uga columns oct. 26, 2015

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October 26, 2015 Vol. 43, No. 14 www.columns.uga.edu News Service University of Georgia 286 Oconee Street Suite 200 North Athens, GA 30602-1999 Periodicals Postage is PAID in Athens, Georgia 3 INSTRUCTIONAL NEWS 2 CAMPUS NEWS UGA unit, Department of Education partner to make fourth-grade booklet College of Education class marries clinical practice with community service The University of Georgia ® By Camie Williams [email protected] In its first year alone, UGA’s Center for Undergraduate Re- search Opportunities Assistantship Program has given more than 250 students hands-on experiences in fields ranging from molecular engineering to linguistics. The CURO Research Assis- tantship Program was launched in fall 2014 and offers $1,000 stipends for a nonrenewable se- mester of independent research under the supervision of faculty members across campus. A total of 258 undergraduates from 78 majors participated during the 2014-2015 academic year, and more than 100 currently are taking part. Although the Honors Program coordinates CURO, more than half the assistantship participants were from outside of the program. “Participation has exceeded our expectations, especially in the interest we are seeing from faculty looking to support undergraduates By Aaron Hale [email protected] Alice Walker, the Pulitzer Prize- winning author of The Color Purple, delivered a message of courage, empathy and self-empowerment to the UGA and Athens communities this month. Walker, who came to UGA as the Delta Visiting Chair for Global Understanding, spoke to capacity crowds Oct. 14 at the Chapel and Oct. 15 at the Morton Theatre in downtown Athens. Her message, which Walker delivered with her thoughtful, Zen-like tone, resonated with UGA students like Mansur Buffins, a second-year social studies educa- tion and African-American studies major. Buffins got to meet with Walker for an intimate conversa- tion with several other students at the Willson Center for Humanities and Arts Oct. 14. “I love how she lives freely,” Buffins said. “My takeaway is that I should stop worrying about what other people think of my ideas and goals and get rid of that fear of other people’s criticism and learn along the way.” Walker is the first African- American woman to win the Pulitzer Prize in fiction. Beyond her most famous novel, The Color Purple, she has written six other novels, four collections of short stories, four children’s books and volumes of essays and poetry. Throughout her public life, she has been an international activist for civil and human rights and a force- ful advocate for women and girls. Walker is the inaugural Delta Visiting Chair, which was established by the Willson Center for Humanities and Arts through the support of the Delta Air Lines Foundation to host outstanding global scholars, leading creative thinkers, artists and intellectuals who teach and conduct research at UGA. As part of her visit, Walker met with students from UGA, Emory University and Spelman College as well as high school students from Walker’s birthplace of Putnam County at the Willson Center parlor. In this cozy setting, students asked Walker questions about her writing, her relationships and her philosophies about life. For Juhi Varshney, a third-year women’s studies and biochemistry double major at UGA, it was an op- portunity to have a face-to-face talk By Jean Cleveland [email protected] Georgia’s first lady Sandra Deal will be joined by her co-authors Oct. 28 on a visit to the UGA Librar- ies to discuss Memories of the Mansion: The Story of Georgia’s Governor’s Man- sion, published by the University of Georgia Press. Open to the public, the talk will be held at the Richard B. Russell Building Special Collections Libraries at 10 a.m. “All homes have a story to tell, and the Georgia Governor’s Mansion is no exception,” Deal said. Deal wrote the book with Kennesaw State University history professors Jennifer W. Dickey and Catherine M. Lewis to chronicle the history of the Georgia Governor’s Mansion, which opened in 1968 and includes a distinguished collection of American art and antiques. The book contains personal anecdotes and more than 200 photos from the collections of former first families. Former first families Maddox, Carter,Busbee,Harris,Miller,Barnes and Perdue shared stories and photo- graphs about what it was like living in the “people’s house.” The foreword by Betty Foy Sanders details the complicated process of planning the new mansion. Atlanta architect A. Thomas Bradbury’s neoclassical design features a 30-column colon- nade to evoke Southern charm and grandeur while accommodating state functions and family living quarters. “The mansion has one of the most valuable collections of early federal-era art and antiques in the world, and its origin is now recorded for posterity,” said UGA Press Direc- tor Lisa Bayer.“As a unit of Georgia’s flagship university, the UGA Press is honored to have published this rich, meticulously documented, utterly engaging story of our state’s current history through its first families.” By Stephanie Schupska [email protected] When Ryan Seacrest takes the stage for the UGA spring Com- mencement ceremony May 13 in Sanford Stadium, he will have two tasks—inspire a new class of UGA alumni and receive an honorary Doctor of Humane Letters degree from the university he attended as a freshman. The Board of Regents of the University System of Georgia approved Seacrest’s honorary de- gree during its Oct. 14 meeting. Other than an earned doctorate, the honorary degree is the highest recognition UGA can bestow and is given to recognize a person who has a sustained record of achievements of lasting significance. Seacrest holds pre-eminent positions in broadcast and cable television as well as nationally syndicated radio and local radio. He is celebrated internation- ally as host of the top-rated prime-time talent show- case American Idol on Fox. He is host and executive producer of ABC’s annual New Year’s eve pro- gram Dick Clark’s Rockin’ Eve with Ryan Seacrest. He also has an agree- ment with NBCUniversal that includes on-air broadcasting and producing duties across the NBC and E! networks. On radio, Seacrest is host of On Air with Ryan Seacrest, his market-topping nationally syndicated Los Angeles morning drive-time show for iHeart Me- dia’s 102.7 KIIS-FM, as well as a ‘Learn along the way’ Pulitzer Prize-winning author Alice Walker inspires as inaugural Delta Visiting Chair Alice Walker, the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of The Color Purple, poses for a photo during her visit to UGA. Walker, who came to UGA as the Delta Visiting Chair for Global Understanding, spoke to capacity crowds Oct. 14 at the Chapel and Oct. 15 at the Morton Theatre in downtown Athens. Ryan Seacrest to headline UGA spring Commencement DIVISION OF MARKETING AND COMMUNICATIONS CENTER FOR UNDERGRADUATE RESEARCH OPPORTUNITIES UGA LIBRARIES Vice president for marketing and communications named Sandra Deal to discuss book during UGA visit CURO Research Assistantship Program exceeds expectations See COMMENCEMENT on page 8 See CURO on page 8 See WALKER on page 4 Ryan Seacrest Peter Frey By Rebecca Vander Plaats [email protected] Karri Hobson-Pape, co- founder and partner at Inflexion Point Marketing Group in Atlanta, has been named vice president for marketing and communications at UGA. “Karri brings the ideal combi- nation of professional experience and strategic vision required to advance the institution’s critical marketing and communications functions,” said UGA President Jere W. Morehead. “I look forward to working with her as a member of the university’s senior leader- ship team.” Hobson-Pape’s appointment is effective Jan. 1. She succeeds Tom Jackson, who became heritage communications executive with the University System of Georgia earlier this year. As vice president for marketing and communications, Hobson- Pape will report directly to More- head and will oversee the Division of Marketing and Communica- tions, currently known as the Public Affairs Division. The office comprises four departments: news service, publications, broadcast/ video/photography and the Visi- tors Center as well as WUGA-FM. Under Hobson-Pape’s direction, the division will serve as the central communications and marketing unit at UGA. “The University of Georgia See MARKETING on page 8

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Page 1: UGA Columns Oct. 26, 2015

October 26, 2015Vol. 43, No. 14 www.columns.uga.edu

News ServiceUniversity of Georgia286 Oconee StreetSuite 200 NorthAthens, GA 30602-1999

Periodicals Postage is PAID

in Athens,Georgia

3INSTRUCTIONAL NEWS 2CAMPUS NEWS

UGA unit, Department of Education partner to make fourth-grade booklet

College of Education class marries clinical practice with community service

The University of Georgia®

By Camie [email protected]

In its first year alone, UGA’s Center for Undergraduate Re-search Opportunities Assistantship Program has given more than 250 students hands-on experiences in fields ranging from molecular engineering to linguistics.

The CURO Research Assis-tantship Program was launched in fall 2014 and offers $1,000 stipends for a nonrenewable se-mester of independent research

under the supervision of faculty members across campus. A total of 258 undergraduates from 78 majors participated during the 2014-2015 academic year, and more than 100 currently are taking part. Although the Honors Program coordinates CURO, more than half the assistantship participants were from outside of the program.

“Participation has exceeded our expectations, especially in the interest we are seeing from faculty looking to support undergraduates

By Aaron [email protected]

Alice Walker, the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of The Color Purple, delivered a message of courage, empathy and self-empowerment to the UGA and Athens communities this month. Walker, who came to UGA as the Delta Visiting Chair for Global Understanding, spoke to capacity crowds Oct. 14 at the Chapel and Oct. 15 at the Morton Theatre in downtown Athens.

Her message, which Walker delivered with her thoughtful, Zen-like tone, resonated with UGA students like Mansur Buffins, a second-year social studies educa-tion and African-American studies major. Buffins got to meet with Walker for an intimate conversa-tion with several other students at

the Willson Center for Humanities and Arts Oct. 14.

“I love how she lives freely,” Buffins said. “My takeaway is that I should stop worrying about what other people think of my ideas and goals and get rid of that fear of other people’s criticism and learn along the way.”

Walker is the first African-American woman to win the Pulitzer Prize in fiction. Beyond her most famous novel, The Color Purple, she has written six other novels, four collections of short stories, four children’s books and volumes of essays and poetry. Throughout her public life, she has been an international activist for civil and human rights and a force-ful advocate for women and girls.

Walker is the inaugural Delta Visiting Chair, which was

established by the Willson Center for Humanities and Arts through the support of the Delta Air Lines Foundation to host outstanding global scholars, leading creative thinkers, artists and intellectuals who teach and conduct research at UGA.

As part of her visit, Walker met with students from UGA, Emory University and Spelman College as well as high school students from Walker’s birthplace of Putnam County at the Willson Center parlor. In this cozy setting, students asked Walker questions about her writing, her relationships and her philosophies about life.

For Juhi Varshney, a third-year women’s studies and biochemistry double major at UGA, it was an op-portunity to have a face-to-face talk

By Jean [email protected]

Georgia’s first lady Sandra Deal will be joined by her co-authors Oct. 28 on a visit to the UGA Librar-ies to discuss Memories of the Mansion: The Story of Georgia’s Governor’s Man-sion, published by the University of Georgia Press. Open to the public, the talk will be held at the Richard B. Russell Building Special Collections Libraries at 10 a.m.

“All homes have a story to tell, and the Georgia Governor’s Mansion is no exception,” Deal said.

Deal wrote the book with

Kennesaw State University history professors Jennifer W. Dickey and Catherine M. Lewis to chronicle the history of the Georgia Governor’s Mansion, which opened in 1968 and includes a distinguished collection of American art and antiques. The book contains personal anecdotes and more than 200 photos from the collections of former first families.

Former first families Maddox, Carter, Busbee, Harris, Miller, Barnes and Perdue shared stories and photo-graphs about what it was like living in the “people’s house.” The foreword by Betty Foy Sanders details the complicated process of planning

the new mansion. Atlanta architect A. Thomas Bradbury’s neoclassical design features a 30-column colon-nade to evoke Southern charm and grandeur while accommodating state functions and family living quarters.

“The mansion has one of the most valuable collections of early federal-era art and antiques in the world, and its origin is now recorded for posterity,” said UGA Press Direc-tor Lisa Bayer. “As a unit of Georgia’s flagship university, the UGA Press is honored to have published this rich, meticulously documented, utterly engaging story of our state’s current history through its first families.”

By Stephanie [email protected]

When Ryan Seacrest takes the stage for the UGA spring Com-mencement ceremony May 13 in Sanford Stadium, he will have two tasks—inspire a new class of UGA alumni and receive an honorary Doctor of Humane Letters degree from the university he attended as a freshman.

The Board of Regents of the University System of Georgia approved Seacrest’s honorary de-gree during its Oct. 14 meeting. Other than an earned doctorate, the honorary degree is the highest recognition UGA can bestow and is given to recognize a person who has a sustained record of achievements of lasting significance.

Seacrest holds pre-eminent positions in broadcast and cable television as well as nationally

s y n d i c a t e d radio and local radio. He is c e l e b r a t e d internation-ally as host of the top-rated p r i m e - t i m e talent show-case American Idol on Fox. He

is host and executive producer of ABC’s annual New Year’s eve pro-gram Dick Clark’s Rockin’ Eve with Ryan Seacrest. He also has an agree-ment with NBCUniversal that includes on-air broadcasting and producing duties across the NBC and E! networks. On radio, Seacrest is host of On Air with Ryan Seacrest, his market-topping nationally syndicated Los Angeles morning drive-time show for iHeart Me-dia’s 102.7 KIIS-FM, as well as a ‘Learn along the way’

Pulitzer Prize-winning author Alice Walker inspires as inaugural Delta Visiting Chair

Alice Walker, the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of The Color Purple, poses for a photo during her visit to UGA. Walker, who came to UGA as the Delta Visiting Chair for Global Understanding, spoke to capacity crowds Oct. 14 at the Chapel and Oct. 15 at the Morton Theatre in downtown Athens.

Ryan Seacrest to headline UGA spring Commencement

DIVISION OF MARKETING AND COMMUNICATIONS

CENTER FOR UNDERGRADUATE RESEARCH OPPORTUNITIESUGA LIBRARIES

Vice president for marketing and communications named

Sandra Deal to discuss book during UGA visit CURO Research Assistantship Program exceeds expectations

See COMMENCEMENT on page 8

See CURO on page 8

See WALKER on page 4

Ryan Seacrest

Peter Frey

By Rebecca Vander [email protected]

Karri Hobson-Pape, co-founder and partner at Inflexion Point Marketing Group in Atlanta, has been named vice president for marketing and communications at UGA.

“Karri brings the ideal combi-nation of professional experience and strategic vision required to advance the institution’s critical marketing and communications functions,” said UGA President Jere W. Morehead. “I look forward to working with her as a member of the university’s senior leader-ship team.”

Hobson-Pape’s appointment is effective Jan. 1. She succeeds

Tom Jackson, who became heritage communications executive with the University System of Georgia earlier this year.

As vice president for marketing and communications, Hobson-Pape will report directly to More-head and will oversee the Division of Marketing and Communica-tions, currently known as the Public Affairs Division. The office comprises four departments: news service, publications, broadcast/video/photography and the Visi-tors Center as well as WUGA-FM. Under Hobson-Pape’s direction, the division will serve as the central communications and marketing unit at UGA.

“The University of Georgia See MARKETING on page 8

Page 2: UGA Columns Oct. 26, 2015

By Matt [email protected]

As a child, Sam Pittard had a rolled-up copy of the U.S. Constitution printed on faux parchment that he used to read. He even saved it to this day. Now, the senior graphic designer is helping Georgia children have their own copy of some of the most important docu-ments in America’s history.

Pittard and others in Bulldog Print + Design, the newly combined unit that contains staff from what used to be University Printing and Central Duplicating, worked with the state Department of Education to create “The Words That Built America.” The booklet contains a copy of the Consti-tution and other historical documents and songs.

A copy of the booklet, which was designed by Pittard, was given out this fall to every one of the 150,000 fourth-graders in Georgia.

“I remember my old parchment printed copy of the Constitution and how much I loved having that,” Pit-tard said. “Now, hopefully some child somewhere in the state will feel that way after having this booklet.”

The booklet project, which was privately funded and used no taxpayer dollars, came about in May when the Department of Education partnered with Bulldog Print + Design.

“(The Department of Education) didn’t really have anything other than the core concept that they knew they wanted the Constitution in it,” Pittard said. “So I asked them about including things like the Declaration of Indepen-dence, “Star-Spangled Banner” and the

Pledge of Allegiance, and they loved it.”Pittard also wrote an introduction

for each section and included some facts in the “Did You Know?” sections.

“I really wanted things to grab a fourth-grader’s eye and keep them engaged,” he said. “I really enjoyed working on this project. In fact, in doing a bit of the research, I learned a bit myself, and I actually read the Constitution for the first time since probably high school.”

Pittard is quick to point out that

while he designed the booklet, about a dozen others were involved in the entire process.

“I’m proud of the whole group to be able to turn this out,” he said.

Max Harrell, manager of Bulldog Print + Design, said the staff had to pull “double duty” to make the project successful.

“It was a true team effort here; the staff did a wonderful job,” he said. “I think this would probably be the larg-est project this department has ever produced.”

Debi Huckaby, a senior marketing professional in Bulldog Print + Design, said the project helps show how UGA’s units can be “on the same team” with state departments.

“The project is a great illustration of a partnership between K-12 and higher ed in the state of Georgia,” she said. “We’re all here to enrich the lives of all students, and this kind of illustrates that.”

The efforts of everyone involved in the project were recognized at the state Capitol as Georgia’s School Superin-tendent Richard Woods presented the booklet to Gov. Nathan Deal. During the event an ROTC color guard pre-sented the flags and a fourth-grade class sang “You’re a Grand Old Flag.”

“It was nice to get to the Capitol and get a sense that this project was something bigger than what we did,” Pittard said. “I’m proud to be a part of something that not only is showcasing the words that built our country, but I am excited that fourth-graders now have something so early in their lives that will reference those things.”

2 Oct. 26, 2015 columns.uga.edu

Aro

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eme

Census Bureau: Women more likely than men to have college attainment

For the first time in 75 years, women take the lead in college attainment, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.

The Census Bureau began tracking higher education attainment in 1940, when 5.5 percent of American men had bachelor’s degree and 3.8 percent of women had one. For decades, American men were ahead of their female coun-terparts in earning a college degree. But in 2014, the percentage for men earning a bachelor’s degree was 29.9; it was 30.2 percent for women. Overall, college attainment of the population as a whole has increased 30 percent since 1940.

MIT to offer half-online degree The Massachusetts Institute of Technology

will begin offering massive open online courses for students earning a master’s of engineering in logistics degree.

The program, which will launch next year, will offer half of the program through MOOCs for the duration for the 10-month program. This half face-to-face program will cut down time students spend on campus and could save them tens of thousands of dollars in tuition.

The MOOCs for the degree will be com-pleted for the first half of the program, giving students a chance to try before financially com-mitting themselves on campus.

New

s to

Use

Preserve pumpkinsWhether canned, dried or frozen, there are

some important tips to keep in mind when pre-serving pumpkins.Canned, cubed pumpkin• Wash the pumpkin and remove the seeds.• Cut the pumpkin into 1-inch-wide pieces and peel them.• Cut the flesh into 1-inch cubes.• Boil for two minutes in water. • Fill jars with hot pumpkin cubes and add hot cooking liquid to cover them. Freezing• Wash and cut the pumpkin into cooking-sized sections.• Remove the seeds.• Cook until soft in boiling water, in steam, in a pressure cooker or in an oven.• Remove the pulp from the rind and mash.• Place the pan of pumpkin in a pan of cold water to cool, stirring the mash occasionally.• Pack the pumpkin into rigid containers, leave room and freeze.Drying pumpkin• Preheat an electric dehydrator to 140 degrees.• Wash and peel the pumpkin and remove all seeds and fibers from the flesh.• Cut into small, thin strips about 1-inch wide by 1/8-inch thick.• Blanch strips for three minutes in steam above boiling water. Dip the pumpkin strips briefly in cold water to stop the cooking process.• Place the strips into the dehydrator by spacing them apart in a single layer. Remove when they are brittle.Source: College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences

By Elizabeth [email protected]

Derrick Lemons, a faculty member in the religion department of UGA’s Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, recently hosted the mini-conference “Theologically-Engaged Anthropology.”

Funded with a grant from the John Templeton Foundation, the meeting is one of two mini-conferences being held to form collaborations between anthro-pologists and theologians from around the world. Scholars Joel Robbins, Uni-versity of Cambridge; Francis X. Clooney, Harvard Divinity School; Don Seeman, Emory University; Brian Howell, Whea-ton College; Paul Kollman, University of Notre Dame; Jon Bialecki, University of Edinburgh; Timothy Larsen, Wheaton College; Michael Rynkiewich, Asbury Theological Seminary; James Bielo, Miami University-Ohio; and Khaled Furani, Tel Aviv University, were invited to the conference.

Along with Lemons, the scholars met Sept. 20-22 in Atlanta to discuss what theology could contribute to cultural anthropology and ethnography. Every-one wrote a paper addressing the topic, and each paper was discussed at length. These papers, along with the works from the second conference in February in England, will be combined and published in an edited book.

“This conversation attempts to rec-tify a historical split between theology and anthropology and take advantage of the obvious commonalities,” said Clooney, director of Harvard’s Center for the Study of World Religions. “But it is a complicated subject and needs further study.”

Religion professor hosts anthropology, theology conference

By Matt [email protected]

Throughout her 25 years of teach-ing about the Civil War, Martha Hodes, a professor of history at New York University, always had a few lines about Abraham Lincoln’s assassination in her lectures. After 9/11, however, she began to look at that historical event in a new light.

“9/11 made me think about how people responded to transformative events in everyday life,” said Hodes, who gave the 2015 Gregory Distinguished Lecture in the Chapel Oct. 15.

Hodes said in her lecture, “Mourn-ing Lincoln: The Assassination and the Aftermath of the Civil War,” that she wanted to understand a cata-strophic event on a human scale, which prompted her to begin reading through letters and diaries written by Northern-ers and Confederates in the “hours and days after Lincoln’s assassination.”

Similar to how the world was griev-ing and in shock after 9/11, many of the public records after Lincoln’s death presented a nation in mourning, Hodes said, but individual feelings and reac-tions varied.

Among African-Americans, there was a feeling of trepidation, an unease about how this change would affect their newly found freedom.

For some Confederates, those fight-ing and those supporting the troops, their recent defeats and surrender overshadowed the president’s death.

“Many white Southerners seemed to barely register the assassination,” Hodes said, showing scanned copies of

journals and other accounts. While the assassination wasn’t at

the forefront of their thoughts, some Confederates did revel in it. Others spoke of a foreboding future without the president because, according to Hodes, many Confederates felt Lincoln would have been “liberal in his mercy.”

Hodes said that most Lincoln mourners placed the blame for his death on the institution of slavery.

She quoted one source who wrote that “Lincoln had been sacrificed to slavery.”

During her research, Hodes was fas-cinated by how people from both sides of the Civil War continued to record information about daily life, intertwin-ing writings about lovers and business with their thoughts on the president’s assassination. This immersion in daily life allowed people to have a diversion from grief and a way forward after Union victory, Hodes said.

Designated as one of the university’s fall Signature Lectures, the Gregory Lecture is made possible by the Amanda and Greg Gregory Civil War Era Stud-ies Support Fund.

UGA President Jere W. Morehead thanked the Gregorys, who attended the lecture, for their support of UGA’s academics and said that Hodes’ lecture was an “excellent and distinguished ad-dition to this lecture series.”

Stephen Berry, UGA’s Gregory Professor of the Civil War Era and co-director of the Center for Virtual History, praised Hodes’ work prior to her lecture for its focus on the emotional complexity of history.

NYU professor discusses reactions to Lincoln’s death in Gregory Lecture

FRANKLIN COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES

FINANCE AND ADMINISTRATION

UGA unit, Department of Education partner to make fourth-grade booklet

Sam Pittard, a senior graphic designer, designed the “The Words That Built America” booklet, which was distributed to every fourth-grader in Georgia.

ATHLETICTEAMSHAVE WON

414141NATIONAL

CHAMPIONSHIPS

29SINCE 1999

Dorothy Kozlowski

See more information about UGA athletics and student-athletes at discover.uga.edu.

Page 3: UGA Columns Oct. 26, 2015

By Sydney [email protected]

The effects of an animal population’s extinction may echo beyond the original species, new UGA research finds. Loss of a population could ultimately result in the extinction of parasites, which are critical for a healthy ecosystem.

UGA researchers focused this par-ticular study on a Brazilian fish com-munity and their associated parasites.

The study, published in Scientific Reports, which used publicly available data from a previous long-term eco-logical research study, looked at fish and parasite communities in a river in South America.

“We looked at how the loss of fish host species influenced loss of parasite

species,” said the study’s lead author Tad Dallas, a doctoral candidate in UGA’s Odum School of Ecology. “Our goal was to consider the whole ecosystem and to consider overall biodiversity, which includes parasite species that require host species to survive.”

Previous extinction research has focused more on free-living species and less on the potential for the extinction of host species to cause further extinc-tions of parasite species.

Based on the study’s results, these secondary extinctions have major im-plications to the diversity of parasites and the structural stability of the host-parasite network.

Using the data, Dallas and co-author Emily Cornelius, a doctoral candidate at the University of Wisconsin-Madison,

studied different scenarios that could occur in a community of fish, for example, removing species that may be larger or have a large number of parasites on them to get an idea of the effects it would have on parasite diversity and network structure.

The study found that these extinc-tions are, in a sense, a ripple effect, and the extinction of one could lead to the extinction of other important parasites. They identified key species from the group they were studying and then found that when key species go extinct, the network’s stability is compromised.

“The network is not just the fish community but is composed of the interactions between the fish and their associated parasites,” Dallas said.

UGA Miracle, Florida Dance Marathon programs competing in fundraising

UGA students will aim for two victories against the University of Florida this weekend. As the football teams go head to head, UGA Miracle will compete against Florida’s Dance Marathon pro-gram in a rivalry fundraising challenge.

Throughout the week, UGA Miracle will rally the Bulldog Nation to raise funds for Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta, while Florida does the same for its local Children’s Miracle Network Hospital. The official count begins Oct. 29 and the winner will be announced Nov. 2.

To support these students’ efforts, visit www.ugamiracle.org.

UGA Miracle is the leading student-run philan-thropy on campus with more than 1,100 members and record-breaking fundraising totals. Last year, more than 1,600 students raised $683,251 for Children’s, bringing its total amount raised to more than $4.7 million in the past 20 years. Its capstone event is Dance Marathon, a 24-hour event held in late February in the Tate Student Center.

Waters Lecture to be held Nov. 4The College of Pharmacy’s 2015 Kenneth L.

Waters Lecture will be held Nov. 4 at 3:30 p.m. in Pharmacy South 101. William A. Zellmer will give a lecture titled “The Perils of Ignoring Pharmacy’s Deepest Threat.” The lecture is open free to the public.

Zellmer is a consultant, writer and speaker on strategic and professional issues in pharmacy practice and education. He holds appointments as contributing editor of the American Journal of Health-System Pharmacy and as a historian for the American Society of Health-System Pharmacists. He also serves as project director for the annual Pharmacy Forecast report issued by the ASHP Foun-dation and is president of the American Institute of the History of Pharmacy.

Begun in 1982, the Kenneth L. Waters Lecture Series honors the late dean emeritus who led the pharmacy college from 1948 until his retirement in 1977.

iGEM team wins gold at competitionUGA’s International Genetically Engineered

Machine, or iGEM, team won a gold medal and was runner-up for the best measurement project award at the 2015 iGEM Giant Jamboree in Boston.

iGEM is an annual international collegiate synthetic biology competition, which originated from MIT. The 2015 event included 280 iGEM teams and more than 2,700 attendees from across the globe. The competition seeks to promote synthetic biology research awareness and collaborations to develop practical solutions for the real world. The teams are judged on their research novelty, impact toward real world solutions, outreach, collaborations and more.

The 2015 UGA iGEM team included 16 undergraduates from the Franklin College of Arts and Sciences and the College of Engineering, led by Rebecca Buchanan, who is studying biochemistry and molecular biology.

UGA Foundation updates contributor counting for fiscal year 2015

The University of Georgia Foundation has discovered a programming error in its contributor counting for fiscal year 2015. Over a period of a few months, some contributors, who had given to both the Athletic Association and the UGA Foun-dation, were double-counted. Instead of having approximately 63,784 contributors, as originally reported, the actual number is 59,086, a 5 percent increase over the previous year. This error has now been corrected. Fiscal year 2015 still remains a record-breaking year on two key fronts: total giving of $144.2 million and total contributors of 59,086.

Digest

PERIODICALS POSTAGE STATEMENTColumns (USPS 020-024) is published weekly during the academic year and biweekly during the summer for the faculty and staff of the University of Georgia by the UGA News Service. Periodicals postage is paid in Athens, Georgia. Postmaster: Send off-campus address changes to Columns, UGA News Service, 286 Oconee Street, Suite 200 North, Athens, GA 30602-1999.

INSTRUCTIONAL NEWS

Promoting growthBy Kathyrn [email protected]

A line of pool noodles, beach balls and rubber chickens may seem like the perfect props for a pool party, but for students taking the adapted physical education class offered by the College of Education’s kinesiology department, they make up an essential component of a long-established program.

Every week, more than 20 children from around Athens-Clarke County meet at the Ramsey Student Center for a one-on-one clinical session with a UGA student. While the children all have dif-ferent needs and impairments, the goal is always the same: to facilitate and assess their physical and motor development.

“I’ve always looked at the class as a clinical practicum for the students first,” said Michael Horvat, a professor in the department of kinesiology. “It gives them hands-on experience because who wants to sit through three lectures a week?”

Horvat, who is also the director of the Pediatric Exercise and Motor Develop-ment Clinic, has been designing and providing activity programs for children with disabilities for over three decades.

Since his arrival to the university, the clinic, which previously focused on game playing and recreational activities, has evolved into a vital source of firsthand knowledge for a large pool of students, including future physical therapists,

physical education teachers and athletic trainers.

“This is one of the classes that the College of Education offers where stu-dents actually get hands-on practical ex-perience,” said Ashley Fallaize, a doctoral student studying motor behavior. “For physical therapy majors, it’s invaluable be-cause they have to get clinical observation hours and have an opportunity to interact with children who have special needs.”

The clinic offers students a rare op-portunity to expose the children to new physical activities. Ranging in age from 2 to 14, each participant has a disability that hinders physical and motor development, such as cerebral palsy, autism, mitochon-drial disorder, muscular dystrophy, spina bifida and more.

“The practicum is a time for students to take theory and put it into practice,” Horvat said. “But it’s also an opportunity for kids who aren’t traditionally active to participate in some type of exercise program. And that’s why a lot of those kids like to come back semester after semester.”

Generally, student programs involve half an hour in the gym and another half an hour in an aquatic setting. The latter sometimes poses a challenge to partici-pants who are initially reluctant to get into the pool. It’s also the place where the most obvious progressions are seen.

For Laura Stevens, a senior majoring in exercise and sport science

with a disability certificate from the Institute of Human Development and Disability in the College of Family and Consumer Sciences, the pool was where she remembers feeling the most excited about her student’s accomplishments.

Chase Jones, 5, has autism spectrum disorder, which is often characterized by low spatial awareness and a short at-tention span.

“I was super excited when I got Chase to float on his back,” Stevens said. “When he floats, he stops scripting. So with autism, a lot of times kids will talk extraneously, but he was very relaxed and focused on the task, which was a lot of fun for me to see. He’s just a joy.”

According to Fallaize, PEMDC is one of the few clinics that takes advantage of the pools at Ramsey. The students are not specifically teaching the children how to swim, but instead, use the water to develop physical and motor function-ing. However, several children do end up learning some important survival techniques like floating on their backs, Stevens said.

“Our goal is to help the children as they try to keep up with their siblings in playing catch or when they go bowling and swimming with their family,” Fallaize said. “Every child has made progress, and they’ve all benefited. They stay consistent, and they come back each semester to work on different skills.”

College of Education class marries clinical practice with community service

ODUM SCHOOL OF ECOLOGYUGA study: Species extinction can doom parasites

3 columns.uga.edu Oct. 26, 2015

Every week, more than 20 children from around Athens-Clarke County meet at the Ramsey Student Center for a one-on-one clinical session with a UGA student. “This is one of the classes that the College of Education offers where students actually get hands-on practical experience,” said Ashley Fallaize, a doctoral student studying motor behavior.

Page 4: UGA Columns Oct. 26, 2015

4 Oct. 26, 2015 columns.uga.edu GRADY COLLEGE

‘Inhabiting someone else’s skin’By Sarah [email protected]

For Valerie Boyd, the study of Alice Walker is a highly intimate, unique and immersive experience.

The two met while Boyd was writing a biography on Zora Neale Hurston.

An associate professor of journalism in UGA’s Grady College of Journal-ism and Mass Communication, Boyd was personally selected by Walker two years ago to curate and edit the author’s journals for a book, due out in fall 2017. Gathering Blossoms Under Fire: The Journals of Alice Walker will be published by 37 Ink, an imprint of Simon and Schuster. Boyd’s work on the journals is supported in part by a 2015-2016 Willson Center faculty fellowship, one of the university’s critical supports for research in the humanities and arts.

“I feel honored that Alice Walker is entrusting me to read her journals and to edit a selection of them for the world to read as well,” said Boyd, who also is the college’s Charlayne Hunter-Gault Distinguished Writer in Residence.

Sifting through the journals has been no small task. In 2007, Walker turned over her personal archives to the Manuscript, Archives and Rare Book Library at Emory University.

The personal journals begin in 1962, when Walker was a student at Atlanta’s Spelman College, and span more than 50 years, consisting of about 65 note-books. Walker is now 71.

“Can you imagine journaling con-sistently for 50 years?” Boyd said. “The journals allow you to see the whole arc of her life in the day-to-day recording of it. Everything is there—her develop-ment as a woman, a mother, a daughter, a writer, an activist and an artist. My job is easy in some ways; I just have to assemble all of this raw material into a cohesive book, following the narra-tive threads that naturally emerge in the journals.”

According to Boyd, Walker writes about a range of topics over the years, including her first trip in an airplane to study abroad, when she was 18, teaching herself to write a novel and everyday subjects like gardening or making dinner.

“To see the daily walk of human life is really interesting,” Boyd said of her work in the archives. “These are personal journals, which means they can be quite intimate, so doing this kind of research is really like inhabit-ing someone else’s skin for a while and getting to look behind someone else’s eyes. It’s been quite fascinating and

emotional in some ways.”While most of the Walker Collec-

tion at Emory is open to visiting schol-ars, the journals, due to their personal nature, are restricted until 2027, or after Walker’s death, whichever comes later. Walker has given Boyd (and her graduate student assistant) exclusive access to read the journals.

Boyd has been a fan of Walker’s work since she was in high school, but it was through Boyd’s first book, Wrapped in Rainbows: The Life of Zora Neale Hurston, that she met Walker. Walker, too, was inspired by Hurston, and Boyd reached out to Walker during her research on Hurston, who Boyd describes as “the most significant black woman writer of the first half of the 20th century.”

Boyd is pleased with the progress on the book so far and expects to have the manuscript completed and delivered to the publisher by next fall.

“It means everything to have the opportunity to work with her,” Boyd said. “Alice changed American literature in significant ways and has had a major influence not just on me but on many writers of my generation, and subse-quent generations, and on American literature itself. It’s a wonderful gift to have the opportunity to walk side by side with her.”

Journalism professor curates, edits Alice Walker’s journals for upcoming book

Alice Walker, left, the Pulitzer Prize-winning author and Delta Visiting Chair for Global Understanding, joined Valerie Boyd, an associate professor and the Charlayne Hunter-Gault Distinguished Writer in Residence at the Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication, for a public conversation held at the Morton Theatre. Walker also read a few pages from her award-winning novel The Color Purple. Boyd currently is editing Walker’s journals for publication in an upcoming book.

Engineering professors create interactive recycling bin prototype

COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING

ON THE WEBwerecycle.co

Peter Frey

WALKER from page 1with one of America’s great authors.

“It was surreal to have read her work and then to have an intimate conversa-tion with her,” Varshney said. “It was indescribable.”

During the conversation, Walker asked students about their studies and career aspirations. She implored them to pursue their passions.

“You have a perfect right to exist as you,” she told them. “If you love something and you’re really, really interested, there is nothing that will get in the way.”

At her appearance at the Chapel, Walker shared stories about her inter-national journeys to the Soviet Union, Cuba, China and Uganda. From each of these trips, she said, she found kindness from people who were supposed to be enemies of the U.S. She challenged mainstream ideas of Western con-sumerism and U.S. foreign policy and said that it’s important for Americans to learn about people in other nations.

Nisha Katti, a fourth-year public

relations and international affairs major, said she was surprised at how candid and relaxed Walker was with her lecture at the Chapel.

“She spoke to the audience like it was a coffee shop chat,” she said. “And there were some very funny moments. I like the way she spoke by telling stories.”

What stuck out to Katti was Walk-er’s description of racism as “unnatural.” Walker said racism in the South led to whites acting “unnaturally” when they discriminated against African-Americans.

Valerie Boyd, an associate profes-sor of journalism at UGA’s Grady College, moderated Walker’s evening appearance at the Morton Theatre. Boyd is editing Walker’s journals for an upcoming book (see story, above). She asked Walker about her childhood in Eatonton, her activism on international and women’s issues, and her philosophy on freedom. On that last question about freedom, Walker said, “It means the way that I am is the way I’m supposed to be.”

In all of her appearances, Walker talked about her love for reading. As a child, she said, reading was what made her aware of the world beyond her hometown. It inspired her to travel, to write and find humanity in others.

“I discovered you could leave Eaton-ton and go to 18th-century London for a whole afternoon, and no one would even know,” she said at the Morton Theatre. “(Reading) is the door to the you that you can become.”

Nicholas Allen, the director of the Willson Center, said Walker’s visit was a compelling beginning for the Delta Visiting Chair.

“Alice Walker shared a vision of em-pathetic intelligence with our students, faculty and friends across the commu-nity,” said Allen, the Franklin Professor of English. “In years to come, the Delta Visiting Chair will bring generations of the world’s leading artists and creative thinkers, and Alice Walker’s visit was a rich and thought-provoking experience to begin this journey.”

By Molly [email protected]

Fitbits, a wearable electronic device that measures a person’s activity, are on the rise due to their interactive nature and ease of use. Two UGA College of Engineering professors have taken the Fitbit concept and applied it to recycling with their WeRecycle bin.

“When you’re active with a Fitbit, the device smiles at you,” said Jenna Jambeck, an associate professor in the College of Engineering. “You get automatic feedback for doing something good. We used the same kind of idea when creating WeRecycle.”

First conceived in 2010, the WeRecycle bin is the in-vention of Jambeck, assistant professor Kyle Johnsen and former graduate student Eliana Mozo Reyes.

By using lights and sounds as well as counting the number of items recycled, the creators of WeRecycle have developed a rewarding and entertaining device to encourage recycling.

“The bin works by attracting attention through lights and sounds, detecting the deposit of an item into the bin and then providing feedback in the form of a current count of items recycled in the bin and additional lights and sound,” Johnsen said.

In the last few years, the three have created a WeRecycle bin prototype as well as created their own registered LLC for the product.

The prototype uses the existing recycling bins on UGA’s campus, adding handmade circuitry and lights to their lids.

“We did this to reduce both the cost and the materials used,” Jambeck said. “We didn’t want to create something that was unnecessarily using extra resources.”

Because the WeRecycle device is battery powered, it potentially could function for years before the batteries need to be changed. They also could be recharged by the sun if the device is outside.

“All electronics are tucked away under the lid, so chang-ing the bag is easy and shipping the lid is all that is neces-sary because we use standard ‘slim jim’ bins,” Johnsen said.

While not yet on the market, WeRecycle already has been tested in the halls of the Driftmier Engineering Center.

“We saw that students were coming up and recycling multiple things at once,” Jambeck said. “The bin’s lights naturally attract people to come over and see what it does.”

The bin is intended to help address the international problem of recycling, which is that only 30 percent of proper materials are recycled.

“We don’t properly value the cost of the entire life-cycle of our products,” Johnsen said. “When we recycle, we keep track of these products and can control when, where and how they are disposed. Extracting any remaining value of a product is vital because the energy source that enables the creation and transport of most of these products is nonrenewable.”

Already with their WeRecycle LLC, Jambeck and Johnsen have created a website, a mobile app and social media accounts. Once the product is on the market, user data can be tracked using these features.

“We want to be the leaders in sustainable recycling, where we optimize the ‘point of contact’ with the consumer, so that the bins reach their full performance,” Johnsen said.

Jambeck and Johnsen said that before going on the market, the bin needs to harvest renewable resources around itself, detect what’s going into it, reduce “false positives” of items and provide more feedback about what’s

being recycled.While the bin still is being devel-

oped, Jambeck is hopeful that the product will one day be

on the market.“So far we’ve done a Kickstarter and

applied for a grant,” she said. “ R i g h t now, the bin isn’t available

beyond our p r o t o t y p e .

We’re hoping that will change in the near future.”

Page 5: UGA Columns Oct. 26, 2015

Resources. 2:30 p.m. Center for Teaching and Learning Classroom. 706-542-1355, [email protected].

HIDDEN VOICES: GROWING UP INTERSEXThis continuation of Lambda Alliance’s Hidden Voices series features intersex speaker and activist Pidgeon Pagonis. 6 p.m. 150 Miller Learning Center. [email protected].

CONCERTThe UGA British Brass Band, led by former New York Philharmonic principal trumpet Philip Smith, will perform traditional and contemporary repertoire in the classic British brass band tradition. 8 p.m. Hugh Hodgson Concert Hall, Performing Arts Center. 706-542-4752, [email protected].

VOLLEYBALL vs. Ole Miss. 9 p.m. Ramsey Student Center. 706-542-1621.

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 29GALLERY TALKHyangsoon Yi, a professor of comparative literature and director of UGA’s Center for Asian Studies, will give a gallery talk on Samurai: The Way of the Warrior. 2 p.m.

5 columns.uga.edu Oct. 26, 2015

NEXT COLUMNS DEADLINES Oct. 28 (for Nov. 9 issue)Nov. 4 (for Nov. 16 issue)Nov. 11 (for Nov. 30 issue)

Calendar items are taken from Columns files and from the university’s Master Calendar, maintained by University Public Affairs. Notices are published here as space permits, with priority given to items of multidisciplinary interest. The Master Calendar is available on the Web at calendar.uga.edu/.

TO SUBMIT A LISTING FOR THE MASTER CALENDAR AND COLUMNSPost event information first to the Master Calendar website (calendar.uga.edu/). Listings for Columns are taken from the Master Calendar 12 days before the publication date. Events not posted by then may not be printed in Columns.

Any additional information about the event may be sent directly to Columns. Email is preferred ([email protected]), but materials can be mailed to Columns, News Service, 286 Oconee Street, Suite 200 North, Campus Mail 1999.

UGAGUIDEThe following events are open to the public, unless otherwise specified. Dates, times and locations may change without advance notice.

For a complete listing of events, check the Master Calendar on the Web (calendar.uga.edu/ ).

By Jean [email protected]

The environment and civil rights will be the focus of this year’s Georgia Writers Hall of Fame events Nov. 8-9.

Taylor Branch and Janisse Ray will be inducted into the hall Nov. 9, along with posthumous honorees Vereen Bell and Paul Hemp-hill. The ceremony begins at 10:30 a.m. Nov. 9. All events are in the auditorium of the Richard B. Russell Building Special Collections Libraries.

“The Georgia Writers Hall of Fame celebrates our state’s literary tradition, and this year we are proud to induct four outstanding Georgia writers,” said Toby Graham, university librarian and associate provost.

Branch is best known for his landmark history of the civil rights era. Ray’s writing is deeply influenced by the natural world. Bell’s fiction first brought the Okefenokee Swamp into the national consciousness, and Hemphill explored themes related to the work-ing class South.

“Our programming will focus on the topics of civil rights and the environment, ones that connect this year’s inductees and that are of particular relevance to Georgia,” Graham said.

The activities begin Nov. 8 with three discussions:• At 1 p.m., “Sustainability: Preserving our Environ-mental Heritage” will feature Ray and UGA students.

With UGA’s Office of Sustainability, the Georgia Writers Hall of Fame presents a series of “lightning talks” presented by selected UGA students and Ray about sustainability. Ray is an award-winning environmental

writer and activist whose cur-rent passion is sustainability. The five- to six-minute student presentations will focus on their research in relation to Watershed UGA, a town-and-gown initiative to involve the UGA campus and the Athens community in restoring local streams. • Attention turns to civil rights at 2 p.m. for “A Conversation with Branch and UGA Stu-

dents about the Civil Rights Movement,” with footage from the Civil Rights Digital Library.

A panel of UGA students has selected a series of short film clips from the Civil Rights Digital Library that align with events detailed in The King Years: Historic Moments in the Civil Rights Movement, written by Branch. Each student has prepared a question for Branch about these events and how they relate to contemporary issues and events. The panel of students was selected by Barbara McCaskill, a UGA English professor and a member of the Georgia Writers Hall of Fame’s board of judges.• At 4 p.m., an author discussion featuring Branch and Ray will be held, followed by a reception. Moderated by Hugh Ruppersburg, a University Professor of Eng-lish, Branch and Ray will discuss what it means to be a Georgia writer and will share details of their writing life.

The Georgia Writers Hall of Fame is part of the Spotlight on the Arts festival, a 10-day event highlighting UGA units and facilities, from visual arts and creative writing to music, dramatic arts, dance and more to foster an awareness and appreciation of the arts and an environ-ment conducive to artistic innovation. This year’s festival will take place Nov. 5-14.

EXHIBITIONSTravels on the Bartram Trail: Beth Thomp-son’s Possible Perceptions. Through Nov. 29. Visitor Center, State Botanical Garden. 706-542-6014, [email protected].

Infiltro: In-Vitro. Through Nov. 30. Gilbert Hall. [email protected].

Roads, Rivers and Red Clay: Ceramics by Ron Meyers. Through Dec. 18. Circle Gallery.

Set Off for Georgia… Through Dec. 23. Hargrett Library Gallery, special collec-tions libraries. 706-542-8079, [email protected].

Unbeaten, Untied, Undisputed: Georgia’s 1980 National Championship Season. Through Dec. 23. Special collections libraries. 706-542-8079, [email protected].

Before the March King: 19th-Century American Bands. Through Jan. 3. Georgia Museum of Art. 706-542-1817, [email protected].

In Time We Shall Know Ourselves: Photo-graphs by Raymond Smith. Through Jan. 3. Georgia Museum of Art. 706-542-1817, [email protected].

Samurai: The Way of the Warrior. Through Jan. 3. Georgia Museum of Art. 706-542-1817, [email protected].

Seeing Georgia: Changing Visions of Tourism in the Modern South. Through July 30. Special collections libraries. 706-542-5788, [email protected].

MONDAY, OCTOBER 26BLOOD DRIVE2:30 p.m. Brumby Residence Hall.

2015 PEABODY-SMITHGALL LECTURE“Genealogy, Genetics and Race,” Henry Louis Gates Jr., Alphonse Fletcher Univer-sity Professor and director of the Hutchins Center for African and African American Research at Harvard University. Part of the Signature Lecture series. 3 p.m. Mor-ton Theatre, 195 W. Washington St.

SUSTAINABLE FOOD SYSTEMS SEMINAR SERIES LECTURE“Natural Enemies Playing Games: Where to Find Them and How to Keep Them,” Jason Schmidt, an assistant professor in UGA’s College of Agricultural and Environ-mental Sciences. 3:30 p.m. 103 Conner Hall. 706-542-8084, [email protected].

REDEDICATIONThe rededication of the Louis B. Sohn Library on International Relations, in its new home in the renovated Dean Rusk International Law Center, will include a reception. Kannan Rajarathinam, UGA alumnus and head of office for the United Nations Assistance Mission for Iraq, will speak on “The United Nations at 70: Pur-suing Peace in the 21st Century.” 4 p.m. Larry Walker Room, Dean Rusk Hall.

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 27WORKSHOP“SCALE-ing UP Student Engagement and

Learning in Science Classes,” Jill C. Sible, an assistant provost for undergraduate education and a professor of biologi-cal sciences at Virginia Tech. 9:30 a.m. Reading Room, Miller Learning Center. 706-583-0067, [email protected].

BLOOD DRIVENoon. Georgia Center.

WORKSHOP“Designing Learning Activities for SCALE-UP Science Classes,” Jill C. Sible, Virginia Tech. 1 p.m. 326 Biological sciences building. 706-583-0067, [email protected].

BOOK CLUBOctober’s selection: Swamp Water by Ver-een Bell, a 2015 inductee into the Georgia Writers Hall of Fame. To include a discus-sion on works connected to upcoming/ongoing exhibitions and programs at the special collections libraries. 5:30 p.m. 258 special collections librar-ies. 706-542-5788, [email protected].

SHOUKY SHAHEEN LECTURER“The Mysterious Joseph Blackburn: Fash-ionable Faces and Figures in the Colonial Atlantic World,” William Rudolph, San Antonio Museum of Art. 5:30 p.m. S151 Lamar Dodd School of Art.

706-542-0116, [email protected].

GLEE CLUBS FALL CONCERT8 p.m. Hugh Hodgson Concert Hall, Performing Arts Center.

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28MULTI-AUTHOR TALK AND SIGNINGThe UGA Press and UGA Libraries will co-host a talk and signing with authors Sandra Deal, Catherine Lewis and Jen-nifer Dickey about their book Memories of the Mansion. 10 a.m. Special collections libraries. 706-542-4145, [email protected]. (See story, page 1).

BLOOD DRIVENoon. Health Sciences Campus.

LUNCHTIME GALLERY TALKWith Vivienne Varay, one of the nine art-ists featured in the exhibition Forms of Adornment: Flesh and Erotic. Noon. Plaza Gallery, Lamar Dodd School of Art. 773-965-1689, [email protected].

WORKSHOP“Getting a Head Start Towards Tenure: Expectations and Strategies for the First Three Years…” Presenter: Gary Green, assistant dean and associate professor of the Warnell School of Forestry and Natural

Georgia Museum of Art. 706-542-4662, [email protected].

WOMEN’S SOCCER vs. Florida. To be televised on the SEC Network. 7 p.m. Turner Soccer Com-plex. 706-542-1621.

SAMURAI FILM SERIES SCREENINGSeven Samurai with an introduction by Hyangsoon Yi, director of UGA’s Center for Asian Studies. 7 p.m. Georgia Museum of Art. 706-542-4662, [email protected].

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 30STUDENTS’ FALL BREAK

GEORGIA STATISTICS DAY 20159 a.m. Georgia Center.

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 31EXHIBITION OPENINGCrowned with Glory and Immortality will feature ornamental needlework of Georgia and investigate both feminine skills and girlhood education in the state. Through Feb. 28. Boone and George-Ann Knox Gallery II, Georgia Museum of Art. [email protected].

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 1DAYLIGHT SAVING TIME ENDS2 a.m.

VOLLEYBALL vs. Florida. 1:30 p.m. Ramsey Student Center. 706-542-1621.

PERFORMANCEThe Athens Flute Choir will perform its fall concert inside the tropical conservatory. 2 p.m. Visitor Center, State Botanical Gar-den. 706-542-6014, [email protected].

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 2HISTORY OF MEDICAL SCIENCE SERIES LECTURE“Reading Outside the Canon: Some New Thoughts on Medicine in the Time of Galen,” Vivian Nutton, a professor of the history of medicine and culture at the First Moscow State Medical School. 2 p.m. 250 Miller Learning Center.

COMING UPWATERS LECTURE“The Perils of Ignoring Pharmacy’s Deepest Threat,” William A. Zellmer. 3:30 p.m. 101 Pharmacy South. (See Digest, page 3).

SPOTLIGHT ON THE ARTS OPENING CELEBRATIONNov. 4. The opening celebration for the 2015 Spotlight on the Arts festival will feature a sampler of student music, dance and dramatic performances, as well as opening remarks from Univer-sity System of Georgia Chancellor Hank Huckaby and UGA President Jere W. Morehead. A reception will be held at the Lamar Dodd School of Art following the celebration. Sponsored by the UGA Arts Council. 7:30 p.m. Hugh Hodgson Concert Hall, Performing Arts Center. 706-583-0728, [email protected].

Taylor Branch Janisse Ray

Page 6: UGA Columns Oct. 26, 2015

6 Oct. 26, 2015 columns.uga.edu

Kudos recognizes special contributions of staff, faculty and administrators in teaching, research and service. News items are limited to election into office of state, regional, national and international societies; major awards and prizes; and similarly notable accomplishments.

UGA tree health expert Kamal Gandhi was named a Science Policy Fellow for the En-tomological Society of America, just one of five scientists across the country named to the program.

The fellowship program was formed in 2014 to support scien-tists for two-year terms. As a Fel-low, Gandhi will attend virtual and in-person educational events to

learn more about science policy and funding decisions made at the federal level of government. She also will participate in conferences that focus on developing federal science policy and budgets, help draft policy statements and meet with legislators.

Gandhi, who joined the Warnell School of For-estry and Natural Resources in 2008, teaches forest health protection and has been conducting research on issues that affect conifer and hardwood trees, including the effects of exotic insects like the Asian ambrosia beetles, European woodwasp and emerald ash borer. Gandhi’s research is particularly important in the South, where forestry is a billion dollar industry in what is called the “wood basket of the world.”

College of Pharmacy faculty members Dianne May and David DeRemer were named Fellows of the American College of Clinical Pharmacy.

They both work in the college’s clinical and administrative pharmacy department. DeRemer is a clinical associate professor; May is a clinical professor who also works in the college’s Division of Experience Programs.

May’s professional interests include drug infor-mation, drug policy/formulary management, drug literature evaluation, gastroesophageal reflux disease and adverse drug reaction monitoring/reporting. She is the incoming chair for the ACCP Drug Information PRN.

DeRemer’s research interests include bone marrow transplant, clinical/translational research, hematologic malignancies and supportive care. He is chair-elect for ACCP’s Hematology/Oncology PRN.

Fellowship in ACCP recognizes excellence in the practice and science of clinical pharmacy. Achieved by less than 5 percent of ACCP membership, this top award is bestowed to individual members who have demonstrated sustained contributions to the organiza-tion and exceptional performance in clinical practice and/or research.

May and DeRemer were recognized at the ACCP Global Conference awards ceremony Oct. 18 in San Francisco; both maintain their practice site at the Georgia Regents University campus in Augusta.

Sami Yli-Piipari, a faculty member in the College of Educa-tion, was named to the interna-tional editorial board of the jour-nal Teaching, Research and Media in Kinesiology. The online peer-reviewed international research and practice journal addresses both applied and theoretical issues in kinesiology.

Yli-Piipari is an assistant professor in the department of kinesiology where he directs the Children’s Physical Activity and Fitness Laboratory. His scholarly inquiry is focused on the promotion and examination of children’s and adoles-cents’ health behaviors, specifically physical activity.

He is a specialist in school physical activity issues examining the role of physical education, school physical activity and school physical activity policies on children’s health and academic performance. He also applies the latest technological innovations to motivate and engage children in health-enhancing physical activity.

FACULTY PROFILE

PUBLIC SERVICE AND OUTREACH

Kamal Gandhi

Sami Yli-Piipari

By Beth [email protected]

Picture a scene in the drylands of Kenya—a vast open expanse of grasses and bare earth, with very few trees, dot-ted here and there with cattle and goats.

Then think of Driftmier Woods, a pocket of old growth Piedmont forest tucked between the Driftmier Engineer-ing Center and the Family and Graduate Housing complex on the UGA campus.

The two places could hardly be more different. For ecologist Lizzie King, however, both offer an opportunity to gain insights about coupled social and ecological systems, ecosystem services and ecological restoration, subjects that are the focus of her research and teach-ing as a faculty member in the Odum School of Ecology and Warnell School of Forestry and Natural Resources.

Kenya is where King’s interest in ecol-ogy began on a family trip when she was 13. Her father, the director of the Yerkes National Primate Research Center at the time, was helping establish a wildlife reserve in Kenya.

“Seeing conservation biologists in action inspired me,” said King, who ma-jored in biology in college and returned to Kenya as a Fulbright Scholar to study the ecology and conservation status of a rare, recently discovered species of aloe.

“After being there for a while, though, it began sinking in that there were bigger problems afoot than the status of this one plant,” she said. “There was a lot of land degradation. I started seeing the human side of environmental issues.”

King explored her growing interest in the intersection of ecological and so-cial systems in her doctoral dissertation, with a focus on restoration ecology and sustainability.

“Balancing an ecosystem’s capacity for self-renewal with the services that human societies also require of them is a universal issue that challenges our human-environmental relationships ev-erywhere,” she said. “Restoration ecology is tasked with providing the knowledge to help us navigate those situations toward more sustainable futures, particularly where things have already gone wrong.”

Since arriving at UGA in 2012, King has turned her attention to an area in need of restoration closer to home. She and her students are studying the UGA Chew Crew to understand how using goats in restoration is impacting the ecosystem services provided by natural areas on campus. Those services include not only the maintenance of biodiversity and ecological function, but also cultural services such as recreation and aesthetic value.

“We’re also looking at how students’ involvement in restoration changes their own environmental ethics and creates a positive feedback, so that the activity in-creases their future enjoyment of natural spaces and environmental work,” she said.

King also serves on the executive committee of the Center for Integrative Conservation Research, which coordi-nates the Integrative Conservation or ICON doctoral program, in collabora-tion with the Odum School, Warnell and the anthropology and geography

departments in the Franklin College of Arts and Sciences.

“ICON is one of the most exciting interdisciplinary programs in the coun-try,” King said.

Students choose a focal discipline and receive rigorous training in that area, but also learn to work and communicate across multiple fields of social and natural sciences.

“It’s putting a lot of the skills needed of an interdisciplinary team into one person,” King said.

The description also fits King herself.“Being here in one of the best ecology

programs and one of the best schools of natural resources, and back in the Southeast which is my home, is a real win-win-win situation for me,” she said. “It’s a really exciting place, with the Center for Integrative Conservation Research, to have so much support and enthusiasm for this type of work. That’s not a luxury that all interdisciplinary scholars have.”

Nature revival: Ecology professor studies ecological restoration

FACTSElizabeth “Lizzie” G. KingAssistant Professor, Odum School of Ecology and Warnell School of Forestry and Natural ResourcesPh.D., Population Biology, University of California, Davis, 2004M.S., Population Biology, University of California, Davis, 1998B.A., Biology, Reed College, 1993At UGA: 3 years

Seventeen faculty-staff leaders have been selected to participate in UGA’s 2015-16 Public Service and Outreach Vivian H. Fisher Leadership Academy.

Facilitated by the J.W. Fanning Institute for Leadership Development, the academy is a nine-month program designed to build leadership capacity among high-level performers who have outreach as the major part of their duties within PSO. The academy gives participating faculty-staff an opportu-nity to cultivate leadership skills while developing a deeper understanding of the scope and reach of UGA’s public service and outreach mission.

“Vivian Fisher personified the public service mission here at UGA. She understood that preparing faculty-staff for future leadership positions within

PSO is vital to our future success,” said Jennifer Frum, UGA vice president for public service and outreach. “That’s why we’ve named the PSO Leadership Academy in her honor and continue to provide faculty-staff with this important professional development opportunity.”

The 2015-16 participants represent eight public service and outreach units, cooperative extension, two academic units, and the Office of the Vice Presi-dent for Public Service and Outreach. They are Joseph Allen, Georgia Center for Continuing Education; Mary Beth Bass, Fanning Institute for Leadership Development; Mona Behl, Georgia Sea Grant; Michelle Elliott, Archway Partnership; Shannon Ferguson, Carl Vinson Institute of Government; John Graham, State Botanical Garden;

Sheldon Hammond, College of Agricultural and Environmental Sci-ences, Cooperative Extension; Lauren Healey, Fanning Institute for Lead-ership Development; Kyle Hensel, Georgia Small Business Development Center; Kris Irwin, Warnell School of Forestry and Natural Resources; Beverly Johnson, Carl Vinson Insti-tute of Government; Emily Newdow, Georgia Center for Continuing Educa-tion; Andrea Scarrow, College of Fam-ily and Consumer Sciences, Extension and Outreach; Kelly Simmons, Office of the Vice President for Public Service and Outreach; Trina Von Waldner, College of Pharmacy; Josh Walton, Georgia Small Business Development Center; and Theresa Wright, Carl Vinson Institute of Government.

Robert NewcombLizzie King, left, an assistant professor in the Odum School of Ecology and Warnell School of Forestry and Natural Resources, examines research space in Driftmier Woods with Dessa Dunn, a UGA graduate student.

Faculty-staff leaders to take part in Fisher Leadership Academy

Page 7: UGA Columns Oct. 26, 2015

By Stephanie Schupska [email protected]

UGA will honor five individuals at its annual Tucker Dorsey Blue Key Alumni Banquet Nov. 6 at the UGA Center for Con-tinuing Education. A reception will begin at 6:30 p.m. with the dinner and program to follow at 7:30 p.m.

Senate Majority Leader Bill Cowsert (R-Athens), Rep. Terry England (R-Auburn) and Judge Steve Jones will receive Blue Key Service Awards; Professor Emeritus Peter Shedd will receive the Faculty Blue Key Service Award; and Tricia Chastain, president of the Georgia Student Finance Commission, will be pre-sented with the Young Alumnus Award.

Recipients of the AT&T Student Leader-ship Award, the Richard B. Russell Student Leadership Award and the Tucker Dorsey Memorial Scholarship will be announced at the event. The 2015-2016 Blue Key initiates also will be recognized during the banquet.

Banquet tickets are $30 for individuals. Sponsored eight-seat silver tables are $300, and the eight-seat gold tables are $500. To reserve tickets, contact Janet Lance at 706-542-0017 or [email protected].

Bill CowsertCowsert was elected to the Georgia state

Senate in 2006 and was elected senate majority leader in 2014. He represents the citizens of Clarke, Oconee and Walton counties in the 46th District. He serves on the Senate com-mittees for appropriations, finance, health and human services, judiciary, reapportionment and redistricting, regulated industries and utilities and rules.

Born in Jackson, Mississippi, and raised in Macon, Cowsert graduated from Macon Central High School. He earned a bachelor’s

degree in business administration from Pres-byterian College and is a 1983 graduate of UGA’s School of Law.

Cowsert is a founding partner of the Athens-based law firm Cowsert & Avery. He is the past president of the Athens Sertoma Club and the Clarke County Heart Association and is a board member of the Athens Touchdown Club.

Terry EnglandEngland represents the 116th District in the

state House of Representatives, which includes most of Barrow County and its municipalities. He first was elected to the House in 2004. Since 2011, he has served as chair of the House Appropriations Committee.

A 1984 graduate of Winder-Barrow High School, England attended UGA, majoring in agricultural engineering. He has spent his working life as a farmer and agribusinessman. He and his wife, Cindy, live on a farm that has been in England’s family for 150 years. His businesses have included Pete’s Little Idaho Tater Farm and the Homeport Farm Mart.

England is president and CEO of Pete’s Enterprises Inc., which provides consulting in marketing, hiring practices, workplace safety and food safety for the construction and agri-business industries.

In 2003, England served as chair of the board of the Barrow County Chamber of Commerce. He was a board member for six years and served on various committees for 15 years. The organization honored him with its Presidential Award and, in 2013, named him Citizen of the Year.

Steve JonesIn 2011, Jones was appointed a U.S. district

judge by President Barack Obama. Prior to his appointment, he served as a superior court judge in the Western Judicial Circuit and

presided over the Western Judicial Circuit Felony Drug Court Program. Previously, he was an Athens-Clarke County Municipal Court judge, an assistant district attorney for the Western Judicial Circuit and the director of the Athens Child Support Recovery Unit.

Jones has offered his time and leadership to numerous academic, community, legal and social organizations. He is a managing trustee and secretary for the UGA Foundation and is a member of the UGA Athletic Association board. He is the former chair of the Georgia Judicial Qualifications Commission, the UGA School of Law’s Board of Visitors and the Athens Area Community Foundation. He also served on the Georgia Supreme Court’s Com-mission on Equality and Domestic Violence Committee.

Jones has won many awards for his judicial and community service, including the UGA School of Law’s Distinguished Service Scroll Award, UGA’s Fulfilling the Dream Award and the State Bar/YLD Judicial Service Award, among others.

Jones earned his bachelor’s degree in 1978 and his Juris Doctor in 1987 from UGA.

Peter SheddShedd received a bachelor’s degree in 1974

and a Juris Doctor in 1977 from UGA, after which he clerked for Anthony Alaimo, then the chief judge of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Georgia.

In 1978, Shedd returned to UGA as a Terry College of Business faculty member. At UGA, he served as an associate dean, execu-tive assistant to the president and interim vice president for instruction. He also directed the education and training program of the Consortium on Conflict Resolution and Negotiation and served as faculty director of the executive leadership program within the Georgia Leadership Institute.

Shedd was among a group of Terry faculty responsible for implementing the college’s first executive MBA program. Prior to his retire-ment in 2009, he served as director of Terry’s full-time MBA program. As a University Pro-fessor Emeritus of Legal Studies, he continues to teach in Terry’s executive and professional MBA programs.

The Council for the Advancement and Support of Education named Shedd its Georgia Professor of the Year in 1993. He is also a Josiah Meigs Distinguished Teaching Professor. From 1987 to 2007, he served as faculty adviser to UGA’s chapter of the Blue Key National Honor Society.

Tricia ChastainOn Jan 12, Chastain assumed her new

role as president of the Georgia Student Fi-nance Commission, an appointment given by Gov. Nathan Deal. GSFC administers the state’s scholarship, grant and loan programs.

Prior to joining GSFC, Chastain was the associate vice president for government rela-tions at UGA. In this role, she was responsible for managing the university’s relationships with the governor’s office, the General Assembly, the board of regents and statewide elected and appointed officials.

Chastain began her career in government working in the office of U.S. Sen. Johnny Isakson when he was a member of the U.S. House of Representatives. She held a variety of positions for Isakson over 11 years and, from 2007-2011, served as Isakson’s state director.

Chastain graduated summa cum laude in 2000 from UGA, where she served as student body president and as an orientation leader. She is a member of the Leadership Georgia Class of 2015 and was recently recognized as a UGA 40 Under 40 honoree. She is a board member of the REACH Foundation and Great Promise Partnership.

BLUE KEY HONOR SOCIETY 7 columns.uga.edu Oct. 26, 2015

Distinguished serviceBlue Key chapter to recognize 5 for their contributions to UGA, state, nation

CYBERSIGHTSWEEKLY READER

The UGA Career Center recently redesigned its website to better engage students in the career search and preparation process. The responsive aspect of the site allows for better access via mobile devices, and the use of large images at the top of the page will more effectively engage visitors.

The addition of a blog, more in-depth stats from the Class of 2014 Career Outcomes Survey (providing detailed employment information, salary statistics and graduate school information) and other fresh content will encourage return visits to the site.

Career Center updates its sitewww.career.uga.edu

ABOUT COLUMNS

I 7 8 5

The University of Georgia is a unit of the University System of Georgia.

Columns is available to the campus community by subscription for an annual fee of $20 (second-class delivery) or $40 (first-class delivery). Faculty and

staff members with a disability may call 706-542-8017 for assistance in obtaining this

publication in an alternate format.

Columns staff can be reached at 706-542-8017 or [email protected]

EditorJuliett Dinkins

Art DirectorJanet Beckley

Photo EditorDorothy Kozlowski

Senior ReporterAaron Hale

ReporterMatt Chambers

Copy EditorDavid Bill

The University of Georgia is committed to principles of equal opportunity and

affirmative action.

Fifty-three kinds of snakes can be found in the Southeast, almost half of all species native to North America. Filled with more than 300 color photographs, this new edi-tion of Snakes of the Southeast is the most comprehensive authoritative guide to the snakes of the region.

At the heart of the book are its heavily illustrated descriptions of each species. The book includes a wealth of information about the importance of snake conservation and the biology, diversity, habitats and ecology of snakes as well as information about the interactions of humans and snakes.

The book, which is co-authored by Whit Gibbons, professor emeritus of ecology at UGA and the Savannah River Ecology Laboratory, promotes a better understanding of the conser-vation of this fascinating, but often maligned, group of animals.

Ecologist co-authors revised snakes book

Snakes of the SoutheastRevised EditionBy Whit Gibbons and Mike DorcasUGA PressPaperback: $28.95

Peter SheddBill Cowsert Terry England Tricia ChastainSteve Jones

Page 8: UGA Columns Oct. 26, 2015

Oct. 26, 2015 columns.uga.edu8

Four recent college graduates have been awarded one-year marine education internships with UGA Marine Extension and Georgia Sea Grant. Funded by Georgia Sea Grant, one of 33 National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Sea Grant programs located throughout the coun-try, the interns will serve as educators for students, teachers and the general public.

The interns will spend 50 weeks on Skidaway Island at the Marine Education Center and Aquarium, part of Marine Extension, which is a unit of UGA Public Service and Outreach. They will offer edu-cational programs focused on the ecology of Georgia’s estuaries and coastal islands. Interns also will participate in community outreach by judging science fair projects, teaching during science nights at local schools and field-testing educational curricula.

The interns were selected from an international pool of applicants and began their training in September. They are Kayla Clark from Old Chatham, New York; Jessica Hernandez from Bakersfield, California; Caitlin Shea-Vantine from Bridgeport, Connecticut; and Yesenia Feliciano from

Perth Amboy, New Jersey.The new cohort brings a range of skills

and experiences to the program. Clark, who graduated from Smith College in Northampton, Massachusetts, with a degree in sociology, worked as an envi-ronmental educator at multiple locations. An avid researcher of marine animal life, Hernandez received her degree in biology from Pomona College. Shea-Vantine, who became interested in marine life after her experience at the Maritime Aquarium sum-mer camp, located in Norwalk, Connecti-cut, earned a biology degree from Saint Michael’s College in Colchester, Vermont. Feliciano, who has a bachelor’s degree in marine science from Stockton University, has experience with peer mentoring in an underwater robotics course.

“I am always surprised at the quality of the interns we get from around the country,” said Mark Risse, director of UGA Marine Extension and Georgia Sea Grant. “It is a real win-win situation where we get some of the best and brightest students to work with our programs, and they get a one-year internship that will help them land the career of their choice.”

MARKETING from page 1

COMMENCEMENT from page 1 CURO from page 1

Dental clinic fall specialThe University Health Center’s

dental clinic is having a $99 fall special until Dec. 23. The special includes a routine cleaning, bitewing X-rays and exam.

Call 706-542-8700 to schedule an appointment.

New PAC cardThe Performing Arts Center has

introduced a new PAC VIP Card exclu-sively for UGA faculty and staff mem-bers. The VIP Card entitles faculty and staff to receive a 20 percent discount off regular ticket prices.

The VIP Card has a $250 credit that can be used to purchase tickets for all Performing Arts Center-sponsored performances. Cardholders may select one or more tickets to any PAC per-formances throughout the 2015-2016 season, and they automatically will receive a 20 percent discount on all tickets purchased with the card.

For more information, stop by the Performing Arts Center box office or call 706-542-4400.

Dream Award nominationsNominations are being accepted

until Oct. 30 for the President’s Fulfill-ing the Dream Award.

The award highlights the work of local community members and UGA faculty, staff and students who have made significant contributions to social justice, race relations, justice or human rights.

Nomination forms are available at http://t.uga.edu/1O1 or by calling OID at 706-583-8195.

Flu shotsFlu shots for faculty and staff are

available by appointment at the Univer-sity Health Center. The shots are given Tuesdays through Fridays at the Allergy Travel Clinic. To make an appointment, call 706-542-5575. The clinic staff also will give flu shots without an appoint-ment during “walk-in Wednesday” on Oct. 28.

Flu shots are $20 (quadrivalent) and $35(high-dose for those 65 years or older) for the uninsured; the paperwork for everyone else will be filed with insurance.

A valid UGA ID is required for those who get a flu shot. Dependents must be accompanied by a parent or spouse/partner.

Bulletin Board is limited to information that may pertain to a majority of faculty and staff members.

Bulletin Board

UGA Marine Extension, Georgia Sea Grant welcome 2015-16 interns

has a wonderful story to share,” Hobson-Pape said. “I will bring a collaborative approach to advancing the reputation of this great institution and look forward to working in partnership with UGA’s scholars, students and alumni around the globe to highlight their influential work. I am honored, too, to become a part of the UGA community and to join its exceptional leadership team and talented staff.”

Hobson-Pape was selected following a national search by a 15-member search committee chaired by Jennifer Frum, vice president for public service and outreach.

In a career that spans more than 20 years, Hobson-Pape has spearheaded multimillion dollar marketing and communications cam-paigns for IBM Corporate Marketing, where she was a senior marketing strategist, and Emory University’s Goizueta Business School, where she was executive director of external affairs. She also has managed marketing efforts for GE Capital as well as Meridian Manage-ment SA, which was a marketing partner of the International Olympic Committee.

Through her marketing strategy firm, Inflexion Point Marketing Group, she has

led the development of transformational strategies for Fortune 500 businesses, non-profit organizations and public and private institutions of higher education in Georgia.

In addition to her professional roles, Hobson-Pape has served for the past five years as executive director of the Sheth Foundation, a nonprofit that develops marketing scholars and scholarship globally and furthers the development of marketing thought. She also co-founded the publishing firm Marketing Classics Press, which serves the marketing field through the preservation of formative knowledge.

She is the author of the Georgia history book Images of America: Virginia-Highland and is a member of the historic preservation committee of the Virginia-Highland Civic Association.

Hobson-Pape holds a bachelor’s degree from Vanderbilt University and an MBA from Emory University. She received the Recent Alumni of the Year award in 2005 and was named Distinguished Alumni of the Year for Goizueta Marketing Strategy Consultancy in 2011 by Emory University’s Goizueta Business School.

nationally syndicated Top 40 radio show.Seacrest is being honored by the univer-

sity for his commitment to youth-oriented initiatives.

Seacrest’s philanthropic efforts include his service as chairman of the Ryan Seacrest Foundation, which has opened eight broad-cast media centers, known as Seacrest Stu-dios, in pediatric hospitals across the country. Through these studios, patients have the opportunity to explore the creative realms of radio, television and new media and are provided with a variety of programming dur-ing their hospital stays. Students from local journalism schools intern with the studios to learn about broadcasting, programming and operating a multimedia center.

“We look forward to welcoming Ryan Seacrest back to the UGA campus,” said President Jere W. Morehead. “Through Seacrest Studios, he has channeled his success into a source of comfort and creativity that has positively impacted the lives of pediatric patients and their families while providing significant learning opportunities for stu-dents. I am sure he will have a compelling message to deliver as the Commencement speaker.”

Seacrest is also honorary chair of the Grammy Foundation and is on the board of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art.

Seacrest, who attended UGA in 1992, moved to Hollywood to pursue a broadcast-ing career that he began as a radio intern while attending Dunwoody High School. Twenty-four years later, he is known interna-tionally for his work in television and radio.

“Ryan Seacrest is an American icon, one of the movers and shakers of the entertain-ment industry worldwide, a household name—and a Georgian,” said Charles Davis, dean of the Henry W. Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication. “Given Grady’s booming entertainment and media studies department, and the state’s robust growth in film and entertainment, I can think of no finer representative to grace Sanford Stadium’s podium in May. It’s a homecoming fit for a star.”

In addition to his on-air duties, Seacrest launched Ryan Seacrest Productions in 2006, which has become an entertainment production powerhouse. RSP currently is producing the E! hit series Keeping Up with the Kardashians and the spin-offs Kourtney and Khloe Take the Hamptons, Dash Dolls and Shahs of Sunset on Bravo. RSP also produces “E! Live From the Red Carpet” awards pro-grams. RSP is producing a scripted drama series for NBC called Shades of Blue, which stars Jennifer Lopez. RSP also produced the Emmy Award-winning reality series Jamie Oliver’s Food Revolution.

As an entrepreneur, Seacrest has invest-ments in media and entertainment compa-nies including Civic Entertainment Group, a marketing services company; Pinterest; FlightCar; attn:, a news media company targeted at millennials; and Mobile System Security through Seacrest Global Group.

in the pursuit of original research,” said Martin Rogers, who oversees CURO as associate director of the Honors Program. “I am endlessly encouraged by the passion and dedication that our faculty show to our undergraduate researchers.”

Over the past 15 years, more than 2,000 UGA undergraduate students have participated in CURO courses, which allow students to receive credit hours for their work, and CURO Summer Research Fellowships, which award $3,000 for full-time research work through the summer. The new CURO Research Assistantships add the incentive of a stipend during the academic year.

In its first year, 195 faculty members from 14 schools and colleges worked with undergraduates through the program.

Kevin McCully, a professor of kinesiology in the College of Education and director of the Exercise Muscle Physiology Laboratory, said undergraduate students’ help is a kind of “front line” in his research. With five undergraduate students receiving assistant-ships last year, his lab conducted tests on new technologies that could be used to help patients dealing with chronic illnesses and disabilities. One student’s inquiry has led to a possible $40,000 grant.

“We have great kids who want to get involved in research; the assistantships are expanding their opportunities,” McCully said. “There is a long list of students who want to do this.”

One such student is Hannah Bossie, who received a CURO Research Assistantship to work in McCully’s lab during fall 2014, just prior to her graduation. Inspired by a boy with a mitochondrial disease who she cared for as a nanny, Bossie had an idea for a re-search project, and it changed her life’s path.

“Getting to be involved in research for a population I am so passionate about made me do a complete 180-degree turn and decide I wanted to do research forever,” said Bossie, who is pursuing a master’s degree in exercise physiology with McCully as her mentor.

“My undergrad project provided the pilot data for this bigger more comprehensive study, and that entire project would not have been possible without a CURO Assistant-ship,” Bossie said. “It was a phenomenal experience to have a question and get to play an active part in finding a solution.”

Pamela Whitten, senior vice president for academic affairs and provost, said that the success of the CURO Research Assistantship program reflects the growing interest of students in hands-on learning experiences.

“Undergraduate research, service- learning, study abroad and internships are transformative experiences that position stu-dents for success after graduation,” Whitten said. “UGA is making more of these opportu-nities available to students as we implement our experiential learning requirement for fall 2016, and I appreciate the dedication of the many faculty and administrators who are helping take our learning environment to an even higher level.”

PUBLIC SERVICE AND OUTREACH

From left, interns Caitlin Shea-Vantine, Yesenia Feliciano, Jessica Hernandez and Kayla Clark participate in shark identifying training. The interns will spend 50 weeks on Skidaway Island at the Marine Education Center and Aquarium. They will offer educational programs and participate in community outreach.