UGA Columns February 23, 2015

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Student helps rebuild society for black male leadership on campus CAMPUS NEWS

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The University of Georgia 2 Georgia Museum of Art exhibitions will focus on work of Pierre Daura

February 23, 2015

Vol. 42, No. 26

www.columns.uga.edu

tlhat@uga.edu

Peter Jutras

Andrew Owsiak

Jennifer Palmer

‘Exemplary dedication’

Faculty members receive 2015 Russell Awards for Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching camiew@uga.edu

Three UGA faculty members have received the Richard B. Russell Awards for Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching, the university’s highest early career teaching honor. The awards were established by the Russell Foundation and named for Richard B. Russell, a university alumnus who served Georgia in public office for 50 years, including almost 40 years as a U.S. senator. The awards, first presented in the 1991-1992 academic year, are administered annually by the Office of the Senior Vice President for Academic Affairs and Provost and include a $5,000 prize for each recipient from the Russell Foundation. “This year’s recipients of the Russell Awards share an exemplary dedication to creating lifechanging learning experiences for students,” said Pamela Whitten,

senior vice president for academic affairs and provost. “Their innovative teaching methods and commitment to student success epitomize the world-class learning environment that the University of Georgia provides.” The 2015 Russell Award winners are: • Peter Jutras, an associate professor in the Franklin College of Arts and Sciences’ Hugh Hodgson School of Music. • Andrew Owsiak, an assistant professor of international affairs in the School of Public and International Affairs. • Jennifer Palmer, an assistant professor of history in the Franklin College. Jutras has become a leading international figure in piano pedagogy since joining the Hodgson School of Music’s faculty nine years ago. In that time, he has overhauled the curricula for class piano instruction, which reaches all undergraduate music majors,

and piano pedagogy courses for piano majors. He has redesigned two instructional spaces, fitting them with more than $100,000 in technology and other teaching equipment funded through grants. In addition to acting as adviser and mentor to undergraduate piano teachers in the Community Music School, an outreach program of the Hugh Hodgson School of Music, Jutras guides piano graduate teaching assistants and acts as co-adviser of TONIC, the UGA student chapter of the Music Teachers National Association. He is editor-in-chief of Clavier Companion, the only critical journal in piano pedagogy in the U.S. Jutras is a Service-Learning Fellow and University Council representative. Owsiak, who joined UGA’s faculty in 2011, uses innovative methods while teaching Introduction to International Relations, Peace Studies and Crisis Diplomacy See RUSSELL on page 8

COLLEGE OF VETERINARY MEDICINE

UGA dedicates new Veterinary Medical Center By Cindy Herndon Rice cindyh@uga.edu

UGA held a ribbon-cutting ceremony Feb. 13 to dedicate the College of Veterinary Medicine’s new Veterinary Medical Center, which includes an education building and a teaching hospital for large and small animals. Speakers included Gov. Nathan Deal, Chancellor Hank Huckaby, UGA President Jere W. Morehead, Rep. Terry England, Sen. Bill Cowsert, Dean Sheila Allen, Hospital Director Gary Baxter and second-year veterinary student Robert Cotton. “ ‘To teach, to serve and to inquire into the nature of things,’ has long been the motto of the University of

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Women’s History Month to focus on ‘weaving stories’ By Terri Hatfield

By Camie Williams

UGA GUIDE

Georgia. Today, this motto comes to life in the form of a world-class facility, which will support our renowned College of Veterinary Medicine,” Morehead said. “Only with our elected officials, the board of regents, and our faculty, staff, students, alumni and friends working closely together could we bring this new medical center to reality—honoring our land-grant mission to improve lives and to improve communities in this state, across the nation and around the world.” A large crowd gathered to dedicate the Veterinary Medical Center, located at 2200 College Station Road. Construction began on the new facility in spring 2013, thanks to state and private funding. “To the alumni of this institution,

the practicing veterinarians and those who are associated with the ramifications of this school, I want to thank you, because, quite honestly, as we look at proposed projects,” Deal said, “one of the things that gets our attention is when there is a private-sector component. That makes (a proposal) go further—using the public money with the private revenue that has been raised—and this project is a great example of that.” The center was designed by Perkins+Will and built by Turner Construction Co. The new facilities, which encompass roughly 300,000 square feet, will enable the college to better meet its students’ educational needs and its current patient care demands. See CENTER on page 8

In recognition of the 2015 national Women’s History Month theme “Weaving the Stories of Women’s Lives,” UGA’s Institute for Women’s Studies is sponsoring events throughout the month of March. All of the events are open free to the public. This year’s keynote address will be presented by Andrea Smith, a longtime anti-violence and Native American activist and scholar. An associate professor of media and cultural studies at the University of California, Riverside, Smith is the author of Native Americans and the Christian Right: The Gendered Politics of Unlikely Alliances and Conquest: Sexual Violence and American Indian Genocide. She is also the editor of The Revolution Will Not

Be Funded: Beyond the Nonprofit Industrial Complex and co-editor of The Color of Violence, The Incite! Anthology. Andrea Smith A nominee for the 2005 Nobel Peace Prize, Smith currently serves as the U.S. coordinator for the Ecumenical Association of Third World Theologians, and she recently completed a report for the United Nations on Indigenous Peoples and Boarding Schools. She is also co-founder of INCITE! Women of Color Against Violence, a national grassroots organization. Her lecture, “Indigenous Feminist Narratives,” will take

See WOMEN on page 8

PUBLIC SERVICE AND OUTREACH

Archway Partnership expands to Griffin-Spalding County By Angel Jackson arh1016@uga.edu

Griffin-Spalding County is UGA’s newest Archway Partnership community, bringing to 12 the number of counties across Georgia to participate in the unique community development initiative. “Griffin-Spalding County has progressive visionary leadership, a key ingredient to a successful Archway program,” said Mel Garber, director of the Archway Partnership, a unit of the Office of Public Service and Outreach. “I commend community leaders for their unified effort.” Founded in 2005, the Archway Partnership builds on UGA’s land-grant mission by taking a

grassroots approach to address community and economic development needs, as identified by that community. Community leaders in Griffin-Spalding County have demonstrated a commitment to working together on community needs and the partnership with UGA will enhance those efforts. “The Archway Partnership represents the culmination of a community initiative undertaken as far back as 2008, to identify an efficient means of bringing our elected officials and their constituency groups together for the purpose of collaborative strategic planning and the development of solutions to community challenges,” said Chuck Copeland,

See PARTNERSHIP on page 8

WILLSON CENTER, UGA PRESS

Southern Foodways scholar, author to give Feb. 26 lecture By Dave Marr

davemarr@uga.edu

John T. Edge wants people to think about their food. A widely published writer and the director of the Southern Foodways Alliance, an institute of the Center for the Study of Southern Culture at the University of Mississippi, Edge is one of the leading figures in an emerging public conversation about how regional food, culture and history intertwine. Edge will visit UGA Feb. 26 for

a lecture in the Global Georgia Initiative, the signature speaker series of the Jane and Harry Willson Center for Humanities and Arts. Edge will John Edge give his talk, “Grits, Greens and Gochujang: The Emergence of a Newer Southern Cuisine,” at 4 p.m. in

See LECTURE on page 8


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