UGA Columns April 10, 2017

Page 1

Periodicals Postage is PAID in Athens, Georgia

Marketing & Communications University of Georgia 286 Oconee Street Suite 200 North Athens, GA 30602-1999

Researchers provide insight into how health care industry can reduce frustrations RESEARCH NEWS

3

Artist Willie Cole to give Georgia Museum of Art’s Holbrook Lecture April 13 Vol. 44, No. 32

April 10, 2017

www.columns.uga.edu

UGA GUIDE

4&5

Johnson to speak at UGA’s spring Commencement

The addition of GRA Eminent Scholars like Karen Norris, left, and Dennis Kyle has led to major advances in research.

‘Strong partnership’

UGA’s GRA Eminent Scholars foster innovation and economic development By Allyson Mann and Camren Skelton

tiny@uga.edu, cskelton@uga.edu

When Dennis Kyle, one of the nation’s leading infectious disease researchers, arrived on the University of Georgia campus in January, he became the institution’s 17th Georgia Research Alliance Eminent Scholar. Since its establishment in 1990, GRA has partnered with Georgia’s research universities to recruit world-class scientists who foster science- and technology-based economic development. At UGA, the addition of such researchers has led to major advances in research capabilities and impact. Kyle is the GRA Eminent Scholar in Antiparasitic Drug Discovery and the new director of UGA’s Center for Tropical and Emerging Global Diseases, established in 1998. His research

focuses on the mechanisms of anti-malarial drug resistance and discovery of new anti-parasitic drugs for a variety of infectious diseases, including malaria and visceral leishmaniasis, the world’s first and second deadliest parasitic infections, respectively. Kyle is not the only GRA Eminent Scholar who joined UGA in the past year. Karen Norris, one of the nation’s leading infectious disease researchers, joined the faculty in the College of Veterinary Medicine’s infectious diseases department as the GRA Eminent Scholar in Immunology and Translational Biomedical Research. Her research focuses on infectious and chronic diseases, including HIV, pulmonary diseases, inflammatory diseases and diabetes. She has developed a number of highly relevant disease models, which she uses to understand the basic mechanisms of disease suscepti-

bility and progression and to test interventions that treat or prevent disease. “Through the support of the Georgia Research Alliance, the University of Georgia continues to recruit premier scientists to tackle some of the grand challenges of our time,” said President Jere W. Morehead. “And the strong partnership between these two organizations is producing tremendous benefits to individuals and communities across our state, nation and world.” In addition to recruiting leading scientists, GRA invests in technology to facilitate the work of their Eminent Scholars; helps encourage the growth of university-derived startup companies; and facilitates collaboration among academia, business and government. By expanding university research capacity and by seeding and shaping startup companies, See GRA on page 8

CENTER FOR UNDERGRADUATE RESEARCH OPPORTUNITIES schupska@uga.edu

Sydney-Alyce Bourget stands at the edge of Harvard Forest, measuring the height of one of the 25 garlic mustard plants she’s been studying. Emil Dmello sorts through election data, looking at economic indicators like unemployment, inflation, the misery index and GDP searching for their connection to election outcomes. Zack Flagel scrolls through the spreadsheet on his computer, checking baseball stats not many people know by heart: the number of spectators injured by foul balls at Major League Baseball games.

McKenna Barney easily spots trends in case studies on maternal malnutrition in conflict zones: Hunger and Sydney-Alyce Bourget conflict go hand in hand, and food is often used as a weapon. These four University of Georgia students are among 554 undergraduates who presented their research at the annual CURO Symposium. They’ve spent hours, semesters, years working with faculty mentors as they study topics that interest them.

Ernie Johnson

Marshall Shepherd

The student speaker for the undergraduate ceremony will be Avery Hudson, who will receive her bachelor’s degree from the College of Family and Consumer Sciences. Johnson, who has received three Sports Emmy Awards, is in See COMMENCEMENT on page 8

ACADEMIC AFFAIRS

Docampo named recipient of SEC Faculty Achievement Award By Camie Williams camiew@uga.edu

Roberto Docampo, Distinguished Research Professor of Cellular Biology and Barbara and Sanford Orkin/Georgia Research Alliance Eminent Scholar, has been named the University of Georgia’s recipient of the 2017 Southeastern Conference Faculty Achievement Award. The award, which is administered by provosts at the 14 universities in the SEC, recognizes professors with outstanding records in teaching and scholarship who serve as role models for students and other faculty members. Winners receive a $5,000 honorarium. Docampo, a faculty member in the Franklin College of Arts and Sciences and a member of the Center for Tropical and Emerging Global

Diseases, is a worldrenowned researcher known for his work on neglected parasitic diseases including maRoberto Docampo laria, Chagas disease and sleeping sickness. He also is credited with the discovery of a novel organelle, the acidocalcisome, conserved from bacteria to human platelets, where it has a role in blood coagulation. His most recent work at UGA includes the successful use of the CRISPR/Cas9 technique to edit the genome of Trypanosoma cruzi, the parasite that causes Chagas disease. He also has characterized a key signaling pathway in the parasite, See SEC on page 8

TERRY COLLEGE OF BUSINESS

CURO Symposium highlights work in undergraduate research By Stephanie Schupska

Ernie Johnson Jr., a UGA alumnus and host for Turner’s NBA coverage and TNT’s Inside the NBA studio show, will deliver the spring undergraduate Commencement address at the University of Georgia on Friday, May 5, at 7 p.m. in Sanford Stadium. The graduate ceremony, which will feature Marshall Shepherd, an international expert in weather, Georgia Athletic Association Distinguished Professor and director of the atmospheric sciences program at UGA, will be held at 10 a.m. in Stegeman Coliseum. Tickets are not required for either ceremony.

Hosted by the Center for Undergraduate Research Opportunities, the Symposium is a chance for students to “tell the world about our research,” Bourget said. Held April 3-4 at the Classic Center in downtown Athens, the event included students in 91 majors and 13 colleges and schools and involved 311 faculty mentors from 73 UGA departments. Over the past several years, Symposium organizers have seen an increase in the number of students participating. CURO, administered by the Honors Program, was expanded to non-Honors students in 2010, a year when about 200 undergraduates took part in the See CURO on page 8

Business students find a community at new Correll Hall By Aaron Hale

aahale@uga.edu

Some key ingredients to business success are preparation and collaboration. So, it makes sense to have a business learning environment that facilitates teamwork. That’s exactly what master’s students in the Terry College of Business are finding in Correll Hall, which opened in 2015 as Phase I of the Business Learning Community.The building is named for A.D. “Pete” Correll, chairman emeritus of Georgia-Pacific and a Terry College alumnus, and his wife, Ada Lee Correll, a graduate

of the UGA College of Education. Correll Hall, which was supported by $35 million in private funds, features dozens of project team rooms and common areas where students can work and interact between classes. The building is equipped with conference rooms and event spaces for alumni networking and interview rooms where students can meet potential employers. That’s in addition to state-of-the-art classrooms that promote active learning, group activities and creative thinking. In other words, Correll Hall offers an environment that

See CORRELL on page 8


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
UGA Columns April 10, 2017 by UGA Columns - Issuu