MURFREESBORO — Top students past and present were the focus of MTSU’s College Mass Communication
April 24 awards ceremony as leaders added three prominent alumni to the
college’s “Wall of Fame” and presented student scholarships and awards for this
academic year.
Electronic
media communication alumnus Lewis Harkness, recording industry graduate Lacy
Privette and journalism alumnus Jim Ridley joined 76 fellow mass communication
leaders on the college’s Wall of Fame. Almost 100 current students also were
recognized for their scholastic accomplishments.
The
program for the celebration, which includes a complete list of all student
honorees as well as full bios of the Wall of Fame inductees, is available at http://ow.ly/Mbt0Q.
The Wall
of Fame honor began in 2000 as a way to honor successful mass-communication
graduates and inspire current students to continue working toward their goals.
Each of the college’s three departments submits an honoree for
consideration each year, and the Wall of Fame ceremony then becomes a part of
the college’s annual awards day for students.
Harkness, currently
a director for ESPN, began his broadcasting career during his senior year at
MTSU, 1993, when he began working as an intern for WKRN-TV in Nashville. Since
then, he’s won five Emmy Awards for his news, special events and technical
direction.
The
Harriman, Tennessee, native’s ESPN credits include “Sport Center,” “Mike and
Mike,” “NBA Tonight,” “The Herd” and “SVP & Rusillo,” and in 2014 he
directed the launch for ESPN’s new SEO Network in Charlotte, North Carolina,
where he continues today.
Privette,
a 1997 recording industry graduate, has spent most of his career with Yamaha Corp.
of America, where he’s moved up the ranks from an award-winning district sales
manager in the Pro Audio and Combo Division to serve as director of the
company’s Steinberg North America department.
At Steinberg,
Privette markets music production software, including Cubase 4, VST
instruments, Nuendo and WaveLab, used in digital audio workstations and
software synthesizers to clients in the United States and Canada from Yamaha’s
Yorba Linda, California, offices.
Ridley, a
Murfreesboro native who earned his MTSU journalism degree in 1989, was writing
movie and book reviews for local newspapers even before he graduated high
school. His talent led to a freelance film-reviewing job for the fledgling
alternative weekly Nashville Scene and regular contributions to The Village
Voice, L.A. Weekly, Variety and other publications.
The Scene
soon brought Ridley on full time, where he rose to the positions of senior
editor and managing editor before the publishers named him editor in 2009.
During the
afternoon event inside MTSU’s James Union Building, MTSU’s School of Journalism
also honored Sharon Fitzgerald with its top teaching award, the Ed Kimbrell
Excellence in Teaching Award. Fitzgerald, a former reporter and public
relations professional, has taught at MTSU since 1999
One of the largest communication programs in the nation, the MTSU
College of Mass Communication offers degree concentrations in 14 major areas — ranging
from journalism to digital media and media management to recording industry
management — and is accredited by the Association for Education in Journalism
and Mass Communication.
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