uga columns nov. 9, 2015

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November 9, 2015 Vol. 43, No. 16 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 DISCOVER UGA 4&5 UGA GUIDE Conference to examine Shakespeare’s adaptation across cultures Creative Writing Program opens up opportunities to fine tune artistic voice The University of Georgia ® Sanford and Barbara Orkin of Atlanta have extended a long history of generous giving to UGA by establishing a fund to provide scholarship support for low-income students attending the state’s flagship institution of higher education. The couple’s latest gift of $1 million from the Sanford and Barbara Orkin Family Founda- tion will establish a scholarship fund that will be used to provide financial support for tuition, books, room and board, and other living expenses incurred by outstanding, academically talented students who come from low-income families. Students eligible for Orkin Scholarships may come from families where there is little to no parental involvement and fi- nancial resources are minimal to non-existent. In many instances, scholarship recipients will come from families where no current or past family member has attended college. “One of the university’s top priorities is to increase scholar- ship support for students with significant financial need,” said UGA President Jere W. Morehead. “I am deeply grateful to Sanford and Barbara for their enduring generosity and for establishing this scholarship fund, which will have a transformative impact on the lives of many UGA students.” By Stephanie Schupska [email protected] Jane Seddon Willson, one of UGA’s most generous benefactors, died Nov. 3 in Albany. She was 92. Together with her late husband Harry, Willson established a tradi- tion of giving at the university that spanned more than six decades. “Jane set a standard for philan- thropy and service that few have surpassed,” said UGA President Jere W. Morehead. “She supported all aspects of UGA ranging from the Honors Program to the arts and humanities for many decades, cre- ating avenues to promote research and creativity among faculty and to facilitate international travel-study for our stu- dents. She will be missed as a dear friend of the university and a per- sonal friend of mine.” One of the most visible and direct re- sults of her philanthropy is the Willson Center for Humanities and Arts, which was named in honor of an endowment established by Jane and Harry Willson in 2005. The center promotes research and creativity in the humanities and arts and is a showcase for faculty By Aaron Hale [email protected] Kelly Beavers is making a habit of leaving a lasting, colorful, beautiful mark in the places she has worked. Beavers, a senior photography major in UGA’s Lamar Dodd School of Art, has painted a student- veteran inspired mural that will go up in the Tate Student Center on Veterans Day, Nov 11. When Beavers was in the Navy, she had the chance to paint murals on a U.S. aircraft carrier. “I left these murals in places where I worked on the ship,” she said. “I feel like I left a mark. It’s funny. Now as I’m leaving UGA, I’m doing the same thing as when I left the military. I’m leaving something behind.” As a student veteran, the mother of a 3-year-old daughter and a full-time bartender in Winder, Beavers certainly fits the bill of a nontraditional student. She served in the Navy from 2006-2010 stationed on the USS Harry S. Truman aircraft carrier stationed in Norfolk, Virginia. She went into the Navy undesignated, meaning she didn’t have a job title, but came out as a yeoman third-class petty officer. On the ship, Beavers performed a variety of tasks including handling the 30-ton anchor, steering the ship and performing clerical duties. Before she left, the Navy learned about her artistic talents, which gave her the opportunity to paint several murals on an aircraft carrier—not an expe- rience your typical undergraduate art major comes to school with. All along, Beaver’s ultimate goal was to get a college degree, but the military was its own sort of education. “It was tough work, but it gave me a good foundation,” she said. “I dreamt of going to a good school for a long time. It just felt out of reach until I joined the military.” With the military helping cover By J. Merritt Melancon [email protected] A tiny fly is having a huge impact on American fruit farmers. Known as spotted wing drosophila, the insect is costing farmers more than $700 million a year in lost produce and prevention costs. The U.S. Department of Ag- riculture’s National Institute of Food and Agriculture tasked UGA researchers with developing a long- term management plan for the flies. The $2 million NIFA grant will be led by Ashfaq Sial, a national leader in spotted wing drosophila management and an entomologist in the College of Agricultural and Environmen- tal Sciences. Spot- ted wing drosophila deposit eggs into ripe fruit, rendering the fruit unmar- ketable. Popu- lations are so bad in some areas that the flies are pushing organic farmers back to conventional pest control methods, according to recent farmer surveys, forcing them to sacrifice higher fruit prices and environmental advantages that come with an Military salute Art student creates student veteran mural Kelly Beavers, a senior photography major in UGA’s Lamar Dodd School of Art, has painted a student-veteran inspired mural that will go up in the Tate Student Center on Veterans Day, Nov 11. $1M Orkin gift will support need-based scholarships University mourns late philanthropist Jane Seddon Willson COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES DEVELOPMENT AND ALUMNI RELATIONS CAMPUS SCENES $2M grant will help develop control for fruit-ruining flies See GRANT on page 8 See GIFT on page 8 See WILLSON on page 8 Dorothy Kozlowski See MURAL on page 8 Ashfaq Sial Georgia first lady Sandra Deal discusses details of making Memories of the Mansion, a book she co-wrote with Kennesaw State University history professors Jennifer W. Dickey and Catherine M. Lewis, during an Oct. 28 campus visit. The book chronicles the history of the Georgia Governor’s Mansion. Hank Huckaby, chancellor of the University System of Georgia, visited the First-Year Odyssey seminar “Learning UGA: 1785-2015” to talk about the impact of the HOPE Scholarship at UGA. During his visit, Huckaby described the work that went into building the HOPE Scholarship and how it improved the student body at USG institutions. Dorothy Kozlowski Jane Willson

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Page 1: UGA Columns Nov. 9, 2015

November 9, 2015Vol. 43, No. 16 www.columns.uga.edu

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

Periodicals Postage is PAID

in Athens,Georgia

3DISCOVER UGA 4&5UGA GUIDE

Conference to examine Shakespeare’s adaptation across cultures

Creative Writing Program opens up opportunities to fine tune artistic voice

The University of Georgia®

Sanford and Barbara Orkin of Atlanta have extended a long history of generous giving to UGA by establishing a fund to provide scholarship support for low-income students attending the state’s flagship institution of higher education.

The couple’s latest gift of $1 million from the Sanford and Barbara Orkin Family Founda-tion will establish a scholarship fund that will be used to provide financial support for tuition, books, room and board, and other living expenses incurred by outstanding, academically talented students who come from low-income families.

Students eligible for Orkin Scholarships may come from

families where there is little to no parental involvement and fi-nancial resources are minimal to non-existent. In many instances, scholarship recipients will come from families where no current or past family member has attended college.

“One of the university’s top priorities is to increase scholar-ship support for students with significant financial need,” said UGA President Jere W. Morehead. “I am deeply grateful to Sanford and Barbara for their enduring generosity and for establishing this scholarship fund, which will have a transformative impact on the lives of many UGA students.”

By Stephanie [email protected]

Jane Seddon Willson, one of UGA’s most generous benefactors, died Nov. 3 in Albany. She was 92.

Together with her late husband Harry, Willson established a tradi-tion of giving at the university that spanned more than six decades.

“Jane set a standard for philan-thropy and service that few have surpassed,” said UGA President Jere W. Morehead. “She supported all aspects of UGA ranging from the Honors Program to the arts and humanities for many decades, cre-ating avenues to promote research and creativity among faculty and to facilitate international travel-study

for our stu-dents. She will be missed as a dear friend of the university and a per-sonal friend of mine.”

One of the most visible and direct re-

sults of her philanthropy is the Willson Center for Humanities and Arts, which was named in honor of an endowment established by Jane and Harry Willson in 2005. The center promotes research and creativity in the humanities and arts and is a showcase for faculty

By Aaron [email protected]

Kelly Beavers is making a habit of leaving a lasting, colorful, beautiful mark in the places she has worked.

Beavers, a senior photography major in UGA’s Lamar Dodd School of Art, has painted a student-veteran inspired mural that will go up in the Tate Student Center on Veterans Day, Nov 11. When Beavers was in the Navy, she had the chance to paint murals on a U.S. aircraft carrier.

“I left these murals in places where I worked on the ship,” she said. “I feel like I left a mark. It’s

funny. Now as I’m leaving UGA, I’m doing the same thing as when I left the military. I’m leaving something behind.”

As a student veteran, the mother of a 3-year-old daughter and a full-time bartender in Winder, Beavers certainly fits the bill of a nontraditional student.

She served in the Navy from 2006-2010 stationed on the USS Harry S. Truman aircraft carrier stationed in Norfolk, Virginia. She went into the Navy undesignated, meaning she didn’t have a job title, but came out as a yeoman third-class petty officer. On the ship, Beavers performed a variety of tasks including handling the

30-ton anchor, steering the ship and performing clerical duties. Before she left, the Navy learned about her artistic talents, which gave her the opportunity to paint several murals on an aircraft carrier—not an expe-rience your typical undergraduate art major comes to school with.

All along, Beaver’s ultimate goal was to get a college degree, but the military was its own sort of education.

“It was tough work, but it gave me a good foundation,” she said. “I dreamt of going to a good school for a long time. It just felt out of reach until I joined the military.”

With the military helping cover

By J. Merritt [email protected]

A tiny fly is having a huge impact on American fruit farmers. Known as spotted wing drosophila, the insect is costing farmers more than $700 million a year in lost produce and prevention costs.

The U.S. Department of Ag-riculture’s National Institute of Food and Agriculture tasked UGA researchers with developing a long-term management plan for the flies. The $2 million NIFA grant will be led by Ashfaq Sial, a national leader in spotted wing drosophila management and an entomologist in the College of Agricultural and

Environmen-tal Sciences.

S p o t -t e d w i n g d r o s o p h i l a deposit eggs into ripe fruit, rendering the fruit unmar-ketable. Popu-lations are so

bad in some areas that the flies are pushing organic farmers back to conventional pest control methods, according to recent farmer surveys, forcing them to sacrifice higher fruit prices and environmental advantages that come with an

Military saluteArt student creates student veteran mural

Kelly Beavers, a senior photography major in UGA’s Lamar Dodd School of Art, has painted a student-veteran inspired mural that will go up in the Tate Student Center on Veterans Day, Nov 11.

$1M Orkin gift will support need-based scholarships

University mourns late philanthropist Jane Seddon Willson

COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES

DEVELOPMENT AND ALUMNI RELATIONS

CAMPUS SCENES

$2M grant will help develop control for fruit-ruining flies

See GRANT on page 8

See GIFT on page 8

See WILLSON on page 8

Dorothy Kozlowski

See MURAL on page 8

Ashfaq Sial

Georgia first lady Sandra Deal discusses details of making Memories of the Mansion, a book she co-wrote with Kennesaw State University history professors Jennifer W. Dickey and Catherine M. Lewis, during an Oct. 28 campus visit. The book chronicles the history of the Georgia Governor’s Mansion.

Hank Huckaby, chancellor of the University System of Georgia, visited the First-Year Odyssey seminar “Learning UGA: 1785-2015” to talk about the impact of the HOPE Scholarship at UGA. During his visit, Huckaby described the work that went into building the HOPE Scholarship and how it improved the student body at USG institutions.

Dorothy Kozlowski

Jane Willson

Page 2: UGA Columns Nov. 9, 2015

2 Nov. 9, 2015 columns.uga.edu

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eme

WSU to assist low-income students Washington State University announced

a new program that will assist over 400 low-income students with funding.

The program, Assets for Independence, will give students in need a chance to open a sav-ings account with an interest rate of up to 400 percent. Under the program, students who save $1,000 throughout the year will receive $4,000 in matching funds. Dollars matched will be provided by a $1 million federal grant.

Students in the program also will receive academic support and financial literacy educa-tion. The funds from the account will go toward future educational expenses at the university.

Poll: Black college alumni report greater support from HBCUs

Black graduates of historically black colleges and universities are more likely to have felt sup-ported and felt they thrived after school, accord-ing to an ongoing study.

Gallup-Purdue University used a survey to collect data from 50,000 college alumni over two years. The survey measured the amount of support received after graduation. It found that around 55 percent of black graduates of histori-cally black schools felt their college or university prepared and supported them outside of college, compared to only 30 percent of black students from non-historically black colleges or predomi-nantly white institutions.

New

s to

Use

Wash hands at fairs, festivalsIt’s the time of year for visiting fall festivals

and Christmas tree farms. Many of these ven-ues have petting zoos and sell food products, a combination that is a potential health risk if proper hand-washing isn’t included.

Parents and guardians are advised to help keep children safe by following these recom-mendations from the CDC:• Visit hand-washing stations at petting zoos, festival locations and farms. Make sure children wash their hands right after petting animals or touching pens, cages, etc., where animals are housed.• Wash hands before touching food or drink-ing, before preparing food or drinks and after removing soiled clothing or shoes after visiting farms or petting zoos.• Keep food and drinks out of areas where animals are held.• Do not eat or drink raw, unpasteurized juices, cider, milk or cheeses.• Constantly supervise children younger than age 5 while in animal-holding areas.• Do not allow children to put thumbs, fingers, pacifiers or other objects in their mouths while in the animal areas.• Do not take strollers, bottles, pacifiers, cups or toys into animal areas.

For more information, visit www.cdc.gov/features/animalexhibits/.Source: College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences

By Camie [email protected]

The UGA Women’s Leadership Initiative will host a student debate on converting popular demands for greater gender equity into effective policies Nov. 12 at 7 p.m. in the Chapel.

The debate, which is free and open to the public, is titled “Hollywood to D.C.: Moving Feminist Rhetoric from Conversation to Legislation.” It will feature students from the Demosthe-nian Literary Society, the Phi Kappa Literary Society, the Roosevelt Institute and the Women’s Studies Student Or-ganization. Stefanie Lindquist, dean of the School of Public and International Affairs, will serve as moderator, and a reception will follow in Demosthen-ian Hall.

“Demosthenian was excited to get the opportunity to help plan this event,” said Katlyn Firkus, a fourth-year student majoring in psychology and marketing. “We believe in the power of rhetoric to effect change, and this topic represents change that needs to happen.”

Participants include Cali Callaway of the Roosevelt Institute, Justin Ebert of the Demosthenian Literary Society, Halle Hammond of the Phi Kappa Literary Society and Juhi Varshney of the Women’s Studies Student Organization.

Organizers urge students and other attendees to share their thoughts about the debate on social media using #Hllywd2DC.

“The University of Georgia is a hub for the exchange of ideas, and I encourage members of the campus community to hear our students engage in constructive dialogue about one of society’s most pressing issues,” said Senior Vice President for Academic Affairs and Provost Pamela Whitten.

Student debate to focus on women’s leadership issues

GRADY COLLEGE OF JOURNALISM AND MASS COMMUNICATION

WOMEN’S LEADERSHIP INITIATIVE

By Aaron [email protected]

Henry Louis Gates Jr., the Peabody Award-winning historian, TV personal-ity and Harvard University professor, weaved his personal story about the surprising discovery of his ancestral roots to demonstrate the power of the interdisciplinary study of genealogy at the 2015 Peabody-Smithgall Lecture.

Gates is creator of TV documenta-ries The African Americans: Many Rivers to Cross, which won a Peabody Award, and Finding Your Roots on PBS.

Mixing science and history with humorous anecdotes, Gates described how a childhood curiosity in his family tree led to a successful turn making TV documentaries about genealogy, while speaking at the historic Morton Theatre in downtown Athens Oct. 26.

Gates, an African-American and descendant of slaves, would dis-cover that nearly half of his ge-netic makeup was European—about 50 percent was African and less than 1 percent was Native American.

Gates first was introduced to geneal-ogy after the death of his grandfather, who was the son of a former slave. Gates recalls that his grandfather’s skin was white, which got him thinking about where he had come from.

“I was obsessed with my own family tree,” said Gates, who first interviewed his parents about his lineage when he

was 9. Later as an adult, Gates learned he

could trace his ancestors through public records and DNA testing. After that, he came up with the idea of the docu-mentary miniseries African American Lives, which dug into the genealogy of prominent African-Americans like Oprah Winfrey, Quincy Jones and Maya Angelou. The popularity of that show led to his weekly TV genealogy documentary Finding Your Roots, which examines the ancestry of prominent Americans like comedian Tina Fey, journalist Anderson Cooper and

U.S. Congressman John Lewis.Near the end of his lecture at the

Morton Theatre, Gates announced plans to test a genealogy-based cur-riculum in inner-city schools as a way to engage students in science, history and research.

Students would work on projects based on building their own family tree. Gates is betting that students will be able to identify with the personal nature of the project.

“Ancestry training is about find-ing yourself,” Gates said. “And what is everyone’s favorite subject? Yourself.”

Harvard professor traces his roots at 2015 Peabody-Smithgall Lecture

Henry Louis Gates, the Peabody Award-winning historian and Harvard University professor, discussed his roots and the power of interdisciplinary study at the Peabody-Smithgall Lecture.

By Merritt Melancon [email protected]

The College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences will recognize nine of its finest Nov. 10 with the D.W. Brooks Awards for Excellence and the CAES Faculty and Staff Sup-port Awards.

The Brooks Awards and Lecture Series was launched more than 30 years ago in honor of the UGA alumnus and former faculty member of the college.

This year’s award winners are Peggy Ozias-Akins, a professor in the horticulture department and director of the UGA Institute of Plant Breed-ing, Genetics and Genomics. She will receive the Brooks Distinguished Professor Award in recognition of her 30-year career at UGA developing new breeding techniques for peanuts.

Ronald Pegg, an associate professor in the food science and technology department, will receive the Brooks Faculty Award for Excellence in Teach-ing. The award recognizes his work introducing undergraduates to food analysis techniques and introducing non-majors to the chemistry of food with his popular courses on coffee.

George Vellidis, a professor in the crop and soil sciences department, is the recipient of the Brooks Faculty Award for Excellence in Research. The award recognizes his work develop-ing precision agriculture techniques that allow farmers to grow more with less water and his international col-laborations that focus on precision agriculture technologies.

Phillip Brannen, a professor in the plant pathology department, will receive the Brooks Faculty Award for Excellence in Extension. The award recognizes his work as the state’s pre-eminent Extension fruit disease pathologist. His work has grown in

importance as the state’s blueberry and grape crops have expanded.

Jennifer Grogan, county Extension coordinator for Mitchell County and 4-H agent, will be given the Brooks Faculty Award for Excellence in Public Service Extension. As a 32-year veteran of UGA Extension, Grogan is known for going above and beyond to serve Mitchell County residents.

Robert Beckstead, an associate professor in the poultry science de-partment, will receive the Outstanding Academic Advisor Award. It recognizes his dedication to his position as un-dergraduate coordinator for poultry science, a major that draws many pre-professional students in addition to those studying poultry production.

Mary Jane Scarborough, an admin-istrative specialist in the horticulture department, will receive the CAES Staff Award for Administrative or Professional Support. From manag-ing the department’s promotion and tenure records to making sure classes are entered in the UGA Bulletin cor-rectly, Scarborough has managed the details of the horticulture department’s inner workings since 1987.

Carl Hall, farm supervisor at Dur-ham Horticulture Farm, will receive the CAES Staff Award for Skilled Trades. He started working at the farm 36 years ago and has become known as the go-to person for information about farm management and a master engineer, who often builds specialized research equipment from scratch.

Jennifer Berry, a research profes-sional at the UGA Honey Bee Lab, will receive the CAES Staff Award for Technical Support. She has managed the research program at the UGA Honey Bee Lab since 2000 and has become an indispensable resource for beekeepers in Georgia and across the Southeast.

CAES will recognize 9 for excellence Nov. 10 at annual awards ceremony

COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES

Peter Frey

Page 3: UGA Columns Nov. 9, 2015

By Molly [email protected]

A key ingredient to improving couples’ marriages just might be grati-tude, according to new UGA research.

The study recently was published in the journal Personal Relationships.

“We found that feeling appreciated and believing that your spouse values you directly influences how you feel about your marriage, how committed you are to it and your belief that it will last,” said study co-author Ted Futris, an associate professor in the College of Family and Consumer Sciences.

With the use of a telephone survey, the study asked 468 married individuals questions about their fi-nancial well-being, demand/withdraw

communication and expressions of spousal gratitude. The results indicated that spousal expression of gratitude was the most consistent significant predic-tor of marital quality.

“It goes to show the power of ‘thank you,’ ” said the study’s lead author Allen Barton, a former doctoral student in the College of Family and Consumer Sciences and current postdoctoral re-search associate at UGA’s Center for Family Research. “Even if a couple is experiencing distress and difficulty in other areas, gratitude in the relation-ship can help promote positive marital outcomes.”

The study also found that higher levels of spousal gratitude expressions protected men’s and women’s divorce proneness as well as women’s marital

commitment from the negative effects of poor communication during conflict.

“Importantly, we found that when couples are engaging in a negative con-flict pattern like demand/withdrawal, expressions of gratitude and apprecia-tion can counteract or buffer the nega-tive effects of this type of interaction on marital stability,” Futris said.

Results from this study also repli-cated previous findings by documenting demand/withdraw communication to be a pathway through which financial distress negatively influences marriage.

Gratitude was measured in terms of the degree to which individuals felt appreciated by their spouse, valued by their spouse and acknowledged when they did something nice for their spouse.

UGA’s Women in Science student organization to hold career symposium

The UGA student organization Women in Science—also known as UGA WiSci—will host “Mapping Your Path in Science: WiSci Career Symposium,” Nov. 13-14 at the UGA Odum School of Ecology. Attendance is free and open to all, regardless of gender, but registration is required.

The symposium is designed to provide networking opportunities and foster professional development through panel discussions and inter-active workshops. Topics include work/life balance, job search strategies and skills, and identifying careers both inside and outside of academia.

The event begins with check-in and coffee in the Odum School of Ecology lobby at 10:30 a.m. on Nov. 13, followed by a welcome and opening remarks by UGA Provost Pamela Whitten at 11:15 a.m. On Nov. 14, associate professor of marine sciences Patricia Yager will deliver the keynote address at 9 a.m. The symposium con-cludes at 1 p.m. For the complete list of speak-ers, symposium schedule and to register, see http://wisciuga.weebly.com/symposium.html.

School of Law leads other Georgia schools in bar exam passage rate

The UGA School of Law saw a higher per-centage of its graduates pass the July 2015 ad-ministration of the state bar exam than any other law school in the state. UGA led both public and private law schools with regard to first-time takers and overall exam takers.

The passage rate for first-time test takers from Georgia Law was 87 percent, 9.2 percentage points higher than the state average of 77.8 percent for ABA-approved law schools. For all Georgia Law graduates who took the July 2015 exam, 85.4 percent passed. The bar exam is required to receive a license for practicing law. It is administered twice annually by the Supreme Court of Georgia Office of Bar Admissions.

Georgia Law students win moot court competition over University of Florida

Third-year Georgia Law students Stephen D. Morrison and Jacob M. “Jake” Ware defeated a team from the University of Florida to win the annual Florida/Georgia-Hulsey/Gambrell Moot Court Competition in Jacksonville.

The long-running tournament is traditionally held the Friday before the Georgia-Florida football game. Two law students from each school compete as lawyers in a mock appellate case, and the victors earn the right to keep the championship trophy at their law school for the year. Georgia Law’s win brings its record in the competition to 22-9-2.

UGA debate teams win tournamentThe Georgia Debate Union, which organizes

and fields competitive policy debate teams at UGA, emerged victorious at the 2015 Vander-bilt intercollegiate debate tournament held in Nashville, Tennessee. The tournament featured over 50 teams from nearly 20 colleges and uni-versities. Two teams representing the Georgia Debate Union “closed out” in the finals, meaning they won each respective side of their elimina-tion round brackets and tied for first place at the tournament. Teams from the same school typically do not debate each other.

The team of Tucker Boyce, a junior from Alpharetta, and Nathan Rice, a freshman from Roswell, won every one of its debates at the tour-nament. Boyce earned first speaker at the tourna-ment, while Rice earned second speaker.

The team of Swapnil Agrawal, a freshman from Chamblee, and Advait Ramanan, a freshman from Columbia, Maryland, won all but one of its debates. Agarwal earned eighth speaker at the tournament, while Ramanan earned ninth speaker.

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.

DISCOVER UGA: THE ARTS

The art of storytellingBy Molly [email protected]

Gabrielle Lucille Fuentes, a third-year creative-writing doctoral candidate at UGA, types furiously away at her computer, clicking between edits and additions to her first novel.

The year is 1975 in Spain. Police ar-rive at the door of Mosca’s grandmother’s door to hand over her brother Alexis’ medallion. Mosca’s brother has become one of the “disappeared,” taken by the secret police to never be seen from again.

So begins The Sleeping World, set in the political turmoil of Spain in the 1970s, which will be published by Simon & Schuster (Touchstone) next year.

“The book follows Mosca, the nar-rator, in finding her kidnapped brother,” Fuentes said. “She’s part of a group of uni-versity students resisting the government. It’s an emotional journey that takes Mosca through Spain and eventually France.”

Fuentes drew inspiration for the book from her time living in Spain.

“I saw that some older people were more fascist and conservative in their beliefs, while some younger people were anarchists and trying to rebel,” she said. “I used those ideas to come up with the story.”

The rest of the novel fast-forwards two years, taking place in 1977, when there is an absence of power. Fascists fight anarchists for control, students take part in protests in the city and the new order

of life has yet to be decided.“My book is a work of literary fiction

but has elements of magic and realism,” she said. “Even though the book is set in the 1970s, I still saw this divide between the fascist and anarchist ideologies when I lived in Spain. It’s about the connection of then and now … about the tension between forgetting and remembering.”

Fuentes wrote The Sleeping World as a full-length piece for her Master of Fine Arts program in fiction at the University of Colorado, Boulder. After graduation, she started her doctoral program at UGA, where she actively sent out her manuscript and made edits.

The Creative Writing Program in the English department at UGA offers academic and professional opportunities for undergraduate and graduate students. Undergraduates can take introductory courses in creative writing, while graduate students can obtain doctorates in English with a concentration in creative writing.

In their first two years, doctoral students take courses on literary history and disciplinary change within the Eng-lish department. Before their third year, students study for comprehensive exams. Finally, in their fourth and fifth years, students complete a creative dissertation, which is often a full-length work.

Fuentes has two books in the works—she received an offer from Simon & Schuster (Touchstone) for her first novel, and as of fall 2016, it will be available everywhere books are sold. Along with

wrapping up The Sleeping World, she hopes to have a draft of her second novel finished by the end of this year.

“It’ll be totally different than The Sleeping World,” she said. “It’s set in the 1930s at a religious commune up north. It’ll be a retelling of Wuthering Heights.”

A continuous writing pace is not un-common for students in UGA’s Creative Writing Program.

“Many of our students already have one or two books when they arrive at UGA,” said Magdalena Zurawski, an as-sistant professor of English and creative writing. “By the time they leave, it’s not unusual for them to have three or four books out.”

Like the students, the Creative Writ-ing faculty members are expected to publish books. Zurawski, who has worked closely with Fuentes, has written a novel titled The Bruise and a collection of poetry titled Companion Animal.

With nearly two books completed, Fuentes said UGA has been a great deci-sion for her career in terms of its classes, mentors and creative environment.

“I picked Athens because it’s a town that embraces artists,” she said. “In this town, it’s realistic to be an artist and make a living. It’s really a place with a vibrant arts culture.”

Between writing and working with her agent and publisher, Fuentes also stays busy taking courses and teaching an undergraduate Introduction to Creative Writing class.

Creative Writing Program opens up opportunities for students to fine tune their artistic voice

COLLEGE OF FAMILY AND CONSUMER SCIENCES

3 columns.uga.edu Nov. 9, 2015

Gabrielle Lucille Fuentes is mastering the art of creative writing at UGA. She came to the program with one unpublished novel, now scheduled to be released by Simon & Schuster (Touchstone) next fall, and currently is working on her second.

UGA research links gratitude to positive marital outcomes

Page 4: UGA Columns Nov. 9, 2015

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NEXT COLUMNS DEADLINES Nov. 11 (for Nov. 30 issue)Nov. 18 (for Dec. 7 issue)Dec. 9 (for Jan. 11 issue)

4&5columns.uga.edu Nov. 9, 2015

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 at the University

of Georgia, check the Master Calendar on the Web (calendar.uga.edu/ ).

I 7 8 5

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

EXHIBITIONSTravels on the Bartram Trail: Beth Thompson’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 Gal-lery, special collections 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: Photographs 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]

Crowned with Glory and Immortality. Through Feb. 28. Georgia Museum of Art. [email protected]

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

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 9GEORGIA WRITERS HALL OF FAME INDUCTION CEREMONY*“Reflections on a Writer’s Life,” Taylor Branch, Pulitzer Prize-winning American author and public speaker; and Janisse Ray, writer, naturalist and activist. Part of the Signature Lecture series. 10:30 a.m. Special collections libraries audi-torium. 706-542-3879, [email protected]

PERFORMANCE*Known throughout the world for their virtuosity, charm and appeal to a vast international audience, The King’s Singers are synonymous with the best in vocal ensemble performance. $25-$50. 8 p.m. Hugh Hodgson Concert Hall, Performing Arts Center. 706-542-4400.

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 10CLASS“Herbal Creams, Salves and Sprays.” Anne Shenk, director of education, and Pam Butts, curator of the conservatory and the herb and physic garden, will share recipes for using herbs, essential oils and beeswax to prepare products for health and beauty. $30. 9:30 a.m. Classroom 2, State Botani-cal Garden. 706-542-6156, [email protected]

INNOVATION GATEWAY LUNCH AND LEARNThe Innovation Gateway Lunch and Learn Series provides training and presentation sessions once a month. The goal is to inform and inspire individuals working with start-up companies as well as those interested in issues facing uni-versity start-ups. Topics range from employment issues and tax credits to grant programs and intellectual property. Noon. Room 128/130 CAGTECH. 706-542-7065, [email protected]

LUNCHTIME TIME MACHINE“Why Do Historians Fudge?” 12:30 p.m. 221 LeConte Hall. 706-583-8180, [email protected]

WORKSHOP “Basics of Course Design.” This workshop introduces par-ticipants to L. Dee Fink’s ideas for course design, something he calls “Significant Learning.” This workshop will provide participants with the tools to create formulated course learn-ing goals for students using Fink’s Taxonomy for Significant Learning. 1 p.m. Center for Teaching and Learning Class-room. 706-542-1355, [email protected]

D.W. BROOKS LECTURESpeaker: Sanjaya Rajaram, the 2014 world food prize winner. 3 p.m. Masters Hall, Georgia Center. [email protected]

AUTHOR TALK*UGA Press author Valerie J. Frey will discuss her book Pre-serving Family Recipes. 3 p.m. Special collections libraries. 706-542-4145, [email protected]

DISTINGUISHED LECTURER“The Biographical Container: James Merrill’s Life and Art,” Langdon Hammer, Yale University. 4:30 p.m. 350 Miller Learning Center.

LECTURE ON TURKEY“Turkey—Cradle of Civilization.” Fulbright Turkish Language Instructor Ayse Akpinar will make a presentation about Turkey and its contemporary culture. 6 p.m. 214 Miller Learning Center. 706-424-5115, [email protected]

JOHNSTONE LECTURE*“The Garden at Night: Moths, Pollination Services and Climate Change,” James W. Porter is the Josiah Meigs Professor of Ecology at UGA. Porter is known for his award-winning photography as well as his knowledge of butterflies and moths, climate change, coral reefs and ecology. 7 p.m. Visitor Center, State Botanical Garden. 706-542-6138, [email protected]

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 11DIWALIHindu religious observance.

VETERANS DAYClasses in session; offices open.

HONEST DIALOGUE ACROSS DIFFERENCEPresented by Jamie Washington, president and founder of the Washington Consulting Group and co-founder of the Social Justice Training Institute. Part of the Student Affairs Social Justice and Inclusion Lecture series. 10 a.m. Grand Hall, Tate Student Center. 706-542-8229, [email protected]

REACTING TO THE PAST WORKSHOP“Reacting to the Past: Flipping Your Course and Engaging Your Students,” Chase Hagood, assistant director of faculty development and recognition at the Center for Teaching and Learning. 12:30 p.m. 372 Miller Learning Center. 706-583-0067, [email protected]

TOUR AT TWO*Kathleen Staples, independent scholar and co-curator of Georgia’s Girlhood Embroidery: Crowned with Glory and Im-morality, will lead a gallery talk. 2 p.m. Georgia Museum of Art. 706-542-4662, [email protected]

CLIMATE SEMINAR“Riding the Rising Tide: Protecting Georgia’s Coast in Times of Change.” 3:30 p.m. 268 Miller Learning Center. 706-542-2151.

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 12MEN’S TENNIS BULLDOG SCRAMBLEThrough Nov. 15. Dan Magill Tennis Complex. 706-542-1621.

STATE OF TECHNOLOGY PRESENTATIONAnnual State of Technology at UGA presentation by Timothy M. Chester, vice president for information technology. 10 a.m. Reception Hall, Tate Student Center. 706-542-8831, [email protected]

CTL WORKSHOP“Developing and Implementing Video-Enhanced, Case-Based Learning Modules in a Disease State Management” will be led by Catherine Bourg, a clinical assistant professor of phar-macy. In addition to a presentation, participants can interact with colleagues from other health-related professions at UGA and beyond. Noon. 337 pharmacy building. 706-542-1355, [email protected]

DISABILITY RESOURCE CENTER SCHOLARSHIP RECEPTIONEach scholarship recipient will have the opportunity to speak and share personal experiences. 3 p.m. Grand Hall, Tate Student Center. 706-542-8719, [email protected]

CONFERENCE*Through Nov. 14. “Appropriation in the Age of Global Shake-speare” brings to the UGA campus four of the leading schol-ars of Shakespeare from around the world to discuss how TV shows, films, novels, poems, operas, music and stage plays from different countries and cultures adapt Shakespeare and make these 400-year-old plays and poems their own. Special collections libraries. 706-542-1261, [email protected] (See story, bottom right).

GUEST LECTURE*“American Samurai: A Teenager’s Journey from New England to the Satsuma Rebellion,” William Fleming, an assistant professor of East Asian languages and literature and theater studies at Yale University. 5:30 p.m. Georgia Museum of Art. 706-542-4662, [email protected]

STUDENT NIGHT*The Student Association of the Georgia Museum of Art will host a night of music, food, fun and themed activities to celebrate its latest exhibitions. Student Night is sponsored by the UGA Parents and Families Association. 6:30 p.m. Georgia Museum of Art. 706-542-4662, [email protected]

WOMEN’S LEADERSHIP INITIATIVE STUDENT DEBATEThe Women's Leadership Initiative presents “Hollywood to D.C.: Moving Feminist Rhetoric from Conversation to Legisla-tion,” a student debate featuring the Demosthenian Literary Society, Phi Kappa Literary Society, Roosevelt Institute and Women's Studies Student Organization. Stefanie Lindquist, dean of the School of Public and International Affairs, will serve as moderator. 7 p.m. Chapel. 706-542-0383, [email protected] (See story, page 2).

SAMURAI FILM SERIES SCREENING*The Hidden Fortress. To include an introduction by Masaki Mori, an associate professor and assistant director of the Japanese Program at UGA. In Japanese with English sub-titles. Presented in conjunction with the exhibition Samurai: The Way of the Warrior. 7 p.m. Georgia Museum of Art. 706-542-4662, [email protected]

KENDO DEMONSTRATION*In celebration of Samurai: The Way of the Warrior, the student organization Kendo at UGA will provide a demonstration of this modern Japanese martial art. 7 p.m. Georgia Museum of Art. 706-542-4662, [email protected]

UGA HOCKEY vs. Clemson. Tickets can be purchased can be purchased at the Tate Student Center ticket office, online or at the Classic Center Box Office. $10; $2 for students. 7 p.m. Classic Cen-ter, 300 N. Thomas St. 706-207-8819, [email protected]

SECOND THURSDAY CONCERTThis evening of music with the Hodgson Wind Ensemble and director Cynthia Johnston Turner will feature “Audivi Media Nocte” by Oliver Waespi and David Maslanka’s Symphony No. 8. $18; $5 with a UGACard. 7:30 p.m. Hugh Hodgson Concert Hall, Performing Arts Center. 706-542-4752, [email protected]. (See story, top right).

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 13MORNING MINDFULNESS*Instructor Jerry Gale will lead a free meditation session to enhance mindful practice in an environment of creative

energy. RSVP to 706-542-0448 or [email protected]. 9:30 a.m. Georgia Museum of Art. 706-542-4662, [email protected]

WISCI CAREER SYMPOSIUMAlso Nov. 14. 10:30 a.m. Ecology building. (See Digest, page 3).

WOMEN’S STUDIES FRIDAY SPEAKER SERIES LECTURE“Reconceptualizing LGBTQ Allyhood, and Why Feminism Mat-ters in Queer Research,” Stephanie Anne Shelton, women’s studies and language and literacy education. 12:20 p.m. 150 Miller Learning Center. 706-542-2846, [email protected]

PHILOSOPHY LECTURE“Knowing The Good and Ruling the City in Plato’s Republic,” Christopher Bobonich, Stanford University. Part of the Kleiner Colloquium Series. Reception will follow lecture. 3:30 p.m. 205S Peabody Hall. 706-542-2823.

SWIMMING AND DIVING vs. Emory. 5 p.m. Gabrielsen Natatorium, Ramsey Student Center.

READING: GEORGE SINGLETONThe Georgia Review and Avid Bookshop team up to host a reading by author George Singleton. 6:30 p.m. Hendershot’s Coffee, 237 Prince Ave. 706-542-3481, [email protected]

MEN’S BASKETBALL vs. Chattanooga. $15. 7 p.m. Stegeman Coliseum. 706-542-1231.

UGA HOCKEY vs. Georgia Tech. Tickets can be purchased can be purchased at the Tate Student Center ticket office, online or at the Clas-sic Center box office. Attendees are encouraged to wear red. $10; $2 for students. 7:30 p.m. Classic Center, 300 N. Thomas St. 706-207-8819, [email protected]

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 14FAMILY DAY*Participants will view samurai suits of armor, helmets, swords, saddles and more in the exhibition Samurai: The Way of the Warrior then create their own kabuto helmet in the Mi-chael and Mary Erlanger Studio Classroom. 10 a.m. Georgia Museum of Art. 706-542-4662, [email protected]

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 15THE SUPERHERO DASH 5K RUN/WALKHosted by the UGA Multicultural Greek Council. Benefits the Boys and Girls Club of Athens. Participants are encouraged to dress as their favorite superhero. $20-$25. 8 a.m. Tate Student Center plaza. [email protected]

WOMEN’S BASKETBALL vs. Stetson. $5. 2 p.m. Stegeman Coliseum.

CONCERTThe Munich Symphony Orchestra and conductor Phillipe Entremont captivated the Hodgson Hall audience with their performance of the Mozart Requiem in 2011. They return this season with renowned guitarist Pepe Romero and the Romeros Quartet, the Royal Family of the Guitar. $25-$65. 7 p.m. Hugh Hodgson Concert Hall, Performing Arts Center. 706-542-4400. (See story, right).

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 16INTERNATIONAL PARADE OF FLAGSThe Parade of Flags is an annual event where students, faculty and staff carry a national flag of their home country or a country with which they have a significant connection. This event is the official kickoff for UGA’s International Education Week. 10:45 a.m. The Arch.

WORLD FEST Participants will enjoy many different cultural displays, performances and arts and crafts from around the world. Sponsored by World Ambassadors and International Student Life. 11 a.m. Tate Student Center plaza; rain location is the Tate Center’s Grand Hall. [email protected]

INTERNATIONAL EDUCATION WEEK KEYNOTE SPEAKER“How Looking Sideways Can Expand Your View of the World,” Rose George, an award-winning author. 1 p.m. Chapel. 706-542-5867, [email protected]

SUSTAINABLE FOOD SYSTEMS SEMINAR SERIES LECTUREDr. Susan Sanchez, chair of One Health and a professor of infectious diseases, will give a talk on “One Health; Drive it Like You Stole It—How to Reach Sustainable Food Systems Through a One Health Approach.” 3:30 p.m. 103 Conner Hall.

OXFAM HUNGER BANQUETThis event will bring awareness to the issues of hunger and poverty. This event is a part of UGA’s International Education Week. 6 p.m. Reception Hall, Tate Student Center.

GUEST LECTURE“Change Your Plate, Change Your Life, Change the World,” Rich Roll. Roll will speak about how to optimize health and wellness through a plant-powered whole foods diet. 7 p.m. 101 Miller Learning Center. 706-224-3796, [email protected]

COMING UPUNIVERSITY COUNCIL MEETINGNov. 18. 3:30 p.m. Tate Student Center Theatre. 706-542-6020, [email protected]

OPERATION SAFE DRIVENov. 19. Free safety inspections for all UGA students and employees. 10 a.m. Tate Student Center parking deck. (See Bulletin Board, page 8).

*PART OF THE 2015 SPOTLIGHT ON THE ARTS FESTIVAL

By Bobby [email protected]

The UGA Performing Arts Center will present the Munich Symphony Orchestra together with Pepe Romero and the Romeros Guitar Quartet Nov. 15 at 7 p.m. in Hugh Hodgson Concert Hall.

Philippe Entremont will conduct the concert, which will include Bizet’s Carmen Suites and Mendelssohn’s Italian symphony. The program also will include Joaquin Rodrigo’s Concierto de Aranjuez with Romero as guitar soloist and Rodrigo’s Concierto Andaluz featuring the Romeros Guitar Quartet.

Tickets for the concert are $25-$65 and are discounted for UGA students. Tickets can be purchased at the Perform-ing Arts Center box office, online at pac.uga.edu or by calling 706-542-4400.

For more than half a century, the Munich Symphony Orchestra has made a considerable contribution to the cultural life of Germany with an extensive repertoire that includes

symphonic concert pieces, performances of opera and ballet as well as oratories and church music.

The orchestra also has contributed significantly to the film industry, providing the soundtracks for more than 500 films including the Oscar-winning The Silence of the Lambs.

One of the most celebrated musicians of his generation, the Spanish-born guitarist Romero has enjoyed a varied and illustrious career. Together with his father, Celedonio, and his brothers Celin and Angel, Pepe established the Romeros Quartet—often called the “Royal Family of the Guitar”—as the leading guitar ensemble in the world.

In 2007, the Romeros were honored with the President’s Merit Award from the Recording Academy, producers of the Grammy Awards, for their contributions to the music world and professional career achievements.

A pre-concert lecture will be given at 6:15 p.m. in the Performing Arts Center’s Ramsey Concert Hall. It is open free to the public.

By Clarke [email protected]

In both theme and sound, the audience attending the next performance in the Hugh Hodgson School of Music’s Second Thursday Scholarship Series will experience an evening of epic proportions.

The Hodgson Wind Ensemble takes to the Hugh Hodgson Concert Hall stage Nov. 12 at 7:30 p.m. for the November edition of the School of Music’s popular concert series.

The performance comprises two pieces: David Maslanka’s Symphony No. 8 and Oliver Waespi’s “Audivi Media Nocte.”

Tickets are $18 each or $5 with a UGA student ID and are available at the Performing Arts Center box office, by calling 706-542-4400 or by visiting pac.uga.edu.

Maslanka, an American composer born in 1943, is known for powerful, grand compositions, but his Symphony No. 8 stands out even among those.

“His large-scale works reflect his strong connection to nature and its power to heal, but the 8th Symphony goes deeper,” said Cynthia Johnston Turner, HWE director and director of bands at the School of Music. “This is a musi-cal celebration of life: new life, connectivity from the past to the future, great hope, great faith, joy, vision and fierce determination.”

“Audivi Media Nocte,” which translates to “I heard, at midnight,” was written by Swiss composer Waespi as “a kind of concerto grosso for groups of soloists, but in highly unusual instrumentations,” according to Johnston Turner. It, like Maslanka’s piece, digs deep into the existential.

“This piece also explores a deep connection between the past (inspired by Thomas Tallis’ motet of the same name) and the present,” Johnston Turner said. “It is a musical tale that oscillates between contemplation and frivolity, between deep prayer and absolute rave.”

The Second Thursday Scholarship Series began in 1980 and continues the tradition of “Music Appreciation Programs” started by Hugh Hodgson in the 1930s.

By Jean [email protected]

A three-day conference at UGA will explore how writers, readers and performers from around the world adapt the 400-year-old works of Shakespeare and make them their own.

“Appropriation in the Age of Global Shakespeare” will bring together four of the leading experts and other scholars of Shakespeare Nov. 12-14 for panels, roundtables, workshops, brown-bag talks and readings. The symposium is sponsored by the UGA Libraries, the Willson Center for Humanities and Arts, the English department, the theatre and film studies department, the Office of Service-Learning and the UGA Symposium on the Book.

The conference commemorates the 10th anniversary of Borrowers and Lenders: The Journal of Shakespeare and Appro-priation, the award-winning, scholarly, multimedia journal, founded by UGA English professors Christy Desmet and Sujata Iyengar.

Capping the first day of the symposium will be an address, “Others Within: Ethics in the Age of Global Shakespeare,” by Alexa Huang of George Washington University at 4 p.m. in the auditorium of the Richard B. Russell Building Special Collections Libraries.

Huang is founding co-director of the Digital Hu-manities Institute and director of the Dean’s Scholars in

Shakespeare program. The second day of the

symposium will conclude with a staged reading of Lolita Chakrabarti’s Red Velvet, a play that appropriates Shakespeare’s Othello, Nov. 13 at 5:30 p.m. in the Fine Arts Building balcony theatre (Room 300).

The f ina l event is “New To w n R e v u e : S h a k e s p e a r e Remix” Nov. 14 at 6:30 p.m. in Athens Fire Hall No. 2, 489 Prince Ave.

More informa-tion and a com-plete schedule is available at https://shaxandapp2015.wordpress.com/.

Munich Symphony Orchestra, Pepe Romero, Romeros Guitar Quartet to perform Nov. 15

Hodgson Wind Ensemble to perform epic Second Thursday concert in Hodgson Hall

Conference to examine Shakespeare’s adaptation across cultures

Page 5: UGA Columns Nov. 9, 2015
Page 6: UGA Columns Nov. 9, 2015

Trash troublesA recent study found that “90 percent of seabirds

have eaten plastic and are likely to retain some in their gut,” according to a recent article by the BBC.

Jenna Jambeck, an associate professor in the UGA College of Engineer-ing, has studied plastic waste in the oceans. She told the

BBC News that the overabundance of plastic waste in the oceans and on the world’s shores—and the environ-mental hazards it causes—is fixable.

“It illustrates that if we implement solutions to reduce plastic input into the oceans, we can reduce impacts to individual seabirds,” she said. “Solutions include improving solid waste management where it is lacking and also working upstream on product rede-sign and materials substitution moving towards a more circular system.”

The far-right stuffA recent Washington Post article compared presiden-

tial candidate Donald Trump’s political popularity to the rise of far-right groups in Europe.

The article quoted Cas Mudde, an associate professor of interna-tional affairs in the UGA School of Public and International Affairs.

“Trump himself doesn’t hold a populist radical right ideology,” Mudde said, “but his political campaign clearly caters to populist

radical right attitudes, and his supporter base is almost identical to the core electorate of populist radical right parties in (Western) Europe.”

Pulling the leverSports Illustrated recently quoted kinesiology profes-

sor Thomas Baker in a story about a lawsuit against the NCAA.

Known as O’Bannon v. NCAA, the federal antitrust case centers on the question of whether people would stop watching college sports if the athletes were paid. Baker, who spe-

cializes in sport law in the College of Education, said that because the court upheld a previous ruling stating the NCAA was subject to antitrust laws, it’s a key win for the students.

In one part of the ruling, 9th Circuit Court Judge Sidney Thomas remained skeptical of the NCAA’s claims that the multibillion dollar industry would crumble if teenagers and young adults could earn money beyond the cost of their college tuition.

But, Baker said, no judge is willing to take it one step further and test that theory. He compared it to pulling the switch on a death row inmate.

“We can agree there’s this horrible, terrible person who we think deserves to die,” he said. “But do you want to pull the lever on the electric chair? Do I want to pull the lever on the electric chair?”

6 Nov. 9, 2015 columns.uga.edu FACULTY PROFILE

OBITUARY

OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT

Associate professor of astronomy investigates mysteries of universe

FACTSInseok SongAssociate Professor Department of Physics and AstronomyFranklin College of Arts and SciencesPh.D., Astronomy, 2000, UGAM.Ed., Earth Science Education, 1991, Seoul National UniversityB.S., Earth Science Education, 1989, Seoul National UniversityAt UGA: 7 years

Inseok Song, an associate professor in the Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, said there’s nothing quite like the satisfaction of a student having an aha! moment when he has introduced some new subject or knowledge in class.

Peter Frey

By Rebecca Vander [email protected]

UGA President Jere W. Morehead will welcome Arthur Tripp Jr. to his staff Nov. 11 as assistant to the president. Tripp most recently served as senior policy adviser for U.S. Rep. David Scott, who represents Georgia’s 13th Con-gressional District in Washington, D.C.

“I am very pleased that Arthur is joining our staff,” Morehead said. “His extensive involvement as a student leader at UGA and his significant professional experience on Capitol Hill have prepared him well for this impor-tant position. He will be an outstanding addition to the President’s Office, and I look forward to his contributions.”

In his new role as assistant to the

president, Tripp’s primary respon-sibilities will be focused on stu-dent affairs and diversity relations. He also will serve as the liaison to the Staff Council, Retirees Associa-

tion and Board of Visitors as well as represent the Office of the President in the planning of several annual campus events.

“It is truly an honor to join the Office of the President,” Tripp said. “There is no greater privilege than to serve the administration, faculty, staff, students and alumni of UGA as assis-tant to the president. I look forward

to supporting President Morehead and his vision for this great institution.”

While in Washington, D.C., Tripp served as a member of the UGA School of Public and International Affairs board of directors and as president of the Georgia State Society board of directors.

Tripp was named a member of the 40 Under 40 Class of 2015 by the UGA Alumni Association earlier this year, an honor given to alumni younger than 40 who have made a significant impact in business, leadership, com-munity, educational or philanthropic endeavors.

Tripp graduated from UGA in 2009 with a Bachelor of Arts in political science from the School of Public and International Affairs.

Arthur Tripp

Senior policy adviser named assistant to UGA president

By Jessica [email protected]

If you’ve ever looked up at the sky and wondered how our planetary system formed, you’ve got a friend in Inseok Song.

Song is an associate professor of astronomy in the Franklin College of Arts and Sciences astronomy and physics department. He teaches students about the origins of the universe, a topic he seeks answers to through his own research.

Song has been at UGA since 2008. He teaches an introductory course for nonscience majors titled Life in the Universe, an observational astronomy class for science majors and an astronomy lab that teaches students how to look at data and use computer programming to understand and seek answers to some of mankind’s biggest unanswered questions.

“Being a teacher can be so reward-ing,” Song said.“I really enjoy the active engagement and discussion with the students, and I love it when students bring up a subject and look at it with a new point of view that I hadn’t thought about before. It’s a fresh eye. Normal professional astronomers don’t always think this way, so it’s enjoyable.”

Second to that, he added, there’s nothing quite like the satisfaction of a student having an aha! moment when he has introduced some new subject or knowledge in class.

When he’s not teaching, Song is busy doing research in hopes of contributing to our understanding of how planets formed around the sun in our solar system. He made headlines in August as part of a large research team of as-tronomers who, using direct imaging, discovered a Jupiter-like planet within a young star system.

The new planet, called 51 Eridani b, is just the first exoplanet discovered by the Gemini Planet Imager, an instru-ment designed specifically to detect faint young planets that are orbiting stars. The discovery was 10 years in the making, and there’s still much work to be done.

Song hopes that the research team is able to find a couple dozen exoplanets in all and then learn more about their char-acteristics, such as chemical composition.

Song’s own fascination with life beyond Earth stems from a book on the exploration of Venus that he read as a stu-dent in South Korea. Fixated on the story in the book, he told people that when he grew up he wanted to be an astronomer, but what he meant, he realizes now, was that he wanted to be an astronaut.

After earning his doctorate in as-tronomy at UGA, Song worked at the UCLA NASA Astrobiology Institute as an assistant scientist and postdoctoral researcher, at the Gemini Observatory in Hawaii as an assistant astronomer and at the Spitzer Science Center at Caltech as a staff scientist.

He returned to UGA in 2008 as an assistant professor, became an associate professor in 2013 and now enjoys the added role of serving as the graduate coordinator for students in the astronomy program.

For students looking to go into the field, Song has one simple piece of advice.

“Being a good astronomer requires perseverance. I have seen many really intelligent people persevere and become superhero scientists,” he said. “But many of the astronomers that I have collabo-rated with, myself included, have only a modest amount of intelligence and put forth great effort.

“If a particular subject interests you, put in a lot of effort and stick with it,” he also said. “Choose the subject you’re most interested in, and the rest will follow.”

Newsmakers

Charles GrunerCharles R. “Chuck” Gruner, professor emeritus of

communications studies in the Franklin College of Arts and Sciences and founding parliamentarian for University

Council, died Oct. 28. He was 83.Gruner, a native of Pinckneyville,

Illinois, received his undergraduate and master’s degrees from Southern Illinois University after serving in the U.S. Air Force. He earned his doctorate in communication from Ohio State University.

After serving on the faculty at the University of Nebraska, Gruner joined the faculty at UGA in 1969,

with his research focused on “humor as persuasion.” Gruner was promoted to full professor in 1974, the same year he became the first parliamentarian of the University Council. He served on and off as university parliamentar-ian until 2014, years after he retired from UGA in 1997.

Gruner is survived by Marsha, his wife of 56 years, son Mark (Robin), daughter Valerie, grandson David and granddaughter Amanda.

There was no memorial service. The family requests that in lieu of flowers, donations be made to the UGA Foundation or a charity of one’s choosing.

Charles Gruner

Page 7: UGA Columns Nov. 9, 2015

By Christopher [email protected]

When other states are looking for best practices in small business development, they’re looking more often at UGA.

In recent years, programs developed by UGA’s Small Business Development Center have become a model for other universities. At a recent Digital Marketing Boot Camp, the audience included counselors from the University of Alabama SBDC.

“We try to rip off and duplicate as much as we can,” said Alabama SBDC director Bill Cummins. “We exchange ideas, our best practices and some-times our mistakes. The Southeast directors get together twice a year. We always spend an hour or two talking about innovation, new practices. The nice part about this business is we’re not competi-tors. We’re all in the same boat so to speak.”

UGA’s SBDC first began getting out-of-state attention in 2013 when the University of Florida copied a veterinary and pharmacy school externship developed by SBDC senior public service associate Jeff Sanford. Auburn followed a year later. The program, which provides students an opportunity to learn business practices while working alongside professional pharmacists and veterinarians, will be emulated at Washington State University and North Carolina State University over the next two years.

“The (SBDC) program was kind of founded here nationally and has been around a long time,” SBDC director Allan Adams said. “We’ve done innovative things and other SBDCs have asked for our help. We’ve taken from other SBDCs.

“We’re sort of high profile in SBDC stuff na-tionally. We’re very visible to that group,” Adams also said.“People look to us. We’re very inclined to share.”

Several months ago, staff from the UGA SBDC traveled to Miami to train staff in marketing skills as part of the Florida SBDC’s annual statewide professional development program.

The UGA SBDC has shared GrowSmart, an SBDC program that helps existing businesses ex-pand, and StartSmart, which helps entrepreneurs launch small businesses, with other states, including Kansas and Texas.

The Digital Marketing Boot Camp is a day-long class supported by a grant from the Georgia Technology Authority. It focuses on major social media platforms like Facebook and Google as well as smaller ones like Instagram, Pinterest and LinkedIn. In addition to welcoming people from other states to classes at one of UGA’s 17 SBDC offices, UGA instructors have taught the program in San Antonio and Austin.

Cummins wants to bring the program to Ala-bama next summer.

STUDENT AFFAIRS DIVISION 7 columns.uga.edu Nov. 9, 2015

CYBERSIGHTSWEEKLY READER

Open enrollment details are now available on the UGA Human Resources website. Select “2015 benefits open enrollment now in progress” under the HR NEWS heading to get to the open enroll-ment page.

The two-week benefits open enrollment period runs through

Nov. 13. Benefits-eligible employ-

ees who need assistance mak-ing the best choices for them-selves and their family or those who have any questions about open enrollment, should con-tact HR at [email protected] or 706-542-2222.

Open enrollment details onlinehttp://www.hr.uga.edu/open-enrollment

ABOUT COLUMNS

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.

There are two forms of personal banking in America. For those who can afford it, there are checking accounts, ATMs and debit cards. For everyone else, including the 70 million who don’t have a bank account or access to traditional finan-cial services, there are “fringe loans” from payday lenders, title loans and pawn shops. As Mehrsa Baradaran documents in How the Other Half Banks: Exclusion, Exploitation, and the Threat to Democracy, limited access to banking is both widespread and staggeringly expensive.

Baradaran, an associate profes-sor at the UGA School of Law, traces the history of banking in America to show how trends including de-regulation and the consolidation of banks have resulted in a bank-ing system that has no incentive to serve Americans who most need small loans.

Professor writes about banking inequality

How the Other Half Banks: Exclusion, Exploitation, and the Threat to DemocracyBy Mehrsa BaradaranHarvard University PressHardcover: $29.95

By Erica Hensley [email protected]

Since the Student Veterans Resource Center opened two years ago, director Ted Barco has been working to help military veterans more fully integrate into student life at UGA.

In the past year, the SVRC has worked with the community to add nine awards and scholarships to ease student veteran financial strain, created a new certificate program for student veterans and established the Veteran Success Council. Comprised of senior UGA leadership and co-chaired by Dean of Students Bill McDonald and Ronald Cervero, associate vice president of instruction, the board identifies key areas where UGA can improve student veteran success.

Barco, twice retired from the national security arena, likes to map out his goals. So he’s created a wheel-shaped graphic that includes the SVRC’s priorities. Two of these priorities are easing student veterans’ transition into a large university setting and enabling access to UGA services. The third component focuses on the next phase of their lives by helping them transition to graduate school or a career.

Because student veterans are on a strict timetable to graduate within the parameters of the Post-9/11 GI Bill, which covers up to 36 consecutive months of tuition, it is vital to make sure they are “career ready” by the time the funds are exhausted, Barco said.

The average age of the student veterans at UGA is 28. Of the 210 student veterans at UGA, about half of them have spouses or children and more than half are working while attending school.

“The challenge with our student veterans is that as nontra-ditional students they are often pulled in multiple directions at the exact same time with school, family, work and health

issues,” Barco said. “This challenge is compounded by a sense of self-reliance, which at times may work against their long-term career interests.”

To address this issue, the SVRC implemented the Black Belt Certificate Program in partnership with the Office of the Dean of Students, the UGA Career Center, First Data Corp. and the Reynolds Veterans Association. The program offers a defined pathway to career readiness.

Students who complete the journey are awarded a Black Belt Certificate.

In addition, the SVRC coordinates three mentoring pro-grams. In one program, faculty and staff help students transi-tion into college. A second peer mentoring-based program pairs juniors and seniors with graduate student veterans and a capstone corporate mentoring program connects students to working professionals through American Corporate Partners for a yearlong mentorship.

Justin Sailers, a combat-Marine veteran and fourth-year finance major who works part time in the SVRC, said he has benefited from the array of services provided to aid entry into a career. Sailers also is president of the Student Veteran Association, a student-run organization that works in tandem with the SVRC to foster veteran engagement and enable access to university services. He attributed his internship with a financial advise-ment firm to reliance on the career-readiness student services.

While serving a population as diverse as student veterans can be complicated, Barco said UGA’s tailored approach is working.

“Everyone at UGA wants to help student veterans success-fully transition through higher education” Barco said, “and we’re showing them how.”

‘Career ready’Student Veterans Resource Center helps military

veterans prepare for next phase of their lives

UGA programs set standard for small business development

PUBLIC SERVICE AND OUTREACH

In the past year, the Student Veterans Resource Center has worked with the community to add nine awards and scholarships to ease student veteran financial strain, created a new certificate program for student veterans and established the Veteran Success Council.

Don Reagin

Page 8: UGA Columns Nov. 9, 2015

Nov. 9, 2015 columns.uga.edu8

GIFT from page 1

MURAL from page 1 GRANT from page 1

University Woman’s ClubThe University Woman’s Club will

meet Nov. 10 at 11 a.m. in the Fel-lowship Hall of Central Presbyterian Church, 380 Alps Road.

Mary Ann Johnson, interim director of UGA’s Institute of Gerontology, will discuss “Changing Gears for Chang-ing Years ... More than Keeping up Appearances.” Tickets for the Dec. 8 holiday luncheon also will be available for purchase.

For more information, email Kim Argo, publicity chair, at [email protected].

Operation Safe driveAs part of Operation Safe Drive,

Parking Services will perform free safety inspections for all UGA students and employees Nov. 19 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. in the Tate Student Center parking deck. The Office of Sustainabil-ity will coordinate free on-site bicycle maintenance and safety inspections.

The first 300 visitors will receive a free Chick-fil-A coupon courtesy of Food Services.

The vehicle inspections include fluid level checks, belt and hose assessments, wiper blade inspections and tire pres-sure checks.

For more information, contact Laura Pratt at 706-542-7275 or [email protected].

Flu shotsFlu shots for faculty and staff are

available by appointment at the

University Health Center. The shots are given Tuesdays through Fridays at the Allergy Travel Clinic. To make an appointment, call 706-542-5575.

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.

Research participants soughtThe kinesiology department in the

College of Education is conducting a study to learn more about metformin’s effects on the body. Researchers are seeking men and women ages 18-75 who currently are taking metformin, a prescription drug treatment for adult type 2 diabetes.

Participants will wear a glucose monitor for two different three-day sessions and will be provided meals dur-ing this time. They also will walk on a treadmill for one short session and two longer sessions.

Participants will be given informa-tion about their body composition and health and also receive a financial incentive.

For more information, contact Melissa Erickson at [email protected] or 706-829-2560.

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

Bulletin Board the cost of tuition, Beavers first went to school at the Art Institute of Atlanta before she transferred to UGA in 2013.

Growing up in Georgia, Beavers said UGA was the kind of university she used to dream about. And despite the seeming chaos of balancing school, her job and motherhood, she said, she’s loved the experience.

She credits the UGA Student Veterans Association, which gives her the opportunity to interact with others facing the same balanc-ing act, and the Student Veterans Resource Center for helping make it manageable (see story, page 7).

As she prepares to graduate in the spring, Beavers has been working with SVRC direc-tor Ted Barco to develop a plan for her next step. She’s considering art education as a career option.

But in recent weeks, one of her biggest preoccupations has been the student veterans’ mural. In the months she’s been painting it, the 4- by 5-foot canvas has been taking up real estate in her living room. The painting, which will hang outside the First Data Student Veterans Lounge, depicts veterans from all branches of the military before a backdrop of recognizable UGA landmarks.

Dean of Students Bill McDonald com-missioned the mural.

“As we observe Veterans Day, particularly the service of UGA student veterans, we are pleased to unveil a new mural to honor and thank all military personnel who served our country,” McDonald said. “We are honored to share it with our approximately 2 million visitors to the Tate Student Center on an annual basis.”

Barco said Beavers’ story and work on the mural demonstrate the diversity of experience among student veterans.

“Each of our student veterans brings a spe-cial talent to the table,” Barco said. “However, Kelly is uniquely blessed with the ability to share that talent on canvas for all of us to see.”

Sanford and Barbara Orkin both at-tended UGA. This gift signals their strong commitment to help others experience the outstanding education provided by America’s first state-chartered public university.

“A secure source of funding that helps students meet their housing, food and educa-tional requirements, we hope, will help these remarkable young people stay at the university through graduation and on the road to suc-cessful careers and full lives,” said Sanford

Orkin. “Barbara and I are truly honored to be able to give back to a university we both love deeply and that has given so much to us.”

The Orkins’ most recent pledge extends a legacy to UGA. The couple has supported the School of Law, the College of Education, the Carl Vinson Institute of Government, the College of Public Health, the Athletic Association, the President’s Venture Fund and a range of research, scholarship and faculty support initiatives.

organic label.Conventional farmers are losing out on prof-

its as they spend ever-increasing amounts on preventing the fruit-ruining flies.

“Spotted wing drosophila has emerged as a major threat to small- and stone-fruit production industries, and its management is challenging particularly in organic systems due to lack of organically approved control options,” said Sial, who is an assistant profes-sor of entomology. “I am glad to have the opportunity to lead this collaborative effort to help organic farmers develop effective management strategies to control this dev-astating pest in a more sustainable manner.”

His team was awarded the grant under NIFA’s Organic Agriculture Research and Extension Initiative, but the management practices developed during his research should benefit small- and stone-fruit farmers across the board, including both conven-tional and certified-organic farmers, he said.

Spotted wing drosophila attack all berries and stone fruit; in Georgia, its major target is blueberries. In 2013, Georgia farmers grew about $313 million in blueberries on about 28,000 acres, according to the 2013 Farm Gate Value Report published by the UGA Center for Agribusiness and Economic Development. Numbers for Georgia-grown blueberries increase each year as blueber-ries become more popular with consumers.

Sial joined the UGA entomology depart-ment in 2013 to help improve integrated pest management practices being used by Georgia’s blueberry farmers.

Sial will build on his existing work to develop management strategies for organic growers. Tactics will include development of growing practices to minimize the fly’s impact, development of specific attractants that will draw the flies away from blueberry fields and investigation of organic insecti-cides to diminish fly populations before they cause major damage to fruit.

By Terry Marie [email protected]

The energy of 400 seventh-graders was channeled into the State Botanical Garden Oct. 22 for the third annual Bioenergy Day @ UGA.

The Hilsman and Coile middle school students and their teachers crowded into the Botanical Garden conservatory and patio to excitedly explore the hands-on demonstra-tions about producing renewable energy from biological sources. In addition to learn-ing about basic concepts such as the carbon cycle and how woody biomass such as trees and grasses can produce biofuels, they also learned about the technical and economic obstacles to a bio-based fuel economy.

Seventh-grade teacher Shantavius Stokes said that Bioenergy Day helps the students understand the science of energy, which connects their classroom studies about global conflicts with what they learn about

energy sources and production. But just as important, he said, the annual Bioenergy Day provides “a personal connection to researchers and students in their own com-munity who conduct research on energy.”

UGA’s Bioenergy Systems Research Institute sponsored the event with collabora-tion from the BioEnergy Science Center, the Office of Sustainability as well as the UGA Office of Service-Learning and the State Botanical Garden, two public service and outreach units.

Interactive exhibits were developed by staff from the BioEnergy Science Center and the Creative Discovery Museum in Chat-tanooga, Tennessee, and departments from across UGA. Faculty, graduate students and staff from the Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, the College of Engineering, the College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences, the Warnell School of Forestry and Natural Resources and the Complex Carbo-hydrate Research Center staffed the event.

400 middle school children visit for annual Bioenergy Day @ UGA

During Bioenergy Day @ UGA, Hilsman and Coile middle school students explored hands-on demonstrations about producing renewable energy from biological sources.

Amy Ware

WILLSON from page 1

innovation and achievement. The couple also funded the Jane and Harry Willson Profes-sorship in Humanities and the Jane Willson Professorship in the Arts.

“Jane and Harry Willson transformed support for humanities and the arts at the University of Georgia. In doing so they en-riched the lives of generations of students and faculty,” said Nicholas Allen, Franklin Profes-sor of English and director of the Willson Center. “We will miss Jane very much and work every day with a commitment to grow her legacy into new and positive forms.”

Willson was an emeritus trustee of the UGA Foundation and served on the Arts and Sciences Advisory Board, the Arts and Sciences Dean’s Council, the Franklin Col-lege Advisory Board, the UGA Research Foundation, the Honors Program Advisory Board and the Georgia Museum of Art Board of Advisors, among others.

When her passed away in 2004, Willson honored him by endowing the William Harry Willson Distinguished Chair of Business in the Terry College of Business. The same year, she made one of the largest contributions in Honors Program history, funding the Will-son International Honors Scholars Program, which allows high-achieving UGA students to travel and study around the globe. She also established a study abroad fellowship to Cortona.

“Jane was a remarkable person, and I am grateful to have known her,” said David S. Williams, associate provost and director of the Honors Program. “I am pleased that she left a lasting legacy with regard to the

Honors Program. Honors students will study abroad in perpetuity as Willson International Scholars due to her generous support.”

In 2006, UGA honored Willson with a Doctor of Laws degree, one of the highest ac-colades accorded any individual associated with the institution. The university then inducted Willson into the Crystal Arch Society in 2008 in recognition of her extraordinary philanthropy.

Throughout the years, Willson gave gener-ously to the Georgia Museum of Art, which named its sculpture garden in her and Harry Willson’s honor, the UGA Center for Trade and Security and the Richard B. Russell Build-ing Special Collections Libraries.

She also donated funds to support the UGA Costa Rica Campus, the UGA Libraries, State Botanical Garden, Blue Key scholar-ships, Foundation Fellows, the College of Veterinary Medicine, the Franklin College of Arts and Sciences and the UGA Graduate School.

An extremely civic-minded individual, Willson held many community leadership posts, including serving as a board member of the Albany Chamber of Commerce, the United Way of Southwest Georgia and the Atlanta Opera. She was a retired director of Southern Bell Telephone and Telegraph Co. and was a former board member of the now Albany State University. She also served on the boards of the Albany-Dougherty Inner City Authority and Albany Technical College.

She is survived by her children Bill, Larry, Arthur and Jane, two grandchildren and five great-grandchildren. Her funeral service was held Nov. 7 in Albany.