UGA Columns Dec. 7, 2015

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12 18 15 15 members of the Class of 2015 discuss faculty, staff who have impacted them 2015 COMMENCEMENT SPECIAL

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Performing Arts Center to host holiday-inspired events in December Vol. 43, No. 19

December 7, 2015

www.columns.uga.edu

Class of 2020: Early admission offered to more than 7,500 By Sam Fahmy

sfahmy@uga.edu

Dorothy Kozlowski

Han S. Park, a pre-eminent scholar on global peace and a thought leader on the tense relationship between the U.S. and North Korea, retires at the end of the year after 45 years at UGA. “Dr. Han Park, over his long career, has not only remained a deeply inquisitive scholar but has become a public intellectual, concerned about the moral and humanitarian dimensions of his teachings,” said Markus Crepaz, a professor and head of SPIA’s international affairs department.

Man of peace

Accomplished professor, thought leader to retire after 45 years at UGA By Aaron Hale

aahale@uga.edu

Han S. Park, a pre-eminent scholar on global peace and a thought leader on the tense relationship between the U.S. and North Korea, retires at the end of the year after 45 years at UGA. While many people on the cusp of retirement plan to travel and relax, Park already is thinking about how to continue his decades-long effort to promote peace. “Retirement won’t stop me from pursuing my research and being an activist for peace,” he said. Park is the founding director of UGA’s Center for the Study of Global Issues, which fosters educational and research activities focused on economic, political and sociocultural change and development occurring at the global level. His work as a peace

scholar and activist has made Park a respected international arbitrator and humanitarian. His efforts have helped raise the profile of UGA’s School of Public and International Affairs and the university itself, said Markus Crepaz, a professor and head of SPIA’s international affairs department. “Dr. Han Park, over his long career, has not only remained a deeply inquisitive scholar but has become a public intellectual, concerned about the moral and humanitarian dimensions of his teachings,” Crepaz said. Born in China, Park is the son of Korean immigrant parents. His early years were shaped by two civil wars, first in China when the Communists rose to power. After Park’s family moved back to Korea, he saw the devastation caused by the Korean War. “From early childhood, I have

been puzzled by the question of why people kill each other,” Park said. “That’s why I became obsessed with peace. I thought someone like me must do something about it.” Park joined the UGA faculty in 1970. It was during the height of Vietnam War protests and the continued struggle for civil rights in the South. At that time, it was a bold decision for the Korean national to come to Dixie. Park said it was about making the biggest impact. “I wanted to play a part in globalizing the South,” he said. When he came to Athens, he found early on that people didn’t treat him like a threat, instead he was regarded as a guest and treated with Southern hospitality. As a peace scholar, Park was frustrated with the existing paradigm that considers peace an absence See PARK on page 8

OFFICE OF INSTITUTIONAL DIVERSITY

House leader to speak at Freedom Breakfast By Sara Freeland freeland@uga.edu

Stacey Y. Abrams, House minority leader for the Georgia General Assembly and state representative for the 89th House District, will give the keynote address for the 13th annual Martin Luther King Jr. Freedom Breakfast Jan. 22 at 7:30 a.m. in the Grand Hall of the Tate Student Center. Sponsored by UGA, the AthensClarke County Unified Government and the Clarke County School District, the MLK Freedom Breakfast

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commemorates the life of the late civil rights leader. T h i s ye a r ’s theme is “The Power of the Dream: One Step at a Time.” Abrams is Stacey Abrams the first woman to lead either party in the Georgia General Assembly and is the first African-American to lead in the House of Representatives. She serves on the Appropriations, Ethics,

J­ udiciary Non-Civil, Rules and Ways and Means committees. One of six children, she grew up in Mississippi with working-class parents who taught them the value of public service and civic engagement at a young age. The family moved to Georgia in 1989, when her parents attended Emory University, where they both graduated with Master of Divinity degrees and became United Methodist ministers. Abrams attended Spelman College, graduating magna cum laude with a bachelor’s in interdisciplinary

See BREAKFAST on page 8

MacKenzie Tobin, a senior at Schley County High School in Ellaville, received an early surprise as the first of more than 7,500 students to be offered admission to the Class of 2020 at UGA. Her application was among a record 14,516 received by the university for early action admission—an increase of nearly 10 percent over the previous year— and in midNovember UGA officials notified her in person that she was being offered admission. Students like Tobin have applied to UGA in record numbers, and they’ve also set records for academic accomplishments. The average GPA of students who were admitted through early

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action admission was 4.11, which exceeds last year’s average GPA of 4.01 and reflects rigorous coursework and an average of eight honors, International Baccalaureate and Advanced Placement classes. The average best SAT score this year was 1395—compared to 1374 last year—and the average ACT score increased by one point over last year to reach 31. “MacKenzie was the first of more than 14,500 students from across Georgia and around the world to apply to UGA, and her outstanding academic accomplishments earned her a spot in our Class of 2020,” said Patrick Winter, associate vice president for undergraduate admissions and enrollment management. Prospective first-year students

See ADMISSION on page 8

HONORS PROGRAM

UGA senior economics major receives Marshall Scholarship By Camie Williams camiew@uga.edu

UGA Honors student Meredith Paker has been named a recipient of the Marshall Scholarship to pursue graduate studies in the United Kingdom. Up to 40 Marshall Scholars are selected each year, and Paker is UGA’s third student in the last decade to earn the award and the seventh in the university’s history. Paker, a native of Madison, Wisconsin, and a recipient of UGA’s Foundation Fellowship and the Stamps Leadership Scholarship, plans to pursue a master’s degree in economic and social history from the University of Oxford. She will graduate in May with a bachelor’s degree in economics from the Terry College of Business and a minor

in mathematics from the Franklin College of Arts and Sciences. While at UGA, Paker has conducted economics research with Meredith Paker faculty members Jonathan Williams, David Bradford and William Lastrapes. Contributing to a growing literature on the prevalence and impact of off-label prescriptions in the U.S. pharmaceuticals market, she recently presented her work at the International Health Economics Association conference in Italy and at the UGA Center for Undergraduate

See MARSHALL on page 8

ACADEMIC AFFAIRS Medical Partnership campus dean finalists visit UGA By Sam Fahmy

sfahmy@uga.edu

Two finalists for the position of campus dean of the Georgia Regents University/University of Georgia Medical Partnership will visit or have visited Athens and Augusta this month A 15-member committee chaired by Houston Davis, University System of Georgia executive vice chancellor and chief academic officer, conducted a national search to identify the finalists. Angela Sharkey, associate dean for faculty affairs and professional de-

velopment, and professor of pediatrics at St. Louis University School of Medicine, visited Athens and Augusta Dec. 1 to make a public presentation and meet with faculty, staff, students and community members. Kenneth Simons, senior associate dean for graduate medical education and accreditation, and professor of ophthalmology and pathology at the Medical College of Wisconsin, will visit Dec. 15. He will make a public presentation at 5:30 p.m. in Room 228 of Russell Hall on the UGA Health Sciences Campus. The CVs of the finalists are at http://t.uga.edu/1Ec .


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