MURFREESBORO, Tenn. — Middle Tennessee State University’s Board of Trustees voted unanimously Tuesday to support efforts to gain permission from the state to remove the name of Confederate Lt. Gen. Nathan Bedford Forrest’s name from its Army ROTC building.
The board’s action endorsed President Sidney A. McPhee’s desire to remove the Forrest name from the structure, which he has said “distracts from the values, goals and priorities we share as a modern, inclusive and comprehensive university.”
The board said the vote underscores McPhee’s desire to reapply to the Tennessee Historical Commission for a second time to ask for the name change. The commission rejected McPhee’s first attempt in 2018.
Built in 1954, it was named after Forrest, the first grand wizard of the Ku Klux Klan, in 1958, reportedly to honor his notoriety as a military tactician in the Civil War. Under state law, two-thirds of the commission must approve such changes on state buildings.
However, in recent months, the body approved the removal of a bust of Forrest from the State Capitol, which encouraged the university to make another attempt at renaming the Army ROTC building.
“It is the intent of the university, at my recommendation, to remove the name,” McPhee told trustees.
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MTSU to seek Aerospace capital funding
Meanwhile, on other matters, trustees also endorsed an effort by the university to request additional capital funding from the state for its growing Aerospace Department. Established in 1942, Aerospace is a signature department at MTSU and has grown into one of the most respected programs in the country.
Twenty full-time faculty members, 100-plus flight instructors at the Flight Operations Center and more than 1,200 majors place MTSU Aerospace among the largest of the nation’s collegiate aviation programs. Its Professional Pilot sequence alone has seen an 11.3% increase in majors annually in the past 10 years, prompting concerns by Murfreesboro city leadership about increased air traffic at the municipal airport, the home of the flight training program.
“The university is working diligently to address the issues that the city has raised,” McPhee said.
Joey Jacobs, chair of the board’s Finance and Personnel Committee, told trustees the university is also submitting a request to Tennessee Higher Education Commission for over $50 million for extensive renovations to MTSU’s iconic Kirksey Old Main building, as well as nearby Rutledge Hall, both located off of Walnut Grove.
That project, if approved, would replace major building systems, repair the exteriors, replace windows and other upgrades “to ensure these buildings will provide modern space for academic instruction for many years to come,” Jacobs said.
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In other business, trustees:
- Approved a 2.7% salary increase for all full- and part-time employees as of June 30. The state allocated $4.5 million to MTSU to implement salary increases.
- Approved the appointment of Murat Arik, director of the MTSU Business and Economic Research Center, as chairholder of the Jennings and Rebecca Jones Chair of Excellence in Urban and Regional Planning.
- Approved McPhee’s selection of Christy Sigler as assistant to the president for institutional equity and compliance. She had been serving in an acting capacity since January.
Smith reelected; Vanek new vice chair
Trustees reelected Stephen B. Smith, who has held the top trustee role since the board was created in 2017, to a third two-year as chairman. He has been a vocal advocate of the university’s adult degree completion program, earning his bachelor’s degree in 2011, about 30 years after he left the campus as a student-athlete.
Chairman of Haury and Smith Contractors, Smith has served on a number of boards including Federal Home Loan Bank of Cincinnati; Nashville Planning Commission; and chairman of the Nashville Park Board. He now serves on the boards of Capstar Bank and Williamson County Sports Authority.
He was a pitcher for the Blue Raiders baseball team in the mid-70s and was elected to the university’s athletics Hall of Fame in 2004.
The board also elected Christine Karbowiak Vanek, also one of the inaugural trustees, as vice chair, replacing alumnus Darrell Freeman. She recently retired from her roles as chief administrative officer, chief risk officer, executive vice president and vice chair of the board of directors of Bridgestone Americas, the Nashville-based subsidiary of Bridgestone Corp., a global leader in tires and rubber. She also served as the corporation’s executive vice president.
She is active in community organizations and has served on numerous boards including the Tennessee Chamber of Commerce and Industry, Japan America Society of Tennessee, Nashville Area Chamber of Commerce and Franklin American Music City Bowl (now known as the Transperfect Music City Bowl).
Vanek has received a number of recognitions for her civic work and she recently was conferred the Order of the Rising Sun, Gold Rays with Rosette by the Government of Japan for her work to strengthen Tennessee-Japan relations over the past nearly three decades. She holds bachelor’s and law degrees from the University of Illinois.
The officers began serving their two-year terms immediately following the vote.