when<br />

her son and daughter-in-law became<br />

proud parents of a beautiful baby girl.<br />

Chrisila Pettey received recognition<br />

for 10 years of service at MTSU during the<br />

Annual Service Awards Luncheon held in<br />

November 2001. She did an extraordinary<br />

job as department social committee. She<br />

revamped some of the library database<br />

for Page <strong>Middle</strong> School. She served as co-<br />

PI on an NSF planning grant in the amount<br />

of $30,000 for the Women in STEM Undergraduate<br />

Program along with Judith<br />

Iriarte-Gross (PI), Judy Hankins, Brenda<br />

Parker, and Ginger Rowell. She served on<br />

the board of EYH (Expanding Your Horizons).<br />

She was coauthor with Ginger<br />

Rowell, Diane Perhac, Judy Hankins, Brenda<br />

Parker, and Judith Iriarte-Gross on a<br />

paper titled “Computer-Related Gender<br />

Differences” accepted by SIGCSE 2003.<br />

She served on the undergraduate program,<br />

institutional effectiveness and promotion<br />

and tenure committees. Chrisila is<br />

co-PI on two recently submitted grants.<br />

The first is an NSF CCLI grant with Jungsoon<br />

Yoo, Sung Yoo, Cen Li, and Judy<br />

Hankins titled “Adaptive Online Laboratory<br />

in Computer Science Education.”<br />

The second is an NSF ITEST grant with<br />

Brenda Parker titled “Enhancing <strong>Middle</strong><br />

School Teachers’ Competencies in Using<br />

Technology in Math and Science Instruc-<br />

tion.” She serves as project director for<br />

the NSF CSEM grant and has recently submitted<br />

a new NSF CSEM grant as PI along<br />

with Ray Phillips. She continues to be<br />

one of our parallel programming experts.<br />

This is only appropriate—Chrisila has<br />

become an expert at parallel processing<br />

in her own life, juggling teaching responsibilities,<br />

three children, and many farm<br />

animals.<br />

Medha Sarkar (see the article “New<br />

Faculty”)<br />

Suk Jai Seo (see the article “New<br />

Faculty”)<br />

Mack Thweatt is the veteran of our<br />

department. He has been at MTSU over<br />

37 years! He is the departmental resource<br />

concerning ethical questions since<br />

he became the “Ethics” teacher after<br />

Nancy Wahl retired. Mack coordinates<br />

co-op and internship courses and has<br />

helped many students receive credit for<br />

work experience. He coordinated the<br />

Twenty-first Annual High School Computer<br />

Contest. He was noted by a student<br />

as a “Faculty Member Making a Difference.”<br />

With other faculty, he made a<br />

presentation titled “Women in Computer<br />

Science—A Work in Progress” to the ACM<br />

Mid-Southeast Conference. He was elected<br />

Mid-Southeast Conference chair for<br />

next year. He is the computer science<br />

representative on the Faculty Senate.<br />

He submitted a grant proposal titled<br />

“Learning Enhancement through Technology.”<br />

He also worked as a consultant<br />

for an elementary school and industry.<br />

Mack is helping start a new church congregation<br />

by preaching part-time and<br />

teaching Bible classes. He loves to spend<br />

time with his eight grandchildren.<br />

Roland Untch remains active in software<br />

testing research. His research article,<br />

“Prioritizing Test Cases for Regression<br />

Testing,” coauthored by Gregg Rothermel,<br />

Chengyun Chu, and Mary Jean<br />

Harrold, appeared in the IEEE Transactions<br />

on Software Engineering. His latest<br />

article, “Can Fault-Exposure-Potential<br />

Estimates Improve the Fault Detection<br />

Abilities of Test Suites?” with coauthors<br />

Wei Chen, Gregg Rothermel, Sebastian<br />

Elbaum, and Jeffery von Ronne, was published<br />

in the Journal of Software Testing,<br />

Verification, and Reliability (December<br />

2002). Students have identified him as a<br />

“Faculty Member Making a Difference.”<br />

Dr. Untch continues to be Web site man-<br />

ager for the nationally recognized STORM<br />

Web site. He attended the Java! Nashville<br />

Conference, the Music City Java<br />

Conference and the Mid-South Instructional<br />

Technology Conference. He also<br />

attended the Seventh Annual Distance<br />

Learning Conference, where he was presented<br />

with the TBR Distance Education<br />

Committee’s Innovations Award for his<br />

work in videoconferencing development.<br />

He is the department’s systems ombudsman<br />

and serves on both the BAS and<br />

departmental tenure and promotion committees.<br />

Roland’s wife, Sandra, is a fulltime<br />

student in the nursing program at<br />

MTSU. She practices her nursing skills on<br />

Roland from time to time, and rumor has<br />

it that he is dreading the time when she<br />

starts giving shots!<br />

Jungsoon Yoo has done a wonderful<br />

job as the ACM (<strong>As</strong>sociation for Computing<br />

Machinery) faculty advisor since<br />

1999. She received recognition for 10<br />

years of service at MTSU during the<br />

Annual Service Awards Luncheon held in<br />

November 2001. Jungsoon has been promoted<br />

to full professor. She serves as a<br />

mentor for 24 students as part of a<br />

National Science Foundation grant. She<br />

was a consulting researcher for Mind-<br />

Shadow Corporation. She conducted<br />

research with Dr. P. Langley and Dr. D.<br />

Shapiro at Stanford <strong>University</strong> on adaptive<br />

interfaces. Jungsoon also coauthored<br />

a paper titled “Generalized Clustering,<br />

Supervised Learning, and Data <strong>As</strong>signment”<br />

at the KDD Conference in San<br />

Francisco, California. She coauthored a<br />

paper with K. Kim and Sung Yoo titled<br />

“Usability Test for On-line Retail Stores”<br />

that was published in the SeoGang Business<br />

Journal and in the proceedings of<br />

the Sixth International Conference on<br />

Decision Science Institute. The work has<br />

also been copresented at the Sixth International<br />

Conference on Decision Science<br />

Institute in Chihuahua, Mexico. She and<br />

Sung Yoo were awarded an Instructional


Evaluation and Development Grant to<br />

create a new interface for the 1170 online<br />

lab manual. She submitted a proposal<br />

for the NSF CCLI grant titled “Adaptive<br />

Online Laboratory in Computer Science<br />

Education” with Drs. Li, Hankins, S. Yoo,<br />

and Pettey. She chairs the graduate program<br />

committee and serves on the institutional<br />

effectiveness committee. She<br />

continues to be faculty facilitator for<br />

Scientia (an electronic journal featuring<br />

the research of MTSU students). Jungsoon<br />

has a natural “green thumb” and<br />

enjoys sharing her flowers with everyone.<br />

In her spare time, she has her hands<br />

full keeping Dr. (Mr.) Yoo out of trouble<br />

(?) and corresponding with their son,<br />

Jeffrey, who is studying in Spain.<br />

Sung Yoo lightens the departmental<br />

meetings with his great sense of humor.<br />

He is our resident networking expert and<br />

continues to teach network classes and<br />

manage the lab. He was recognized as a<br />

faculty member who significantly contributed<br />

to the success of the past year’s<br />

graduating students. <strong>As</strong> the ACM Programming<br />

Contest chair, each year he<br />

takes a team to the Southeast Regional<br />

Programming Contest. His research this<br />

year included Web-supported instruction<br />

and its effectiveness. <strong>As</strong> part of that, he<br />

and Jungsoon Yoo were awarded an Instructional<br />

Evaluation and Development<br />

Grant to create a new interface for the<br />

1170 online lab manual. He served as co-<br />

PI on a recently submitted NSF CCLI<br />

grant titled “Adaptive Online Laboratory<br />

in Computer Science Education.” He copresented,<br />

with Jungsoon Yoo, a paper at<br />

the Sixth Annual Decision Science International<br />

Conference in Chihuahua, Mexico,<br />

titled “Usability Test for On-line<br />

Retail Stores.” He served as co-PI on a<br />

recently submitted NSF CCLI grant titled<br />

“Adaptive Online Laboratory in Computer<br />

Science Education.” He serves on the<br />

university awards committee, chairs the<br />

department scholarship and awards committee,<br />

and coordinates CSCI 1150. Word<br />

has it that he is trying to steal Cen Li’s<br />

robot technology to keep his networking<br />

lab in shape. He was heard saying something<br />

like, “Don’t worry, I can control<br />

them.” �<br />

ALUMNI NEWS<br />

by Judy Hankins<br />

We’ve heard from many of our<br />

alumni since the last newsletter. Some<br />

have visited us personally, and many<br />

have sent e-mail to let us know what’s<br />

happening in their lives. We love hearing<br />

about your activities and we love bragging<br />

about them, so drop your favorite<br />

professor(s) an e-mail or note.<br />

Mary Beth Ada (Rogers) (B.S. ’94) works<br />

from her home for Esse Health of St.<br />

Louis. She has two small children, Faith<br />

and Grace.<br />

Al Ansari (Pouransari) (B.S. ’94) is in<br />

California working for VeriSign, a company<br />

in the PKI and domain name market.<br />

Al’s main responsibilities include building<br />

a LAN/WAN and moving two of the corporation’s<br />

data centers to a new location.<br />

He focuses on the ERP system in the<br />

company. It sounds like he’s really enjoying<br />

his work.<br />

Kay Anthony (B.S. ’98) is working with<br />

Compuware. She came on campus to talk<br />

to our local ACM about the job market<br />

(interviewing and tips she has learned at<br />

various jobs). We enjoyed visiting with<br />

her. Thank you again for a great job,<br />

Kay!<br />

Bryan Ary (B.S. ’92) is contracting for<br />

Manheim Auctions Remarketing Solutions<br />

in Nashville. He sent an e-mail saying<br />

“Wow—it has definitely been a while<br />

since Computer Science kept me up all<br />

night!”<br />

Linda (Wyatt) Bochar (B.S. ’99) works<br />

for Ingram Entertainment in La Vergne.<br />

Jason Bone (B.S. ’98) works for Blue Star<br />

Communications in Nashville.<br />

Dale Brown (B.S. ’98) works as an engineer<br />

for MTSU’s Department of Recording<br />

Industry<br />

Matt Byrnes (M.S. ’98) works for the City<br />

of Murfreesboro.<br />

Joseph Chandler (B.S. ’98) works at<br />

Arnold Engineering Development Center<br />

in Tullahoma.<br />

Billy Cromer (B.S. ’86) is working for the<br />

Georgia Department of Agriculture.<br />

Curt (CJ) Curry (M.S. ’93) is a senior<br />

systems analyst for the Information Technology<br />

Division at MTSU. He’s helped us<br />

out many times by serving as an adjunct<br />

teacher. He has two children, a boy (one<br />

year old) and a girl (five years old).<br />

Rajarathinam Davidarulappan (M.S. ’98)<br />

works for Lucent Technologies in North<br />

Carolina.<br />

Yan Fei (M.S. ’01) is working for the<br />

<strong>State</strong> of <strong>Tennessee</strong> Treasury Department<br />

in Nashville.<br />

Chris Freeze (B.S. ’98) received a graduate<br />

degree from Clemson <strong>University</strong> and<br />

is working for a Department of Defense<br />

contractor in Texas.<br />

Anatoli Gorchetchnikov (M.S. ’02) came<br />

by for a visit saying that he is working on<br />

his Ph.D. at Boston <strong>University</strong>. He’s a research<br />

assistant, and his research involves<br />

computational modeling of goaldirected<br />

navigation in computational<br />

neuroscience labs. Good luck on that<br />

Ph.D., Anatoli. It was great to see you.<br />

Blake Graves (B.S. ’95) was on campus<br />

and Mrs. Parker and I just happened to<br />

run into him. He is working at First Data<br />

Corporation. Blake, come back and see<br />

us when you can visit longer!<br />

Jonathan Griffith (B.S. ’99) works at<br />

BlueCross BlueShield of <strong>Tennessee</strong>.<br />

Chris Harris (B.S. ’91) completed three<br />

months of intensive training (fall 2002) in<br />

Japan for IBM/Nissan.<br />

Amy (B.S. ’97) and Ben Henderson started<br />

their own company: Intuitive Digital,<br />

Inc. In June, Ben is scheduled to present<br />

a real-world ASP.NET application developed<br />

at HCA to the Nashville Visual<br />

Studio.NET Users’ Group.<br />

Luke Hill (B.S. ’00) works for BlueCross<br />

BlueShield of <strong>Tennessee</strong>. He went<br />

through extensive training and is excited<br />

about the job.<br />

Roxanne (Clancy) Howlett (B.S. ’96)<br />

works at home on her own Internet business,<br />

www.healthy-sunshine.com, an<br />

independent distributor of natural health<br />

products.<br />

Terri Jenkins (B.S. ’81) wrote to us after<br />

our last newsletter. Since graduation, she<br />

got an M.B.A. in computer information<br />

13


14<br />

resource management from Bristol<br />

<strong>University</strong> in East <strong>Tennessee</strong>. She is also<br />

a certified information systems auditor.<br />

About four years ago, she incorporated<br />

herself and is independently serving<br />

clients in the middle <strong>Tennessee</strong> area as<br />

an application developer on PeopleSoft<br />

projects. She wrote to say that “programming<br />

has always been a joy for me<br />

and I want to thank you all for helping<br />

me find it.” It was great to hear from<br />

you, Terri. We’re so glad that you are<br />

happy with your chosen profession.<br />

Julie (Duvall) Jones (B.S. ’97) works at<br />

Toyota in Kentucky. She is working on a<br />

new ordering process for all plants in<br />

North America.<br />

Randy Jones (M.S. ’97) works in Alabama<br />

for Mercedes-Benz U.S. International.<br />

Sounds like a neat job to me!<br />

Dena Kerr (B.S. ’01) works for Nation<br />

Way Connection.<br />

Danny Lampkin (B.S. ’98) is working for<br />

Quilogy, Inc., in Nashville.<br />

Fred Latham (B.S. ’95) works for Home<br />

Healthcare Laboratories of America in<br />

Franklin. Since our last newsletter, he<br />

and his wife became proud parents of a<br />

baby girl (Oct. 2001).<br />

Chris Lawrence (M.S. ’00) is working for<br />

Solutions IT Consulting in Cookeville. His<br />

responsibilities include Web development<br />

using Perl, programming desktop applications<br />

in Visual Basic, and visiting clients<br />

to install/troubleshoot hardware and<br />

software issues. He’s also been willing to<br />

serve as an adjunct teacher for us from<br />

time to time and we really appreciated<br />

his assistance. Good luck with your new<br />

job and home, Chris.<br />

Huiming Li (M.S. ’02) works for Vanderbilt<br />

<strong>University</strong> Medical Center.<br />

Ting Liu (M.S. ’96) works for Oracle Corporation<br />

in Sterling, West Virginia.<br />

Shane Martin (M.S. ’01) is a software<br />

engineer at Eglin Air Force Base in Florida.<br />

Shane states that his job<br />

is very challenging and he is<br />

putting his computer programming<br />

skills to good use.<br />

The programs he writes<br />

are responsible for supporting<br />

the development<br />

and testing of state-ofthe-art<br />

smart weapon systems.<br />

Some of the work they<br />

do isn’t performed anywhere<br />

else in the world.<br />

Cindy (B.S. ’83) and Nathan (B.S. ’82)<br />

McCormac wrote to say that Cindy is<br />

staying at home with their two children<br />

while Nathan is a software engineer with<br />

Lockheed Martin in Huntsville, Alabama.<br />

Nathan designs and programs prototype<br />

systems for manufacturing processes—<br />

mostly weld control systems. The systems<br />

(some of them) are used for welding<br />

space shuttle external tanks at<br />

NASA’s factory in New Orleans. Cindy and<br />

Nathan were newlyweds in my class<br />

many years ago. It doesn’t seem like 20<br />

years since you graduated!!<br />

Tracy Norris (B.S. ’97) wrote to Dr. Wahl<br />

to say he hadn’t realized it while in the<br />

CS program at MTSU, but after graduation<br />

he discovered that the program was<br />

so much better than many others. He is<br />

working for IBM as an RDx lead system<br />

engineer. He said that thanks to his education,<br />

he doubled his salary quickly and<br />

has had excellent ratings. Tracy, we<br />

appreciate your kind words.<br />

Alicia Parsons (B.S. ’00) is working at<br />

Local Government Data Processing in<br />

Columbia. She is building new software<br />

to replace old COBOL software.<br />

Mark Partin (B.S. ’96) is working for<br />

American General Life and Accident in<br />

Brentwood. He is in the actuarial department<br />

working with financial projections<br />

and doing programming in VB. He also<br />

works part-time teaching computer literacy<br />

to people with severe disabilities.<br />

Matt Petre (B.S. ’98) is with the <strong>University</strong><br />

of <strong>Tennessee</strong>–Memphis.<br />

Joshua Phillips (B.S. ’02) is in graduate<br />

school at Vanderbilt. He has received a<br />

teaching assistant scholarship. Last summer<br />

he married Julie Baker. Congratulations,<br />

Joshua.<br />

Robert Reineri (B.S. ’98) works with<br />

Square D Powerlogic as a senior software<br />

engineer. He wrote to say that he had a<br />

performance problem requiring him to<br />

get out the data structures book and<br />

refresh his memory on time-complexity<br />

analysis. A change in algorithms<br />

yielded almost a ten-fold<br />

improvement in program performance<br />

(see—it is good<br />

to know big Oh!!).<br />

Daniel Shilstat (B.S. ’01)<br />

is working for Cingular<br />

Wireless.<br />

Vladimir Silva (B.S. ’96)<br />

works for IBM in<br />

Naugatuck, Connecticut.<br />

Corey Stovall (B.S. ’95) is working in<br />

Nashville for Indus Corporation. He is a<br />

programmer/analyst and part-time project/programmer<br />

lead. He said he wears<br />

many hats due to his experience. He is<br />

working with Coldfusion, Java, Java-<br />

Script, Oracle, and Access in a client/<br />

server environment. It was great to hear<br />

from you Corey. Good luck with the job.<br />

Brent Straight (B.S. ’00) is working for<br />

Schott Scientific Glass as a systems programmer<br />

in Parkersburg, West Virginia.<br />

His duties include development of manufacturing<br />

information systems and client/<br />

server applications as well as maintenance<br />

of Lotus Notes databases and<br />

applications. He is now close to home<br />

and says that the job was a great career<br />

opportunity for him.<br />

Lianhong Tang (M.S. ’01) works as a<br />

health system software engineer at<br />

Vanderbilt-Ingram Cancer Center.<br />

Jian Wang (M.S. ’92) is working for<br />

Rational Software Corporation in California.<br />

Zujiang Wang (M.S. ’02) is working at<br />

Vanderbilt Medical Center. This job made<br />

it possible for him to combine his chemistry<br />

master’s with his computer science<br />

master’s and maintain software to analyze<br />

the results of protein testing by<br />

using mass spectrometry.<br />

James Welcher (B.S. ’89) is working in<br />

La Vergne at Ingram Entertainment.<br />

Bill White (B.S. ’97) is a systems software<br />

specialist in the Department of<br />

Molecular Physiology and Biophysics at<br />

Vanderbilt <strong>University</strong> Medical School. He<br />

is developing parallel evolutionary computing/machine<br />

learning (genetic algorithms,<br />

genetic programming, neural networks,<br />

cellular automata, ant systems)<br />

applications to search for and classify<br />

gene-gene interactions associated with<br />

complex human disease. He is using C,<br />

C++, PVM, MPI, and Perl on Unix (Linux/<br />

Beowulf) systems. He says it is a “dream<br />

job.”<br />

Shay Wilson (B.S. ’99) is a personal<br />

financial analyst at Primerica Financial<br />

Services. She now holds a securities,<br />

mortgage, variable annuities, and insurance<br />

license and says, “ I didn’t think a<br />

college degree was enough!”<br />

Josh Yockey (B.S. ’02) works at<br />

Copyright.net in Nashville. �


SPOTLIGHT ON AN ALUMNUS<br />

The following article about 1997 CSCI<br />

graduate Russ Hudson is excerpted from<br />

titansonline.com by the kind permission<br />

of Russ and the author, Michelle Manson.<br />

It was posted September 27, 2002.<br />

The world of technology and computers<br />

plays a large role in everyday life.<br />

That’s no exception for the <strong>Tennessee</strong><br />

Titans. Just ask Russ Hudson, the<br />

team’s director of information systems,<br />

who handles a variety of behind-thescenes<br />

work for the club that keeps the<br />

football and business side of the team<br />

functioning 365 days a year.<br />

While Hudson’s work may not draw<br />

fame, if not completed, coaches and<br />

front office personnel would have a<br />

tough time doing their jobs. His responsibilities<br />

keep him busy year-round.<br />

“It depends on what season it is,”<br />

says Hudson, in his third year with the<br />

team. “From July to January, the coaches<br />

are the top priority. We work with<br />

them every day, especially the defensive<br />

and offensive quality control coaches and<br />

both coordinators, working on game<br />

analysis reports. Each week we print out<br />

opponent reports and self-scouting reports<br />

on both sides of the ball.”<br />

Once the off-season rolls around,<br />

Hudson turns his attention to the NFL<br />

Draft, working with the team’s scouting<br />

staff to create electronic reports through<br />

April. From May through training camp in<br />

August he installs new servers and workstations<br />

while making general upgrades<br />

on the network and computer systems at<br />

Baptist Sports Park and the Coliseum.<br />

Hudson and his assistant, Bryan Mc-<br />

Guire, also assist the ticket office with<br />

their electronic databases, help the<br />

medical staff with injury programs, and<br />

maintain the telephone system.<br />

On game days, Hudson oversees a<br />

staff of statisticians that calls the official<br />

game stats after each play. He ensures<br />

the information is sent back to Elias<br />

Sports Bureau, the official gatekeeper of<br />

NFL statistics based in New York. From<br />

there, the stats are sent to affiliates<br />

around the country including major<br />

sports outlets like ESPN.<br />

While serving more than 100 people,<br />

Hudson has to make sure the Titans’<br />

computer network is properly functioning<br />

365/24/7. Internet and e-mail access are<br />

key components to most jobs with the<br />

Titans, and the moment there’s a glitch<br />

in the system, Hudson is the first to hear<br />

about it.<br />

Jeff Diamond, Titans president and<br />

chief operating officer, reiterates the<br />

necessity of the information systems<br />

crew and believes they play an integral<br />

part in the team’s accomplishments both<br />

on and off the field.<br />

“If your computers<br />

are breaking down or if<br />

you aren’t getting the<br />

information processed quickly … It’s<br />

going to put the coaches behind; it’s<br />

going to have an effect on your scouting<br />

operations and other things, so there’s a<br />

definite impact on the organization and<br />

the team.”<br />

Prior to joining the Titans, Hudson<br />

was a network engineer/project manager<br />

for Cottonwood Computer Services. During<br />

those three years he made a strong<br />

connection with his favorite NFL team,<br />

consulting with the Titans on various<br />

computer and network issues. Once his<br />

predecessor left, Hudson realized his<br />

lifelong dream of working for a professional<br />

sports organization was about to<br />

come true.<br />

“I was very excited when I got the<br />

position here,” says Hudson. “There are<br />

so many people who would love to be<br />

working for an NFL team, and there are<br />

only 31 [others] in my position across the<br />

league, so I feel extremely fortunate and<br />

blessed.”<br />

While many extra hours and<br />

overtime come with the territory, it’s a<br />

price Hudson is willing to pay. “I wouldn’t<br />

trade it for anything,”<br />

he says. “I work<br />

with great people here<br />

and my job is so diversified<br />

that there’s<br />

always a task to be<br />

completed or a challenge<br />

in front of you.<br />

It keeps me going,<br />

whether it’s in-season<br />

or in May, but I like it<br />

that way. There’s always something to<br />

do, and in some small way you feel like<br />

you’re contributing to the overall<br />

process.” �<br />

ON A MORE PERSONAL NOTE . . .<br />

by Michelle Higdon and Judy Hankins<br />

Russell Hudson grew up in Decherd,<br />

<strong>Tennessee</strong>, and attended Franklin County<br />

High, where he was valedictorian. He<br />

was very interested in computers and<br />

thought he would like to do something<br />

in the field. Once he got to MTSU and<br />

found out more about the Computer<br />

Science Department and faculty, he knew<br />

he had found the right major. Russ<br />

received the Junior and Senior Computer<br />

Science Student of the Year Awards and<br />

graduated summa cum laude.<br />

“I enjoyed my time at MTSU,” he<br />

says, “and thank the entire faculty for<br />

the knowledge I received…[especially]<br />

Dr. <strong>Cheatham</strong>, because he had a unique<br />

teaching style that made learning fun.<br />

He was also willing to help students in<br />

any way possible.”<br />

Russ and wife, Amy, live in Murfreesboro.<br />

Amy is also a graduate of MTSU<br />

and is a registered nurse at <strong>Middle</strong><br />

<strong>Tennessee</strong> Medical Center.<br />

Russ encourages current majors to<br />

find out what aspect of computers they<br />

like, whether it be programming, networking,<br />

or something else, and give it<br />

their all.<br />

15


Computer Science Department<br />

P.O. Box 48<br />

<strong>Middle</strong> <strong>Tennessee</strong> <strong>State</strong> <strong>University</strong><br />

Murfreesboro, TN 37132<br />

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