uga columns july 11, 2016

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July 11, 2016 Vol. 44, No. 1 www.columns.uga.edu Marketing & Communications University of Georgia 286 Oconee Street Suite 200 North Athens, GA 30602-1999 Periodicals Postage is PAID in Athens, Georgia 2 CAMPUS NEWS 3 UGA GUIDE Watercolor illustrations by John Abbot on display at special collections libraries Photography series and social media campaign win national awards The University of Georgia ® By Mike Sullivan [email protected] UGA Skidaway Institute of Oceanography researcher Cath- erine Edwards is leading a team that has received a five-year, $750,000 grant from the Southeast Coastal Ocean Observing Regional Asso- ciation, or SECOORA, to establish a regional glider network. Also known as autonomous underwater vehicles, the gliders are torpedo-shaped crafts that can be packed with sensors and sent on underwater missions to collect oceanographic data. Equipped with satellite phones, the gliders surface periodically to transmit their recorded data and to receive new instructions during missions that can last from weeks to months. The team will work collab- oratively to operate regular glider missions on the continental shelf in an area from North Carolina to Florida known as the South Atlantic Bight. Regular coordinated experi- ments will involve simultaneous deployment of gliders at multiple locations off Florida, Georgia and North Carolina. Sensors on the gliders will allow the team to map temperature, salinity, density, dis- solved oxygen and other scientific data over the entire South Atlantic Bight. The data will help scientists understand ocean processes and how the ocean physics may affect fisheries—for example, the loca- tion of fronts or areas of increased productivity where fish often congregate. “This glider observatory is the first time regular glider efforts have been funded in the South Atlantic Bight and is complementary to larger SECOORA efforts in ob- serving and modeling,” Edwards said. “The work is highly leveraged by contributions from each of the team members and partnerships with fisheries and observing groups By Leanna Brown [email protected] Colleagues and friends of former U.S. Sen. Saxby Chambliss raised $250,000 in support of the UGA Chambliss Fellows program at an event held in Washington, D.C. Joining Chambliss and his wife, Julianne, were UGA President Jere W. Morehead, current UGA students interning in Washington and members of the U.S. Congress. Funds raised for the Cham- bliss Fellows program will allow five UGA students each fall and spring semester to live, work and advance their education in the na- tion’s capital. “The University of Georgia is immensely grateful to Sen. and Mrs. Chambliss for their support of our students,” Morehead said. “An internship in Washington, D.C., is an exceptional learning opportunity. With the generosity of our sponsors and the support of several members of Congress, we are helping to prepare our students By Christopher James [email protected] Kyle Fletcher is the one sitting in the classroom, but the new Georgia Certified Economic Developer Program offered by UGA is benefiting her entire community. The executive director of the Thomaston-Upson Industrial Development Authority is using what she learns from instructors at the Carl Vinson Institute of Government, a unit of UGA Public Service and Outreach, to create a portfolio or handbook to take back to her office. “Having that readily available is vital in what we do,” Fletcher said. “The most important thing you want to do is be prepared. As an economic developer, you need to have information on infrastruc- ture, water, sewer lines. You need to know all of that. “You don’t want to get asked a question and say, ‘Let me get back with you next week,’ ” she also said. Fletcher is only two classes into the three-year program, but she said she’s already learning about resources she didn’t know were available. The portfolio project will allow Fletcher to share her newfound knowledge with colleagues back in Thomaston. It’s one of the ways the new program, announced in January, is trying to make an immediate impact in Georgia. The Vinson Institute worked with an advisory committee of Georgia economic development experts, including By J. Merritt Melancon [email protected] Summer isn’t quite the same without fresh corn, beans, okra and tomatoes, but many Georgians don’t have easy access to the state’s bounty of produce. This summer, the UGA Co- operative Extension is working in DeKalb and Fulton counties to build a network of food oases to help serve residents who have a dif- ficult time finding fresh vegetables because of limited mobility, lack of transportation or lack of well- stocked stores or markets. UGA Extension in Clayton County will launch a similar mobile market this month. “Our mobile markets are help- ing to address the critical issue of food access in the Atlanta area,” said Jeff Miller, urban UGA Extension coordinator. “Working together, UGA Extension agricultural and natural resources agents, fam- ily and consumer sciences and 4-H agents teach patrons about where their food comes from, how to prepare their meals for optimal health and the value of a varied non-processed diet. “Mobile markets in Fulton, DeKalb and Clayton counties are excellent examples of how UGA Extension is helping to meet the needs of communities across Geor- gia,” he also said. For the second year, UGA Extension in DeKalb County has partnered with the DeKalb County Board of Health and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to bring the DeKalb Mobile Farmers Market to neighborhoods across the county. Traveling from site to site in a converted mint green school bus, UGA Extension personnel meet with people across the county and offer them farm-fresh produce at market prices. The mobile market also fea- tures weekly cooking demonstra- tions and healthy recipe ideas. Cooking and nutrition information are provided by DeKalb County Extension agents through the USDA-funded Expanded Food and Nutrition Education Program, or EFNEP, and Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program Education, or SNAP-Ed. Last year, the mobile market UGA head coach Jack Bauerle has been chosen as an assistant coach for the U.S. Olympic team. Bauerle will serve on the men’s staff at the Rio Games, where the swimming portion will take place Aug. 6-13. This will be Bauerle’s third appointment with the U.S. Olympic team. He served as the women’s head coach in 2008 and as a women’s assistant coach in 2000. Bauerle attended the 2004 and 2012 Games as a personal coach. “Any time I get to represent the USA and UGA at the Olympics, it’s a real honor,” Bauerle said. “I am absolutely elated to be chosen. I’m very thankful, and I’m excited. It will be a busy time for all of us, but we’re going to make a lot of special memories.” During the U.S. Olympic trials, which ended July 3, eight swimmers with ties to Bau- erle’s program qualified for the Games. Hali Flickinger, Melanie Margalis, Allison Schmitt, Olivia Smoliga and Amanda Weir made it for the women, while Gunnar Skidaway researcher receives funding for glider network UGA ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION GOVERNMENT RELATIONS PUBLIC SERVICE AND OUTREACH UGA head swimming and diving coach named to US Olympic staff New training program gives Georgia communities edge in attracting business Summer forum raises $250,000 for Chambliss Fellows program See COACH on page 4 See PROGRAM on page 4 See FORUM on page 4 See NETWORK on page 4 Mobile markets Rolling farmers markets help residents in metro Atlanta stock up on fresh food Lyndon Waller, left, a DeKalb Mobile Farmers Market program assistant, and Rickeia Stewart, a UGA Cooperative Extension administrative assistant in DeKalb County, are part of the team helping to bring fresh vegetables to underserved communities in DeKalb County. See MARKETS on page 4 Jack Bauerle J. Merritt Melancon

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July 11, 2016Vol. 44, No. 1 www.columns.uga.edu

Marketing & CommunicationsUniversity of Georgia286 Oconee StreetSuite 200 NorthAthens, GA 30602-1999

Periodicals Postage is PAID

in Athens,Georgia

2CAMPUS NEWS 3UGA GUIDE

Watercolor illustrations by John Abbot on display at special collections libraries

Photography series and social media campaign win national awards

The University of Georgia®

By Mike [email protected]

UGA Skidaway Institute of Oceanography researcher Cath-erine Edwards is leading a team that has received a five-year, $750,000 grant from the Southeast Coastal Ocean Observing Regional Asso-ciation, or SECOORA, to establish a regional glider network.

Also known as autonomous underwater vehicles, the gliders are torpedo-shaped crafts that can be packed with sensors and sent on underwater missions to collect oceanographic data. Equipped with satellite phones, the gliders surface periodically to transmit their recorded data and to receive new instructions during missions that can last from weeks to months.

The team will work collab-oratively to operate regular glider missions on the continental shelf in an area from North Carolina to Florida known as the South Atlantic

Bight. Regular coordinated experi-ments will involve simultaneous deployment of gliders at multiple locations off Florida, Georgia and North Carolina. Sensors on the gliders will allow the team to map temperature, salinity, density, dis-solved oxygen and other scientific data over the entire South Atlantic Bight. The data will help scientists understand ocean processes and how the ocean physics may affect fisheries—for example, the loca-tion of fronts or areas of increased productivity where fish often congregate.

“This glider observatory is the first time regular glider efforts have been funded in the South Atlantic Bight and is complementary to larger SECOORA efforts in ob-serving and modeling,” Edwards said. “The work is highly leveraged by contributions from each of the team members and partnerships with fisheries and observing groups

By Leanna [email protected]

Colleagues and friends of former U.S. Sen. Saxby Chambliss raised $250,000 in support of the UGA Chambliss Fellows program at an event held in Washington, D.C. Joining Chambliss and his wife, Julianne, were UGA President Jere W. Morehead, current UGA students interning in Washington and members of the U.S. Congress.

Funds raised for the Cham-bliss Fellows program will allow

five UGA students each fall and spring semester to live, work and advance their education in the na-tion’s capital.

“The University of Georgia is immensely grateful to Sen. and Mrs. Chambliss for their support of our students,” Morehead said. “An internship in Washington, D.C., is an exceptional learning opportunity. With the generosity of our sponsors and the support of several members of Congress, we are helping to prepare our students

By Christopher [email protected]

Kyle Fletcher is the one sitting in the classroom, but the new Georgia Certified Economic Developer Program offered by UGA is benefiting her entire community.

The executive director of the Thomaston-Upson Industrial Development Authority is using what she learns from instructors at the Carl Vinson Institute of Government, a unit of UGA Public

Service and Outreach, to create a portfolio or handbook to take back to her office.

“Having that readily available is vital in what we do,” Fletcher said. “The most important thing you want to do is be prepared. As an economic developer, you need to have information on infrastruc-ture, water, sewer lines. You need to know all of that.

“You don’t want to get asked a question and say, ‘Let me get back with you next week,’ ” she also said.

Fletcher is only two classes

into the three-year program, but she said she’s already learning about resources she didn’t know were available. The portfolio project will allow Fletcher to share her newfound knowledge with colleagues back in Thomaston.

It’s one of the ways the new program, announced in January, is trying to make an immediate impact in Georgia. The Vinson Institute worked with an advisory committee of Georgia economic development experts, including

By J. Merritt [email protected]

Summer isn’t quite the same without fresh corn, beans, okra and tomatoes, but many Georgians don’t have easy access to the state’s bounty of produce.

This summer, the UGA Co-operative Extension is working in DeKalb and Fulton counties to build a network of food oases to help serve residents who have a dif-ficult time finding fresh vegetables because of limited mobility, lack of transportation or lack of well-stocked stores or markets. UGA Extension in Clayton County will launch a similar mobile market this month.

“Our mobile markets are help-ing to address the critical issue of

food access in the Atlanta area,” said Jeff Miller, urban UGA Extension coordinator. “Working together, UGA Extension agricultural and natural resources agents, fam-ily and consumer sciences and 4-H agents teach patrons about where their food comes from, how to prepare their meals for optimal health and the value of a varied non-processed diet.

“Mobile markets in Fulton, DeKalb and Clayton counties are excellent examples of how UGA Extension is helping to meet the needs of communities across Geor-gia,” he also said.

For the second year, UGA Extension in DeKalb County has partnered with the DeKalb County Board of Health and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to

bring the DeKalb Mobile Farmers Market to neighborhoods across the county.

Traveling from site to site in a converted mint green school bus, UGA Extension personnel meet with people across the county and offer them farm-fresh produce at market prices.

The mobile market also fea-tures weekly cooking demonstra-tions and healthy recipe ideas. Cooking and nutrition information are provided by DeKalb County Extension agents through the USDA-funded Expanded Food and Nutrition Education Program, or EFNEP, and Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program Education, or SNAP-Ed.

Last year, the mobile market

UGA head coach Jack Bauerle has been chosen as an assistant coach for the U.S. Olympic team.

Bauerle will serve on the men’s staff at the Rio Games, where the swimming portion will take place Aug. 6-13. This will be Bauerle’s third appointment with the U.S. Olympic team. He served as the women’s head coach in 2008 and as a women’s assistant coach in 2000. Bauerle attended the 2004 and 2012 Games as a personal coach.

“Any time I get to represent the USA and UGA at the Olympics, it’s a real honor,” Bauerle said. “I am absolutely elated to be chosen. I’m very thankful, and

I’m excited. It will be a busy time for all of us, but we’re going to make a lot of special memories.”

During the U.S. Olympic trials, which ended July 3,

eight swimmers with ties to Bau-erle’s program qualified for the Games. Hali Flickinger, Melanie Margalis, Allison Schmitt, Olivia Smoliga and Amanda Weir made it for the women, while Gunnar

Skidaway researcher receives funding for glider network

UGA ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION

GOVERNMENT RELATIONSPUBLIC SERVICE AND OUTREACH

UGA head swimming and diving coach named to US Olympic staff

New training program gives Georgia communities edge in attracting business

Summer forum raises $250,000 for Chambliss Fellows program

See COACH on page 4

See PROGRAM on page 4 See FORUM on page 4

See NETWORK on page 4

Mobile marketsRolling farmers markets help residents in metro Atlanta stock up on fresh food

Lyndon Waller, left, a DeKalb Mobile Farmers Market program assistant, and Rickeia Stewart, a UGA Cooperative Extension administrative assistant in DeKalb County, are part of the team helping to bring fresh vegetables to underserved communities in DeKalb County.

See MARKETS on page 4

Jack Bauerle

J. Merritt Melancon

2 July 11, 2016 columns.uga.edu

By Lauren Corcino [email protected]

UGA faculty and staff are now able to use payroll deduction to make automatic deposits into their Bulldog Bucks account. This convenient, new service offers customers full control on how money is added to their Bulldog Bucks account automatically from their paycheck each month.

Paying with a Bulldog Bucks ac-count offers many advantages over paying for services with traditional debit and credit cards. Bulldog Bucks is the cheapest way to pay for on-campus services such as printing and copying with no transaction, convenience or maintenance fees associated with the transaction. Bulldog Bucks also is ac-

cepted at over 150 Coke and snack machines on campus. The funds loaded on the card will roll over from year to year with the account remaining active as long as it is used at least one time within a 12-month period.

Payroll deductions can be started or stopped at any time and the amount deducted can be changed by visiting the Bulldog Bucks account management website. After signing up for payroll deduction, the deduction will be taken out of the next month’s paycheck.

“We are excited to offer this new and convenient service to faculty and staff here at UGA,” said Virginia Hamilton, business manager for Bulldog Bucks. “The automatic deductions make it easy to always have funds available for vending, print and copy jobs as well as

dining and merchandise purchases.” Along with campus locations,

Bulldog Bucks has partnered with businesses in the Athens area including restaurants, gas stations, pharmacies and fitness clubs. These locations offer discounts to Bulldog Bucks account holders that can be activated when paying with Bulldog Bucks along with a printout of the coupon. A complete list of off-campus partners and merchant coupons is at www.bulldogbucks.uga.edu.

For more information about payroll deduction, call the Bulldog Bucks office at 706-542-8257.

By Lona [email protected]

Alexander W. Scherr has been named the School of Law’s new as-sociate dean for clinical programs and experiential learning. In this role, he will work to enhance and advance the school’s experiential learning offer-ings, which currently include 15 clini-

cal courses and a range of simulation classes.

“Alex is a long-standing leader in the clinical legal education commu-nity,” said Georgia Law Dean Peter B. “Bo” Rutledge. “I know he will

build on the good work that his pre-decessor Erica J. Hashimoto has done. His appointment aligns with the univer-sity’s mission to emphasize experiential learning, and this position is critically important at the law school as we pride ourselves on providing first-class training to the next generation of legal leaders. By ensuring our students have multiple opportunities for hands-on learning, we can ensure that they will be practice-ready and meet the needs of employers when they graduate.”

Scherr will continue former As-sociate Dean Hashimoto’s work to create new clinical opportunities and to increase support for clinical faculty and students. His new initiatives will include fostering collaboration with the university’s graduate and undergraduate programs, meeting new American Bar Association requirements for experien-tial courses and assessing the impact of Georgia Law’s clinics on local and state communities.

Scherr is the co-editor of the leading text for externship clinics, Learning from Practice: A Text for Experiential Legal Edu-cation, third edition (West Academic, 2016) for which he authored several chapters. He has served as president of the Clinical Legal Education Associa-tion, chair of the American Association of Law Schools’ Clinical Advisory Com-mittee and as a member of the AALS Clinical Section’s executive committee. He chaired the planning committee for the 2015 AALS Clinical Conference that had more than 700 participants and over 200 presenters. He has helped to plan numerous other national and regional conferences.

Bulldog Bucks now offers payroll deduction to faculty, staff members

Scherr named associate dean at law school

AUXILIARY SERVICES

SCHOOL OF LAW

RETIREES

DIVISION OF MARKETING & COMMUNICATIONS

Small Business Development Center on magazine’s best places to work list

The UGA Small Business Development Center, a public service and outreach unit, is one of Georgia Trend magazine’s 2016 “Best Places to Work in Georgia.”

The evaluation, conducted by the Best Compa-nies Group in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, looks at employees’ views on leadership and planning, cor-porate culture and communications, role satisfac-tion, work environment and overall engagement.

The SBDC program has 17 locations across Georgia and works with about 4,000 individual business owners and prospective entrepreneurs each year. In the past five years, SBDC-assisted firms have created more than 11,000 jobs, acquired more than $600 million in expansion and start-up capital, created more than 1,500 new businesses and are responsible for $8.9 billion in total sales. The most recent economic impact studies indicate that SBDC clients experience annual sales growth of 19.7 per-cent and employment growth of 19.6 percent.

Coordinated statewide by UGA, six of the SBDC’s 17 regional offices are located on the campuses of other University System of Georgia schools: Georgia State University, Kennesaw State University, Georgia Southern University, Valdosta State University, Clayton State University and the University of West Georgia.

UGA Foundation Board welcomes four elected trustees, two advisory trustees

The UGA Foundation elected four new trustees during its annual meeting in St. Simons: Larry D. Thompson, a faculty member in the School of Law, and alumni Allison Ausband, James “Jim” Whidden Childs and Frank Foley III.

Two advisory trustees, Betsy Camp and John Reid Parker Jr., also were chosen to assist the foundation’s committees in defining and achieving strategic goals.

The meeting concluded with the accordance of emeritus status to four trustees: Darren DeVore, Keith Mason, Mary Lou Swift and Brenda Thomp-son, whose terms concluded July 1.

Two from UGA receive US Department of State Critical Language Scholarships

A UGA student and a recent graduate have been selected to study the Arabic language while abroad this summer through the U.S. Department of State Critical Language Scholarship program.

Cassidy Lyon is traveling to Tangier, Morocco, and Alice Naghshineh is studying in Madaba, Jordan. The participants are joining approximately 560 U.S. undergraduate and graduate students who are spending eight to 10 weeks in intensive language institutes across the globe.

Lyon is a 2016 graduate who majored in inter-national affairs in the School of Public and Interna-tional Affairs and hails from Newnan. This fall she begins her master’s program in Washington, D.C., at Johns Hopkins University’s Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies.

Naghshineh is a senior Honors student from Marietta, majoring in Arabic and mathematics in the Franklin College of Arts and Sciences and eco-nomics in the Terry College of Business. Last sum-mer she studied the Persian language in Tajikistan, where she was placed with a local family for two months through the Critical Language Scholarship program. Her experiences earned her a Fulbright grant to return to Tajikistan, where she will perform economic development research this fall.

The Critical Language Scholarship program is part of a U.S. government effort to dramatically expand the number of Americans studying and mastering critical foreign languages, such as Arabic, Azerbaijani, Bangla, Chinese, Hindi, Korean, Indo-nesian, Japanese, Persian, Punjabi, Russian, Swahili, Turkish or Urdu.

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 Marketing & Communications. Periodicals postage is paid in Ath-ens, Georgia. Postmaster: Send off-campus address changes to Columns, UGA News Service, 286 Oconee Street, Suite 200 North, Athens, GA 30602-1999.

ON THE WEBhttp://bulldogbucks.uga.edu/payded.php

MayTen UGA employees retired May 1.

Retirees, their job classification, department and length of employment are:

Daniel A. Colquitt, maintenance worker, Facilities Management Divi-sion-Zone Maintenance Shop, East Campus, 16 years, 8 months; Harry A. Dailey Jr., professor, microbiol-ogy, 35 years, 8 months; Brendia Dianne Fields, administrative assistant II, language and literacy education department, 24 years, 10 months; Sarah A. Gresham, building services worker II, Facilities Management Division-Building Services (second shift), 22 years, 10 months; Charles O. Johnson, graphics designer, Division

of Marketing & Communications, 42 years, 10 months; Danny R. Langs-ton, structural maintenance foreman, Facilities Management Division-Zone Maintenance Shop, Health Sciences Campus, 27 years, 7 months; Bennie M. McKinley, building services worker I, Facilities Management Division-Building Services, North Campus, 10 years, 1 month; Inell Middlebrooks, food service worker I, Bolton Dining Commons, 25 years, 7 months; Robert Joseph Murphy, locksmith, residence hall facilities administration, 10 years; and Anne Asbell Pettis, county exten-sion program assistant, UGA Coop-erative Extension-Southeast District, 16 years, 1 month.

Alexander Scherr

UGA’s Division of Marketing & Communications won two national awards from the Council for Advancement and Support of Education. Photographer Andrew Davis Tucker won a bronze award for his photographs in the “Ga. Fishes Field Course Series,” which documented the coastal portion of a 2015 Maymester course at the UGA Marine Institute on Sapelo Island. The division also won a bronze award for its spring 2015 Commencement social media campaign. The multifaceted approach to celebrating graduation focused on informational posts, telling the stories of graduating students and sharing alumni advice with the graduating class.

Award-winning fish story

Source: Human Resources

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

Turned and Sculpted: Wood Art from the Collection of Arthur and Jane Mason. Through Aug. 7. Georgia Museum of Art.

Tom Polk. Through Aug. 13. Visitor Center, State Botanical Garden. 706-542-6014, [email protected]

Paper in Profile: Mixografia and Taller de Grafica Mexicana. Through Aug. 21. Georgia Museum of Art. John Abbot, Early Georgia’s Naturalist Artist. Through Aug. 31. Special collections libraries. 706-542-8079, [email protected] (See story, above).

MONDAY, JULY 11SHORT SESSION I GRADES DUEDue by 5 p.m.

TUESDAY, JULY 12LSAT PREPARATION CLASSHeld Tuesdays and Thursdays through Aug. 11. The LSAT preparation program covers each aspect of the test in complete detail, offering concrete techniques for solving even the most challenging items on the test. $899. 6 p.m. Georgia Center

for Continuing Education. 706-542-9841, [email protected]

SUNFLOWER MUSIC SERIES CONCERTRandall Bramblett, a noted singer-songwriter with 13 albums of his own original music, will perform. $15; $5 children ages 6-12. 7 p.m. Flower Garden Lawn. State Botanical Garden. 706-542-6014, [email protected]

WEDNESDAY, JULY 13STAFF COUNCIL MEETING2:30 p.m. 153 Miller Learning Center.

THURSDAY, JULY 14UGA ORGANIC FARM TWILIGHT TOUROpen house for farmers and gardeners to learn about some of the newest research being conducted on the 90-acre farm, where the college’s organic research plots are located. This open house is free, and no registration is required. 6 p.m. College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences Durham Horticulture Farm Georgia, 1221 Hog Mountain Road, Watkinsville. 706-542-8084, [email protected]

SATURDAY, JULY 16EXHIBITION OPENINGRecent: Acquisitions. Through Oct. 19. Georgia Museum of Art. (See story, above right).

FAMILY DAY: BUGS AND BUTTERFLIESParticipants will learn about John Abbot and

scientific illustration, then design their own butterflies. 1 p.m. Special collections libraries. 706-542-8079, [email protected] (See story, above).

TUESDAY, JULY 19FULL MOON HIKE$5; $15 per family. 8 p.m. State Botanical Garden. 706-542-6156, [email protected]

WEDNESDAY, JULY 20WITHDRAWAL DEADLINE FOR SHORT SESSION II

SHORT SESSION II MIDTERM

TOUR AT TWOTurned and Sculpted: Wood Art from the Collec-tion of Arthur and Jane Mason. Led by docents. 2 p.m. Georgia Museum of Art. 706-542-4662, [email protected]

THURSDAY, JULY 21THURSDAY TWILIGHT TOURLed by docents. 7 p.m. Georgia Museum of Art. 706-542-4662, [email protected]

FRIDAY, JULY 22GALLERY TALKAttendees will join Shaye Remba, son of Mixo-grafia founder Luis Remba and current head of

the workshop, for a question-and-answer session moderated by Lynn Boland, curator of the exhibi-tion Paper in Profile: Mixografia and Taller de Grafica Mexicana. 2 p.m. Georgia Museum of Art. 706-542-4662, [email protected]

90 CARLTON: SUMMERThe Friends of the Georgia Museum of Art present this reception featuring the summer exhibitions. Attendees will enjoy light refreshments, gallery activities, door prizes and “Ask the Experts.” RSVP to [email protected] or 706-542-4199. $5; free for members. 6 p.m. Georgia Museum of Art. 706-542-4662, [email protected]

SATURDAY, JULY 23MIXOGRAFIAChildren and adults are invited to learn about the work of international contemporary artists in the exhibition Paper in Profile: Mixografia and Taller de Grafica Mexicana, then experiment with paper-making and collage techniques to create their own work of art. 10 a.m. Georgia Museum of Art. 706-542-4662, [email protected]

COMING UPCLASS ON SUMMER PERENNIALSJuly 26. A class focusing on plants that thrive during the longest and hottest days of the year. This class will highlight perennials that bloom in late summer. These include, but are not limited to, tall phlox, echinacea and rudbeckia. $20. 3:30 p.m. Visitor Center’s Classroom 2, State Bo-tanical Garden. 706-542-6156, [email protected]

UGAGUIDE3 columns.uga.edu July 11 , 2016

NEXT COLUMNS DEADLINES July 13 (for July 25 issue)July 27 (for Aug. 8 issue)Aug. 3 (for Aug. 15 issue)

Calendar items are taken from Columns files and from the university’s Master Calendar, maintained by Marketing & Communications. 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.

The 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).

Watercolor illustrations by Englishman John Abbot on display at special collections libraries

‘Recent: Acquisitions’ to open July 16By Jean Cleveland

[email protected]

The exhibit John Abbot, Early Georgia’s Naturalist Artist is on display until Aug. 31 at the special collections libraries.

The exhibit includes watercolor illustrations from the Har-grett Rare Book and Manuscript collections, along with drawings on loan from other museums.

The exhibit celebrates the 20th anniversary of the James W. Woodruff Sr. Center for the Natural History of Georgia.

Of the thousands of drawings Abbot made, less than 200 of his butterfly and moth illustrations and none of his bird draw-ings were published, according to curator Beth Fowkes Tobin, professor of English and women’s studies at UGA. Abbot’s original watercolor drawings of insects and birds along with the engravings of his drawings that were published in 1797 in The Natural History of the Rarer Lepidopterous Insects of Georgia are included.

“This book was praised as one of the ‘most beautiful and valuable’ natural history publications of his era,” Tobin said.

Emory University, the University of South Carolina and the Morris Museum have loaned drawings for the exhibit.

An Englishman, Abbot (1751-1840) arrived in Georgia in 1776, planning to stay only a few years. He planned to use his time in Georgia to jump-start a career as a natural history illustrator, supporting himself by collecting insect and bird specimens for London’s natural history collectors and dealers.

Abbot intended to return to London after he made enough drawings to establish his career. But he never left the South, living the rest of his long life in rural Georgia, where he continued to collect and draw insects and birds into his 80s, producing more than 7,000 watercolor drawings.

Two events will be held at the special collections libraries in conjunction with the exhibit. During Family Day July 16 at 1 p.m., participants can learn about Abbot and scientific illustra-tion and then design their own butterfly.

The lecture “Climate Change and Biological Conserva-tion in Georgia: John Abbot and the Pearly Eye Butterflies of Athens-Clarke County” will be held Aug. 25 at 5:30 p.m. James

W. Porter, Meigs Professor of Ecology, will discuss the global phenomenon of anthropogenic climate change in the context of conservation in Georgia and Athens-Clarke County. He will announce a major new discovery of the presence of three closely related species of Pearly Eye butterflies within the Tallassee Forest. Using paintings by Abbot, Porter will show more than 100 years before the scientific description of these species, the artist was clearly aware of the slight variations that exist

By Morgan [email protected]

The Georgia Museum of Art at UGA will present an exhibition of recent additions to its collection from July 16 to Oct. 9.

Recent: Acquisitions will include more than two dozen works of art in a variety of media: works on paper, decorative arts, works on canvas and a neon light sculpture by Nils Folke Anderson. The museum’s curators of fine art (Lynn Bo-land, Pierre Daura Curator of European Art; Dale Couch, curator of decorative arts; Sarah Kate Gillespie, curator of American art; and Shawnya Harris, the Larry D. and Brenda A. Thompson Curator of African American and Afri-can Diasporic Art) selected them from works that have entered the collection since 2013, the last time the museum presented this kind of exhibition.

Highlights include six mixed-media pieces on gessoed paper by African-American artist Freddie Styles, Jean Dufy’s painting “Moulin Rouge” and a double-headed rooster stoneware piece by Edwin “Nub” Meaders.

Exhibition visitors are invited to choose the subject of a special tour Aug. 10 at 2 p.m. that will focus on a single object. They can vote in the gal-lery or in a Facebook album on the mu-seum’s page by “liking” a specific work. The curator who selected the work that wins the most votes will lead the tour.

The exhibit includes watercolor illustrations from the Hargrett Rare Book and Manuscript collections as well as art from other museums.

July 11, 2016 columns.uga.edu4

New MyID processThe process for requesting a MyID

for new UGA employees has changed. The change does not affect MyIDs for current faculty and staff.

The new process will assign MyIDs that include the new employee’s ini-tials and five random digits (example: gwb12345).

As part of the new process, the form to request a MyID has changed, and now requires authentication through UGA’s Central Authentication Service.

New employees and those without MyIDs are no longer be able to re-quest a MyID for themselves. Instead they should contact their manager or HR representative to have that person complete the MyID request form at myid.uga.edu.

Once the MyID request has been successfully completed, the new em-ployee will be informed by an email from [email protected] . The email will be sent to the email address of the MyID recipient provided during the MyID request process.

Visit the EITS Helpdesk website at https://confluence.eits.uga.edu/display/HDSH/MyID+FAQ for informa-tion about this change along with frequently asked questions.

Email questions about the new process to Keith Martin at [email protected].

Season basketball ticketsTickets for the women’s basketball

team’s 2016-2017 season are now on sale.

Orders can be placed by calling the UGA Athletic Association ticket office at 1-877-542-1231 or online at http://tinyurl.com/gwox9fj .

General admission season tickets are $40 each.

The priority order deadline for buying season tickets ends Sept. 1. Beginning in August, paper applica-tions will be mailed to current season ticket holders who have not renewed.

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

Bulletin Board

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potential participants, to develop the 60 hours of coursework required for certification. Participants select either the Industry Knowledge or Leadership track, and gain expertise in areas of key competency—pro-fessionalism and initiative; technical and industry knowledge; analyzing, assessing and problem solving; relationship building; and leadership and influence. The program expands on an annual economic development course series that the Vinson Institute created to help economic development professionals enhance their effectiveness. The first two courses were heavily attended, and course participants provided overwhelmingly positive feedback.Before UGA launched the certification program, the closest one was in Oklahoma, and it didn’t offer the Georgia-specific information that economic developers had been asking for. “There are incredibly talented profes-sionals in our state working in this area, and they’re hungry for more knowledge,” said Stacy Jones, the Vinson Institute’s associate director of governmental training, education and development. “They’re choosing to in-vest in themselves, which ultimately leads to improved outcomes in their communities.” The training, said Kevin Shea, president of the Georgia Economic Developers As-sociation, is critical to retaining talent in Georgia. “In the local community it makes a big difference because the individuals are more aware of the issues they face on a day-to-day

basis,” Shea said. “Communities can be more confident in people they have working on the front line.” Greg Sellars has traveled to Macon, Cartersville and Athens for the first three Georgia Certified Economic Developer courses. For Sellars, executive director of the Jefferson County Development Authority, getting certified was a priority even before the new UGA program was announced. One of the biggest benefits is hearing from his peers about how they’ve tackled challenges he might face. Sellars said the knowledge he picks up in the classroom is like “concrete that hasn’t cured,” until he is able to do something hands-on in his own community. In the first course, the Economic De-velopment Landscape, he learned about the importance of having a map of a commu-nity’s assets. He returned to Louisville and began taking stock of the community assets in Jefferson County. He can now recite by memory the infrastructure capacity of the county’s three industrial parks. It is knowledge Sellars can share with prospects when they need it, keeping Jefferson County in contention for new development. That scenario—played out in communities across Georgia—leads to a brighter future, Shea said. “We’re very glad to have been a partner in developing this program,” Shea said. “We hope to be able to put it to good use and have the state benefit in terms of jobs and investment for future generations of Georgians.”

PROGRAM

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The Vinson Institute worked with an advisory committee of Georgia economic development experts to develop the 60 hours of coursework required for certification.

served nearly 1,600 people and sold 9,800 pounds of fresh produce. The 2016 season started the week of June 6 and served 450 residents during its first 10-stop circuit. The market sold twice the amount of produce its first week of the 2016 season than it did during the first week of 2015.

“I think this is a great idea,” said Roger Hopkins, who met up with the mobile market at the Lou Walker Senior Center on June 9. “It keeps us from having to drive too far to the farmers market, and any time you can find fresh vegetables like this it’s a good thing.”

Hopkins, who is an active 67-year-old, sometimes doesn’t want to make the drive to his local farmers market and wants to avoid the crowds. For him the mobile mar-ket is convenient, but for some of the older members of his community, it’s a lifeline to a healthier diet, he said.

The success of last year’s market was due in large part to buy-in from community mem-bers like Hopkins and in part to cooperation

between departments in DeKalb County’s governments and inside the UGA Exten-sion office, according to Von Baker, DeKalb County Family and Consumer Sciences and EFNEP UGA Extension agent.

A team at DeKalb County Public Works’ fleet maintenance department retrofitted the mobile market bus, a hand-me-down prisoner transport bus from the DeKalb County Sheriff’s Office. A bus driver for the county’s Department of Recreation, Parks and Cultural Affairs drives the bus, and the DeKalb County Board of Health helps get the word out.

The entire staff from the UGA Extension office in DeKalb County—from adminis-trative assistants to agriculture and natural resources agents, 4-H agents and family and consumer science agents—take turns keeping the mobile market rolling while maintaining their usual workloads.

The market will run 16 weeks through the summer.

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at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and NASA.”

Edwards and her team have designed the deployments with input from fisheries management partners and interests of com-mercial and recreational fisheries. Gliders also will be outfitted with passive and active acoustic receivers that will record sound and measure signals from tagged fish. Fisheries managers at Gray’s Reef National Marine Sanctuary, state Department of Natural Re-sources offices, the South Atlantic Fisheries Management Council and others will be able use this information to better understand the ocean “soundscape,” fish migrations and key species use of their habitat.

“The glider missions will contribute important information related to research underway at Gray’s Reef,” said Sarah Fang-man, superintendent of Gray’s Reef National Marine Sanctuary. “We have been studying fish movement patterns inside the sanctuary, and the gliders’ acoustic receivers will provide a valuable new tool to expand where we can observe fish movements.”

In addition to regular coordinated experi-ments with multiple gliders and maximum regional coverage, the project will leverage opportunities to develop regular transects in areas where glider data may be of interest, for example near marine protected areas like

Gray’s Reef National Marine Sanctuary and other critical habitat zones designated by the South Atlantic Fisheries Management Council.

The glider data will provide valuable information about ocean models—regional models of ocean circulation funded by SECOORA as well as the larger modeling community. Further, the data will be pack-aged and used to improve ocean model forecasts.

“We’re sending all of the glider data to the National Glider Data Assembly Center as it comes in so that it can be assimilated into the U.S. Navy’s operational models,” Edwards said. “The gliders will improve Navy forecasts on the fly with real-time data.”

The remainder of the research team includes Chad Lembke from the University of South Florida, Ruoying He from North Carolina State University, Harvey Seim from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and Fumin Zhang from the Georgia Institute of Technology.

Data and maps from the project will be shared freely and made available to the research community, fisheries managers and other stakeholders and the general public in near-real time through SECOORA at http://secoora.org and the National Data Buoy Center.

Bentz, Chase Kalisz and Jay Litherland punched their tickets for the men.

Eight American swimmers at the Games is the high-water mark for the UGA program, eclipsing the seven who qualified in 2000 and 2012.

Counting Canadians Brittany MacLean, Chantal Van Landeghem and Javier Acevedo and Finland’s Matias Koski, UGA will have 12 swimmers in Rio.

Schmitt and Weir will be making their third Olympic appearances, while MacLean

and Koski each will be going for the second time. Flickinger, Margalis, Smoliga, Van Landeghem, Bentz, Kalisz, Litherland and Acevedo will be making their Olympic debuts.

The U.S. team will hold training camps in San Antonio July 12-20 and in Atlanta July 22-31.

The opening ceremony in Rio will be Aug. 5. The July 30 session at Georgia Tech will be open to the public from 11 a.m. until 2 p.m.

to meet the many challenges facing our nation.”

In attendance were Sen. Kelly Ayotte (R-N.H.), Sen. Richard Burr (R-N.C.), Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), Sen. Johnny Isakson (R-Ga.), Sen. Tim Kaine (D-Va.), Sen. Angus King (I-Maine), Sen. Joe Man-chin (D-W.Va.), Sen. Bill Nelson (D-Fla.), Sen. David Perdue (R-Ga.), Sen. Jack Reed (D-R.I.), Sen. John Thune (R-S.D.), Sen. Thom Tillis (R-N.C.) and Sen. Mark Warner (D-Va.). Several Georgia members of the House of Representatives also were present.

The event was hosted by Altria Group Inc., and presenting sponsors were General Dynamics, Home Depot and Northrop Grumman. The event also was supported by The Coca-Cola Company, Lockheed Martin and Southern Company.

“I am truly excited about the future of this program and the students who will become Chambliss Fellows,” Chambliss said. “It is an honor to give back to my alma mater and ensure opportunities like this one endure.”

Shannah Cahoe Montgomery