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UGA takes team approach to proposal and award administration QUESTIONS&ANSWERS
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Hodgson Faculty Series opens 2016 with Bach, Brahms, Mendelssohn Vol. 43, No. 20
January 11, 2016
www.columns.uga.edu
dbill@uga.edu
A new economic impact study conducted by UGA economist Jeffrey Dorfman has found that UGA generates nearly $39 for each dollar of state instructional funding. The study quantified variables such as the increase in earnings that graduates of the university’s schools and colleges receive, revenues from the licensing of university inventions and the creation of business and jobs resulting from the university’s public service and outreach units.
Far-reaching impact Study: UGA has an annual $4.4 billion economic impact on Georgia
sfahmy@uga.edu
Georgia’s flagship university has a $4.4 billion annual economic impact on the state, according to a new study that analyzed how the three-part teaching, research and service mission of UGA contributes to the economy. The study, conducted by UGA economist Jeffrey Dorfman, quantified variables such as the increase in earnings that graduates of the university’s schools and colleges receive, revenues from the licensing of university inventions and the creation of business and jobs resulting from the university’s public service and outreach units. “Nowhere is the bond between the state of Georgia and the University of Georgia more evident than in our far-reaching economic impact,” said President Jere W. Morehead. “The contributions of UGA faculty, staff, students and alumni are helping to ensure a strong economic future for our state.”
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UGA remains on Kiplinger best value in public colleges list By David Bill
By Sam Fahmy
UGA GUIDE
Educating students
E a c h y e a r, m o r e t h a n 9,000 UGA students earn undergraduate, graduate and professional degrees in fields ranging from business to engineering, the sciences, arts and humanities. To measure the economic impact of these degrees,
Dorfman and his colleagues took data on earnings by major and multiplied the estimated value of each degree and major offered by UGA by the number of graduates in the 2013-2014 academic year. To ensure they were capturing the economic impact in Georgia alone, they multiplied the economic impact of the degrees awarded by the percentage of each college’s alumni who remain in the state after graduation. Overall, 62 percent of UGA graduates remain in the state after earning their degrees. To put the value of UGA’s academic programs into perspective, the researchers took the economic impact created by the degrees that UGA awarded in the 2013-14 academic year and divided it by state funding. They found that UGA generates nearly $39 for each dollar of state instructional funding. “The University of Georgia has more than 181,000 alumni in each of Georgia’s 159 counties,” said Senior Vice President for Academic See IMPACT on page 4
UGA continues to rank as one of the nation’s top values in higher education, according to Kiplinger, which placed UGA 12th on its Personal Finance list of 100 best values among public colleges and universities for 2016. Kiplinger assesses value by measurable standards of academic quality and affordability. Quality measures include the first-year retention rate, the student-faculty ratio and four-year graduation rate. Cost criteria include sticker price, financial aid and average debt at graduation. UGA was only one of two universities from the SEC (the other being the University of Florida) that made the top 20 and the only
school from the state of Georgia. “The University of Georgia takes pride in its commitment to offering a world-class education at an affordable cost,” said UGA President Jere W. Morehead. “We are pleased that our commitment is once again being recognized on a national level.” Washington Monthly ranked UGA as the third “Best Bang for the Buck” school in the Southeast in 2015, and The New York Times ranked UGA at No. 10 among public universities doing the most for low-income students in its 2015 College Access Index. The Kiplinger rankings are available online at kiplinger.com/fronts/ special-report/college-rankings/. The rankings also will appear in the February 2016 issue of Kiplinger’s Personal Finance, now on newsstands.
OFFICE OF THE VICE PRESIDENT FOR RESEARCH
Two faculty named National Academy of Inventors Fellows By Terry Marie Hastings thasting@uga.edu
The National Academy of Inventors has named two UGA faculty members to the 2015 class of NAI Fellows. Chung K. “David” Chu, a Distinguished Research Professor Emeritus in the College of Pharmacy, and Wayne Hanna, a professor of crop and soil sciences in the College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences, join an elite group of 582 innovators representing more than 190 prestigious research universities and governmental and nonprofit research institutions. Election to NAI Fellow status is a professional distinction accorded to academic inventors who have
David Chu
Wayne Hanna
demonstrated a prolific spirit of innovation in creating or facilitating outstanding inventions that have made a tangible impact on quality of life, economic development and the welfare of society. Five UGA faculty members have been named NAI Fellows since the honor was established in 2013. “The election of David Chu and Wayne Hanna as NAI Fellows highlights the innovative research
See FELLOWS on page 8
CENTER FOR MOLECULAR MEDICINE
Construction begins on new CMM facility By Stephanie Schupska schupska@uga.edu
UGA officials broke ground Dec. 1 on the Center for Molecular Medicine, a 43,000-square-foot facility that will continue to advance UGA’s efforts in human health research. When finished, the building on Riverbend Road will house up to 10 research groups whose primary goal will be to conduct translational research that positively impacts human health. The facility will include laboratories, faculty offices, shared cell culture facilities and
other shared spaces that support research. “The Center for Molecular Medicine is an expansion of the university’s capacity to translate research into products and other innovations that support economic development and enhance the quality of life in our state, our nation and the world,” said UGA President Jere W. Morehead. “Here, the very best researchers will investigate the molecular and cellular basis of human disease and develop new ways to diagnose, treat and prevent diseases that affect millions of people worldwide.”
State and local officials joined university administrators on the work site adjacent to the Complex Carbohydrate Research Center to celebrate the official start of construction. Funding for the facility came from two primary sources: Gov. Nathan Deal and the General Assembly approved $17 million in state funds for the new building, and these funds were matched by $8 million in nonstate funds. “I’m excited about what this project will do for the state of Georgia,” said University System of Georgia Chancellor
See FACILITY on page 8
Andrew Davis Tucker
University officials broke ground Dec. 1 on a facility that will house up to 10 research groups whose primary goal will be to conduct translational research that positively impacts human health. The 43,000-square-foot Center for Molecular Medicine will include laboratories, faculty offices, shared cell culture facilities and other shared spaces that support research.
2 Jan. 11, 2016 columns.uga.edu
COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING
Around academe
Davidson College won’t retire jersey of NBA star until he earns degree
Former Davidson College basketball player Stephen Curry has won an NBA championship and most valuable player honors, but the college said it won’t retire his jersey until he earns his degree, according to ESPN. Curry, who plays for the Golden State Warriors, left college a year early in 2009 to play in the NBA without completing requirements for his degree. Davidson said it won’t make an exception to its rule about only retiring jerseys of graduates, not even for its most famous player. Curry told ESPN he eventually plans to complete requirements for graduation.
Survey: College-educated women are more likely to have longer marriages
A study by the Pew Research Center found that college-educated women are more likely than their peers who didn’t earn a degree to have longer-lasting marriages. According to government estimates, about half of first marriages in the U.S. last at least 20 years. However, women with a bachelor’s degree are 78 percent likely to have marriages survive those two decades. Although it is unclear why these marriages last longer, Pew analysts offer that households with college-educated women are more financially secure than those with less educated households.
Resolve to become heart healthy
Georgia Power leaders joined UGA officials, Georgia Public Service Commissioner Tim Echols and community and business leaders Dec. 15 to dedicate a new one megawatt solar tracking demonstration project. Located on a 10-acre site on South Milledge Avenue owned by UGA, the new project is the result of a utility/university collaboration to further demonstrate and advance solar energy in Georgia. “Working in coordination with the Georgia Public Service Commission, and through strong relationships with organizations such as UGA, we have positioned Georgia as a national solar leader,” said Paul Bowers, chairman, president and CEO of Georgia Power. “Now more than ever, it’s essential that we continue to invest in the research and development of new technologies to make solar, and all generation sources, as reliable, efficient and cost-effective for our customers as possible.” Research will be conducted under a two-year collaboration with UGA researchers, spearheaded by the College of Engineering, to study solar forecasting and the effects of solar panel soiling versus performance. Data analysis and performance reporting will occur through a Georgia Power partnership with the Electric Power Research Institute. The solar project will demonstrate
Robert Newcomb
From left, UGA President Jere W. Morehead, Public Service Commissioner Tim Echols and Paul Bowers, chairman, president and CEO of Georgia Power, cut the ribbon for a new one megawatt solar tracking demonstration project.
optimal orientation and tracking technology suited for Georgia’s climate and energy demand with project partners studying the performance and reliability of various fixed and tracking configurations of five separate sub-arrays. Georgia Power owns and will operate the facility under a 20-year lease agreement with UGA. Energy produced by the facility will flow to the state’s electric grid to serve customers. UGA will receive the renewable energy credits.
Source: University Health Center
Studying abroad
UGA moved up six places to rank 11th among all U.S. institutions in the 2015 Open Doors Report on the number of U.S. students studying abroad in 2013-2014. Selected universities that also made the top 25 list:
Rank University
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 8. 11. 13. 17. 22.
New York U. Texas-Austin Texas A&M Southern Calif. Michigan Michigan State UGA UCLA Florida UNC-Chapel Hill
Source: Institute of International Education
Students
4,504 3,021 2,911 2,891 2,719 2,478 2,240 2,196 2,104 1,859
Janet Beckley
“The complex problems facing our world today, such as the need to expand our sources of energy, require not only interdisciplinary efforts but also multi-institutional efforts that involve higher education, private industry and government,” said UGA President Jere W. Morehead. “The solar tracking demonstration project is a perfect example of this type of broad collaboration, and the University of Georgia is pleased to be part of this exciting endeavor.”
Liberian journalist to open Voices from the Vanguard series
OFFICE OF THE VICE PRESIDENT FOR INSTRUCTION
News to Use
To promote heart health, the American Heart Association encourages Americans to increase physical activity with the aim of achieving 150 minutes of aerobic activity per week combined with strength training a couple of days per week. (Note: It may be advisable to check with your health care provider before beginning a new physical activity routine.) Small changes can make a difference. Try adding 10 minutes of physical activity at a time. Not a fan of the gym? Instead, find activities you enjoy. As part of American Heart Month, the University Health Center will offer cholesterol screenings (blood lipid panels) at a free or reduced rate and free blood pressure screenings Feb. 8-11 and 15-18 from 8 a.m. to noon and 1-3 p.m. Screenings are free for health-fees paid UGA students and $10 for non-fees paid UGA students, UGA faculty and staff, spouses, domestic partners, and UGA retirees. No appointment is necessary, but participants must have no food or drink except water after midnight the night before they are screened. Current guidelines recommend that beginning at age 20, cholesterol levels be checked regularly, every five years. People with borderline high cholesterol levels, or those who have certain risk factors for coronary heart disease including diabetes, a family history of early onset heart disease, tobacco use, high blood pressure, or who are outside of their healthy weight range, may need testing done more frequently.
Georgia Power, UGA advancing solar energy through new project
By Stephanie Moreno s.moreno@uga.edu
Dorothy Kozlowski
Fourteen students make up the new Student Advisory Board of the Office of the Vice President for Instruction.
New board gives input on instruction By Camie Williams camiew@uga.edu
Bert Thompson is a senior, and he is beginning to think about all of the experiences he has had at UGA over the past four years. But Thompson isn’t just reminiscing; as a member of the Student Advisory Board of the Office of the Vice President for Instruction, he is dissecting programs such as orientation, advising and experiential learning to provide input for the benefit of future students. “The opportunity to make a great place even better is just amazing,” said Thompson, who is majoring in international affairs and history. “And it’s a great feeling when you say something and see a reaction and a response. … It’s great to be involved in improving something on campus.” Vice President for Instruction Rahul Shrivastav said that student feedback can play an important role in helping achieve priorities such as improving four-year graduation rates, boosting summer enrollment and giving students more flexibility through online learning. “We create a lot of policies and changes that impact students, so the student perspective is important,” Shrivastav said of his office, which considers ensuring a quality student experience from the day he or she is admitted until graduation its main objective. “Once we began talking, the students became very engaged, and they often stop when they see me on campus to share a new idea.”
The Office of the Vice President for Instruction oversees more than a dozen units—including Admissions, the Washington Semester Program, the First-Year Odyssey Seminar Program, the Office of Online Learning, Academic Advising and Learning Communities—and Shrivastav felt all of them would benefit from student input. “Dr. Shrivastav has given students a forum for sharing their ideas on enhancing the learning experience, and the advisory board is already having a positive impact,” said Senior Vice President for Academic Affairs and Provost Pamela Whitten. “This isn’t a surprise considering that our students are among the best and brightest in our state and nation.” Just weeks after the first session, the office adopted a new tagline, “Summer in Athens,” for the new summer school awareness campaign based on the student suggestions. The enrollment period opened earlier in the fall so that students will be able to make plans sooner based on the classes offered. Shrivastav’s office already had begun work on some of the issues, such as implementing changes to DegreeWorks that would help students track their path toward graduation more closely, and other ideas are being studied to determine their impacts and costs. “We want the students to know that their concerns are being heard, and we want them to see that we are listening,” Shrivastav said. “This board is having an impact on students and their college experience.”
The top health story of 2014, the West Africa Ebola outbreak, dominated news coverage and sent shockwaves through global travel and trade. Liberian journalist Wade C. L. Williams was on the front lines in Monrovia as an investigative journalist and head of the news desk at FrontPage Africa, one of West Africa’s largest digital news organizations. Her first-person account of what happened before, during and after Ebola captured the headlines opens the 2016 Global Diseases: Voices from the Vanguard lecture series on Jan. 12. This is the first of four events sponsored by UGA’s Grady College Health and Medical Journalism graduate program and the Center for Tropical and Emerging Global Diseases. Williams’ talk, “Mobilizing West African Communities to Defeat Ebola,” takes place at 5:30 p.m. in the Chapel. The lecture is open free to the public. During the 2014 Ebola outbreak in Liberia, Williams was one of the most influential Liberian journalists who rigorously covered the epidemic. Wade’s first investigative work on the disease in 2014 and a subsequent op-ed in The New York Times led the government to change its approach to response to the disease. “When Ebola hit, Wade Williams was already internationally known for her coverage of top health issues in Liberia and other West African countries,” said Patricia Thomas, co-organizer of the series and Knight Chair in Health and Medical Journalism at Grady College. “Since the crisis began, she’s also reported for the Associated Press, Bloomberg News and The Daily Beast and has won accolades for her work. We’re so pleased she’s coming to UGA.”
OUTREACH NEWS
columns.uga.edu Jan. 11, 2016
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Digest Ag Forecast seminars to begin Jan. 21
Dylan Wilson
UGA’s Marine Extension opened a hatchery that will help establish an oyster aquaculture industry in Georgia, allowing harvesters to farm single oysters that can be sold on the half-shell, a lucrative market fueled by rising restaurant and consumer demand.
Upscale half-shell UGA Marine Extension launches state’s first oyster hatchery
By Erin Geoffroy
eringeoffroy@uga.edu
UGA’s Marine Extension has opened the state’s first oyster hatchery. Launched last month at the beginning of the state’s oyster season, the hatchery is expected to revive the once-thriving oyster industry in Georgia. The hatchery will help establish an oyster aquaculture industry in Georgia, allowing harvesters to farm single oysters that can be sold on the half-shell, a lucrative market fueled by rising restaurant and consumer demand. Located on Skidaway Island, the hatchery is expected to produce between 5 million and 6 million spat, or baby oysters, per year by 2018. Experts at the UGA Shellfish Research Laboratory have calculated that these oysters will be worth an estimated $1.6 million when harvested. Funded through 2016 by the Georgia Department of Natural Resources Coastal Management Program, the hatchery emerged from a collaborative effort between UGA Marine Extension specialists, resource managers with the DNR, the Georgia Department of Agriculture and the Georgia Shellfish Growers Association. “I’m incredibly proud of our firstever oyster hatchery in the state,” said
Mark Risse, director of UGA Marine Extension, a unit of the university’s Office of Public Service and Outreach. “We hope to grow the oyster industry and allow farmers to produce oysters in a faster, more cost-effective way.” Wild Georgia oysters grow in muddy clumps, due to high natural recruitment rates, a lack of habitat on which to settle and competition for space. The shells are brittle with sharp edges, yet none of this takes away from the flavor of the meat, often described by locals as sweet and salty with a hint of lemongrass. One of the goals of the oyster hatchery is to produce an attractive, easy-to-open single oyster that can be marketed to upscale restaurants. The UGA Shellfish Research Laboratory, part of Marine Extension, has conducted research on single-oyster cultivation for more than 30 years. While scientists such as Thomas Bliss, director of the shellfish lab, have developed specialized growing techniques to harvest spat in the wild, these methods are too labor-intensive to sustain a robust oyster industry. Cultivating single oysters in a hatchery may provide a more viable option. UGA Marine Extension will share spat and guidance with participating growers, who will be trained in handling and transplanting spat and learn
new methods for cultivating oysters. In return, growers will share their experiences and data with scientists. Additionally, extension specialists will connect growers with seafood distribution companies to increase awareness of the Georgia single oyster. This first season is estimated to produce between 300,000 and 600,000 spat, which has a potential harvest value of up to $135,000. Each farmer will receive 30,000 to 60,000 free spat later this fall, which they will grow to legal harvest size. “Our goal is to work with shellfish growers to establish single oyster aquaculture in Georgia by providing them access to oyster spat,” Bliss said. “There is an opportunity for growers to create a thriving market in Georgia, and the hatchery is key in driving the creation of the market.” Oyster growers are an important part of Georgia’s history. In the early 1900s, the state led the nation in oyster production, annually harvesting 8 million pounds of oyster meat, primarily for the canning industry. By the 1940s, the industry was in decline due to over harvesting and decreasing demand for canned oysters. The last shucking houses in coastal Georgia closed in the 1960s. Harvested oysters now are primarily sold in clumps for private roasts.
ODUM SCHOOL OF ECOLOGY Wing structure helps female monarch butterflies outperform males By Beth Gavrilles bethgav@uga.edu
Evidence has been mounting that female monarch butterflies are better at flying and more successful at migration than males, and UGA researchers now have come up with an explanation—but not one they expected. In the study comparing physical traits of female and male monarchs, researchers found that although female monarchs have smaller wings and smaller flight muscles than males, their wings are thicker and also bear less weight per square inch, making them both sturdier and more efficient in flight. “Both of these elements would play important roles in determining the outcome of the migration,” said the study’s lead author Andy Davis, a research scientist in UGA’s Odum School of Ecology.
“Until now, we had no idea why females were better fliers than males, but this study definitely helps to answer that question.” For the study, published recently in the Journal of Insects, Davis and co-author Michael Holden, an undergraduate ecology student, measured the wings and body parts of 47 male and 45 female monarchs, specifically targeting those characteristics that are important for flight, such as the ratio of wing size to body size, the size of flight muscles and wing thickness. “We expected we’d find that females have bigger flight muscles, but it was the opposite,” said Holden, who will graduate this semester with a bachelor’s degree in ecology and will document moth species next year through an internship in Costa Rica. “Males had the largest muscles.” Their analysis revealed, however, that female bodies tend to be lighter in relation to their wing size, meaning their wings
have to carry less weight overall. This would make their flight more efficient. “The way I think about it is that per flap of their wings, females use less energy to move their bodies relative to males,” Holden said. The wings of females were thicker than those of males, making them less likely to break or tear during migration. “Having damaged wings is a death sentence during the migration,” Davis said. By the end of the study, the researchers had accumulated a substantial data set of flight-related measurements, the first of its kind for monarchs. “We believe this work will be important for improving scientific understanding of the migratory cycle,” Davis said, “and it will also serve as a reference point for future studies aimed at flight characteristics of monarch butterflies.”
The College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences’ 2016 Georgia Ag Forecast seminar series will be held Jan. 21-29. Registration is open at www.georgiaagforecast.com . Economists from the Center for Agribusiness and Economic Development and from the college’s agricultural and applied economics department will deliver the annual economic outlook, which will focus on Georgia’s major commodities and the way that global markets, weather patterns and historical trends will affect those commodities in 2016. In addition to the outlook, Kent Wolfe, the center’s director, and fellow UGA agricultural economist Sharon P. Kane will give a briefing on the Georgia Agricultural Tax Exemption, often referred to as GATE, and how it is reflected in county sales tax revenue. The dates and locations for the 2016 sessions are Jan. 21 at the Carroll County Ag Center in Carrolton; Jan. 22 at Unicoi State Park in Cleveland; Jan. 25 at the Cloud Livestock Facility in Bainbridge; Jan. 26 at the UGA Tifton Campus Conference Center in Tifton; Jan. 27 at the Blueberry Warehouse in Alma; and Jan. 29 at the Georgia Farm Bureau Building in Macon.
College of Veterinary Medicine to hold annual shelter medicine symposium
The eighth annual Shelter Medicine Symposium will be held Feb. 6 at the College of Veterinary Medicine. The all-day event is focused on best management and medicine practices for local and regional animal shelters. Veterinary professionals and others who work in animal control facilities and humane societies or with animal rescue groups in Georgia, North Carolina, Tennessee and South Carolina are encouraged to attend. The event is hosted by the student chapter of the Association of Shelter Veterinarians at UGA. There is no registration fee, but all attendees must register by Jan. 25. Scheduled conference speakers include Gerryll Hall, lead veterinarian for Merck Animal Health; Michaela Austell, a dermatologist at North Georgia Veterinary Specialists; Andy Moorhead, an assistant research scientist in the college and director of the NIH-funded Filariasis Research Reagent Resource Center; and Sharon Crowell-Davis, a board-certified veterinary behaviorist and professor in the college. To register, visit http://tinyurl.com/shelter2016 . For an up-to-date list of speakers and other conference information, visit http://tinyurl.com/sheltermed .
University’s 2015 Spotlight on the Arts festival breaks attendance record
Nearly 22,000 people attended the UGA Arts Council’s 2015 Spotlight on the Arts festival, bettering last year’s attendance record. The festival was held Nov. 5-14 and reached 21,828 people through more than 100 events and exhibitions, including an opening celebration, concerts, plays, dance performances, book talks, art openings and more. For the first time in the festival’s four-year history, the UGA Arts Council held a Spotlight on the Arts Opening Celebration, and the event drew more than 600 UGA students, faculty and staff members, donors and patrons to the Performing Arts Center Nov. 4. Other highlights of the 2015 festival included performances from the University Theatre, UGA Opera Theatre and department of dance, a Shakespeare symposium, a popular open house at the Lamar Dodd School of Art and events surrounding the Samurai: The Way of the Warrior exhibition. Special guests included the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra and The King’s Singers and several visiting writers, including those inducted into the Georgia Writers Hall of Fame.
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4 Jan. 11, 2016 columns.uga.edu
COMMENCEMENT 2015
Chad Osburn
Madeline Hill, undergraduate student speaker, told her classmates they didn’t have to be afraid of failure.
Andrew Davis Tucker
Graduate Garrett Ward hugs family members after the fall undergraduate ceremony.
Chad Osburn
Donna W. Hyland, president and CEO of Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta, told fall graduates to put people first. “When you put people first—your family, your friends, those you work with and people that you barely know—it will make a difference,” she said.
Defining success
Commencement speakers encourage graduates to determine their own paths
Nathan Mukasa, age 10, wears his brother Alan’s mortarboard exiting Stegeman Coliseum.
By Aaron Hale
aahale@uga.edu
There is no shortage of prognostications about how the millennial generation will make its mark on the world. Donna W. Hyland, president and CEO of Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta, told fall UGA graduates that it is up to them to decide how they would be remembered. Hyland, the Commencement speaker at the undergraduate ceremony Dec. 18 at Stegeman Coliseum, said she often meets with CEOs and talks about this generation. “We don’t know what to think of you. You are described as civic-minded, confident and tolerant. Some say that you are entitled and even narcissistic,” she said. “You can believe those things or you can believe that you have an extraordinary opportunity ahead. Only you can truly define you.” For the two fall Commencement ceremonies, 1,742 undergraduates and 1,065 graduate students—a total of 2,807—met
requirements to walk in the ceremonies held at Stegeman Coliseum. While Hyland, in her address, challenged graduates to determine their own path, she also offered some advice for making their careers and lives more fulfilling. “When I graduated from college, I really thought that what I had learned in school and hard work would be the keys to success,” she said. “That was important, but the further I got in my career, I learned some lessons that I wish I would have known much earlier.” Her first piece of advice was to put people first. She offered some examples of what Children’s Healthcare employees have done for patients—like a nurse who shaved her head as a show of solidarity to a child on chemotherapy or a group of workers who threw a prom—complete with a disco ball, a dance band and limos—in the hospital for a dying high schooler so that she could experience prom. “When you put people first—your family, your friends, those you work with and
IMPACT
from page 1 Affairs and Provost Pamela Whitten. “They include business leaders, teachers, physicians, scientists and elected officials, and all of them play a critical role in the economic vitality of our state.”
Fueling discoveries
Discoveries by UGA scientists have resulted in more than 575 products that have reached the marketplace, including drugs, vaccines and software, as well as crop, ornamental plant and turfgrass varieties. Most recently, the FDA approved sale of a new drug, called Kanuma, that is based on a technology developed by a UGA startup company. Kanuma is a treatment for patients with a life-threatening, ultra-rare disease. Licensing and royalty revenue from these inventions contribute to UGA’s economic impact, as do companies that are launched based on UGA inventions. More than 60 Georgia companies are based on UGA inventions, including biotech companies Abeome Corp. and ArunA Biomedical, agricultural technology company Electrostatic Spraying Systems and educational software company Cogent Education. The research enterprise at UGA is on an upward trajectory, with a 7 percent increase in external funding from federal agencies such as the National Institutes of Health as well as private organizations such as the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation over the past fiscal year. In addition to contributing to advances in health, safety and security, such research funding generates economic impact by bringing money into Georgia that is spent on
Robert Ivarie’s research produced a portfolio of inventions to genetically engineer chickens as bioreactors for the efficient production of proteins for human therapeutic use. His inventions are now the basis for a platform technology covered by 19 issued U.S. patents and foreign counterparts, along with additional pending patent applications.
equipment and personnel. Using a commonly used model known as IMPLAN, Dorfman and his colleagues found that UGA generates nearly $2 in economic impact for each $1 of federal and foundation research funding it receives. “UGA researchers continually strive to make new discoveries that underlie the innovative products and companies that help drive Georgia’s economy,” said David Lee, vice president for research. “Through our technology transfer and startup company support, the UGA research enterprise ensures that UGA discoveries reach their full potential for public benefit, in Georgia and beyond.”
Serving Georgia
Service to the state of Georgia is an integral part of UGA’s land-grant mission, and the
people that you barely know—it will make a difference,” she said. She also encouraged students to take care of themselves. “Trust me,” she said. “As a health care professional I can tell you: You need to be healthy both physically and mentally to be at your best.” One common theme between the CEO and undergraduate student speaker Madeleine Hill was the need to learn from failure. Hill, a sociology major from Decatur, told her classmates they didn’t have to be afraid of failure. She recalled the first C she got in an Honor’s class her freshman year at UGA. She remembered breaking into tears when she saw the grade on her computer in the Miller Learning Center. “For me, this C meant that I failed,” Hill said. But a fellow student—a stranger—told her, “You’re going to be OK.Trust me.” Hill said she learned from that C, and from surviving it, that it was OK to challenge herself and take risks. “Failure makes us vulnerable. It makes us
university’s public service and outreach units contribute to economic prosperity and quality of life through programs for individuals, businesses and communities. Public service and outreach at UGA has a $345 million annual impact on the Georgia economy, the study found. UGA’s Small Business Development Center, for example, last year provided 4,705 small business owners and prospective entrepreneurs with advice and expertise through its 17 offices across the state. SBDC assistance led to the creation of more than 3,000 new jobs over that period and helped launch more than 330 new businesses. The researchers also quantified cost savings associated with the more efficient operation of state and local governments as a result of training programs offered by UGA’s Carl Vinson Institute of Government and the value of services offered by units such as Marine Extension. “UGA’s public service experts are out in the state every day making a difference in people’s lives, whether by training elected officials and community leaders, helping companies grow their businesses or diversifying opportunities for coastal fishermen,” said Jennifer Frum, vice president for public service and outreach. “It is our mission to help Georgia prosper by developing leaders, creating jobs and addressing issues critical to local communities. The economic impact study confirms what we already know, that we provide taxpayers a good return on their investment.” Dorfman said that he designed the study to only capture economic impacts that would
Peter Frey
want to curl up and watch Netflix for the rest of our lives,” she said, but it also offers opportunities for growth and self-realization. “Be the person you want to be in this world, not the person others think you should be. You’re going to be OK. Trust me.” In the graduate ceremony, Cheryl Davenport Dozier, the 13th president of Savannah State University, called on students to exercise social justice as they pursue their careers. Dozier, who spent 17 years at UGA including as associate provost and chief diversity officer, challenged degree recipients at the graduate ceremony to be “agents of change” who take a stand for diversity and equality in their workplaces and beyond. “As you climb, use your hands to reach down and help someone, both young and not so young, to rise up and reach the next landing no matter their race, their class, their gender, their ethnicity, their religion or their sexual orientation,” she said. “Know that your hands hold the solutions to possibilities of a more global, united world.”
With help from the Georgia Small Business Development Center in Brunswick, Jason Reott got a permit to sell peach wine, found the right technology to run his business and obtained a state trademark for his store.
not exist were it not for the presence of UGA. He also emphasized that many UGA programs create economic impacts that are difficult if not impossible to measure. The university’s 4-H youth development and mentoring programs, for example, have been shown to encourage healthy choices, civic participation and interest in science, technology, engineering and math. In the 2013-2014 school year, 4-H served more than 115,000 students in schools across Georgia. “Our findings are a conservative estimate of the university’s economic impact on the state of Georgia,” Dorfman said, “so the $4.4 billion figure that we arrived at should be treated as the minimum impact UGA has on the state.”
UGAGUIDE
columns.uga.edu Jan. 11, 2016
For a complete listing of events, check the Master Calendar on the Web (calendar.uga.edu/). The following events are open to the public, unless otherwise specified. Dates, times and locations may change without advance notice.
January
Performing Arts Center to present Tchaikovsky Spectacular By Bobby Tyler btyler@uga.edu
The UGA Performing Arts Center will present the State Ballet Theatre of Russia in its Tchaikovsky Spectacular Jan. 11-12 at 8 p.m. in the Fine Arts Theatre. The unique program, featuring lavish sets and costumes, will include highlights from Tchaikovsky’s three most popular ballets, Swan Lake, The Nutcracker and The Sleeping Beauty. Tickets for the State Ballet Theatre of Russia
EXHIBITIONS State Botanical Garden Art Competition Winners. Through Feb. 14. Visitor Center, State Botanical Garden. 706-542-6014, connicot@uga.edu Georgia’s Girlhood Embroidery: “Crowned with Glory and Immortality.” Through Feb. 28. Georgia Museum of Art. hazbrown@uga.edu Seeing Georgia: Changing Visions of Tourism in the Modern South. Through July 30. Special collections libraries. 706-542-5788, jhebbard@uga.edu
MONDAY, JANUARY 11 SPRING SEMESTER CLASSES BEGIN DROP/ADD FOR SPRING SEMESTER For undergraduate- and graduate-level courses. Through Jan. 15. SPRING POSTER SALE Held 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. through Jan. 15. Third floor concourse, Tate Student Center. 706-542-7774, ckolesar@uga.edu PERFORMANCE Tchaikovsky Spectacular with The State Ballet Theatre of Russia. Repeat performance on Jan. 12. $55-$65. 8 p.m. Fine Arts Theatre, Fine Arts building. 706-542-4400. (See story, above).
TUESDAY, JANUARY 12 VOICES FROM THE VANGUARD Speaker: Liberian journalist Wade C.L. Williams 5:30 p.m. Chapel. 706-542-1210, pthomas@uga.edu (See story, page 2).
performance are $55-$65 and are discounted for UGA students. Tickets can be purchased at the UGA Performing Arts Center box office, online at pac.uga.edu or by calling 706-542-4400. The State Ballet Theatre of Russia was founded in 2004 under the auspices of the late Maya Plissetskaya, the internationally renowned dancer and former prima ballerina of the Bolshoi Theatre Ballet. Based in Moscow, where it is known as The New Russian Ballet, the company has performed around the world on tours throughout Europe, Japan, Israel, Morocco, India, Canada and the U.S.
UGA HOCKEY vs. Life University. The final home game of the season also is Star Wars Night and Club Sports Appreciation Night. Tickets 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 Center, 300 N. Thomas St. 706-207-8819, jeb@ugahockey.com
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 13 TOUR AT TWO Led by Brittany Ranew, education program specialist. 2 p.m. Georgia Museum of Art. 706-542-4662, hazbrown@uga.edu MEN’S BASKETBALL vs. Tennessee. $15. 7 p.m. Stegeman Coliseum. 706-542-1231.
THURSDAY, JANUARY 14 SYMPOSIUM “Interwoven Georgia: Three Centuries of Textile Traditions.” In conjunction with the exhibition Georgia’s Girlhood Embroideries: “Crowned with Glory and Immortality.” Participants will celebrate more than 250 years of Georgia’s rich textile heritage, from 18th-century silk production to bed furnishings, the contributions of African-Americans to textile production and chenille fashions of the 20th century. $325-$345. 8 a.m. Georgia Museum of Art. 706-542-4662, hazbrown@uga.edu HUGH HODGSON FACULTY SERIES Violin professor and international soloist Michael Heald will showcase his close attention to musical detail and expression during an evening at the Performing Arts Center. $10; $5 with a student
Calendar items are taken from Columns files and from the university’s Master Calendar, maintained by Marketing & Communications. Notices are published as space permits, with priority given to items of multidisciplinary interest. The Master Calendar is available on the Web at calendar.uga.edu/.
UGACard. 8 p.m. Ramsey Concert Hall, Performing Arts Center. 706-542-4752, musicpr@uga.edu (See story, right).
SATURDAY, JANUARY 16 MEN’S BASKETBALL vs. Texas A&M. $15. 2 p.m. Stegeman Coliseum. 706-542-1231. NIGHT IN SAIGON 12: A NEW BALANCE Night in Saigon is an annual Vietnamese culture show. Hundreds of people from all over the state have been invited for a night of acting, singing, dancing and more. $7-$10. 7 p.m. Grand Hall, Tate Student Center. 770682-4958, ckim95@uga.edu
MONDAY, JANUARY 18 MARTIN LUTHER KING JR. HOLIDAY No classes; offices closed. GYMNASTICS vs. Stanford. $10. 2 p.m. Stegeman Coliseum. 706-542-1621.
COMING UP 2016 STATE OF THE UNIVERSITY ADDRESS Jan. 20. President Jere W. Morehead will deliver the annual report to the faculty and community. 3:30 p.m. Chapel. 2016 MARTIN LUTHER KING JR. FREEDOM BREAKFAST Jan. 22. Stacey Y. Abrams, House minority leader for the Georgia General Assembly and state representative for the 89th House District, will give the keynote address. 7:30 a.m. Grand Hall, Tate Student Center.
Hodgson Faculty Series opens 2016 with Bach, Brahms, Mendelssohn By Clarke Schwabe ccschwabe@uga.edu
The Hugh Hodgson Faculty Series opens 2016 with a slate of “extraordinary” music Jan. 14, at 8 p.m. in Ramsey Concert Hall at the UGA Performing Arts Center. Michael Heald, below, an associate professor of violin at the Hugh Hodgson School of Music, will join with pianist and fellow School of Music faculty member Liza Stepanova to perform works from Bach, Brahms, Mendelssohn and Schubert. Tickets are $10 each or $5 with a UGA student ID and are available at the PAC box office, by calling 706-542-4400 or by visiting pac.uga.edu . “The music being performed on this recital is simply extraordinary, with each composer’s style being clearly defined in these works,” Heald said. The pieces, according to Heald, run the gamut from brooding to joyous, employing a variety of methods: from “dark spontaneity” to classical structures. But a common thread does connect them all. “Somehow, they all understand the role of the instruments involved, never allowing themselves to write music that is beyond the possibility of being played beautifully and with immaculate control,” Heald said. Stepanova is an associate professor of piano at the School of Music. A graduate of The Juilliard School, Stepanova has performed extensively in Europe and the U.S., from Berlin’s Museum of Musical Instruments to Weill Recital Hall at Carnegie Hall in New York.
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Any additional information about the event may be sent directly to Columns. Email is preferred (columns@uga.edu), but materials can be mailed to Columns, News Service, 286 Oconee Street, Suite 200 North, Campus Mail 1999.
NEXT COLUMNS DEADLINES Jan. 13 (for Jan. 25 issue) Jan. 20 (for Feb. 1 issue) Jan. 27 (for Feb. 8 issue)
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Brenda Cude, a professor in the College of Family and Consumer Sciences’ financial planning, housing and consumer economics department, was recognized by the National Association of Insurance Commissioners for her longtime service to consumers. Cude has represented conBrenda Cude sumer interests for more than 20 years and has served as a funded consumer representative since 1994. She began serving on the NAIC Consumer Participation board of trustees in 1997 and is frequently called upon by state legislatures, state insurance departments as well as numerous NAIC members to offer consumer perspectives at public hearings, conference calls, interim and national meetings. Cude was recognized at the NAIC fall meeting in Washington, D.C., in late November. Maurice Daniels, dean and professor of the School of Social Work, received the Georgia Historical Records Advisory Council’s Award for Excellence in Research Using the Holdings of an Archives. The GHRAC awards recognize outstanding efforts in archives and records work in Georgia. Daniels is the author of Saving the Soul of Georgia: Donald L. Hollowell and the Struggle for Civil Rights, the first biography of Donald L. Hollowell, Georgia’s chief civil rights attorney during the 1950s and 1960s. The book was published in 2013 by the University of Georgia Press. The award was presented by University System of Georgia Chancellor Hank Huckaby and GHRAC Chair Toby Graham Oct. 28 during the 13th annual GHRAC Archives Awards Program at the Georgia Archives in Morrow. In addition to using national archival repositories to research his book, Daniels made extensive use of Georgia repositories: the Richard B. Russell Library for Political Research and Studies, Auburn Avenue Research Library, Albany Civil Rights Institute, Atlanta History Center, National Archives at Atlanta, Georgia Archives, Atlanta University Center’s Woodruff Library, and special collections at Columbus State, Georgia State and Emory universities. Kavita Pandit, associate provost for international education and a professor of geography, was recognized by regional and national geography associations. She received the 2015 Lifetime Achievement Award from the Southeastern Division of the Association of American Geographers, at its annual meeting in November. The award, SEDAAG’s highest honor, recognizes geographers who possess an extensive record of research and publication in scholarly journals and books as well as a record of excellence in teaching and advising, a record of service contributions to the individual’s educational institution and a record of support to the geography profession. Pandit also was selected to receive one of the highest honors from the Association of American Geographers: the Ronald F. Abler Distinguished Service Honors. Presented annually, this national award recognizes outstanding accomplishments by members in service to the discipline. It will be presented to Pandit at the AAG national meeting in San Francisco in March. The AAG is the leading North American scientific and educational society committed to the advancement of geography as a discipline. Founded in 1904, it now has more than 10,000 members. SEDAAG is one of the nine regional divisions of the AAG. Kudos recognizes special contributions of staff, faculty and administrators in teaching, research and service. News items are limited to election into office of state, regional, national and international societies; major awards and prizes; and similarly notable accomplishments.
FACULTY PROFILE
Dorothy Kozlowski
Mary Caplan, an assistant professor in the School of Social Work, teaches and conducts research in an area that many researchers have overlooked—how people use credit to make ends meet.
Assistant professor sheds light on poverty, credit and social exclusion By Laurie Anderson laurie@uga.edu
Mary Caplan knows what it’s like to be poor. As a child the Seattle-born researcher shuttled between two households—one wealthy and one that, in her words, “barely scraped by.” “I lived economic inequality,” Caplan said. The experience set the course for her life. After earning a degree in sociology, she worked for nearly a decade in low-income communities in the San Francisco Bay area, trying to help clients on a case-by-case basis. Then she met “a fantastic social worker” who motivated her to look at the underlying issues behind the problems she saw. She eventually earned a doctorate in social welfare to research poverty. “The narrative is ‘If you just work hard enough, you should be able to do it,’ ” Caplan said. “I question that, because I see that there are people who are working very, very hard and they’re still not making it.” These days Caplan teaches and conducts research in an area that many researchers have overlooked—how people use credit to make ends meet. She examines the way low-income individuals utilize informal, fringe and predatory financial services as well as how communities create safer, more inclusive alternatives. Among her observations, she’s noticed how the social aspects of lending impact the borrowing choices people make. “One of the reasons people may prefer predatory lenders is that they tend to be nice,” she said. “People who
walk into a title loan company report feeling respected and not judged.” In contrast, she said, banks ask questions about resources and personal histories that people can find embarrassing or difficult to answer. Her research is attracting interest in academia and beyond. She’s given invited presentations at international conferences, and a textbook that she contributed to has been translated into four languages and adopted in universities across China. She was also recently featured on the financial literacy website WalletHub.com and the Georgia Public Broadcasting radio program “On Second Thought.” When not teaching or conducting research, Caplan volunteers with GLOBES, the campus organization for the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer community. She currently is helping to assess the health service needs of transgender individuals in Athens and surrounding areas to create a guide of “safe space” health service providers. Her efforts reflect her view that poverty isn’t just a lack of income, but can be a lack of inclusion. “Some people in this community go all the way to Atlanta for health services, because they feel they can’t trust local providers to give unbiased help,” Caplan said. While Caplan seeks better alternatives for marginalized people, she also encourages her students to do the same through hands-on projects and research about the challenges those populations face. Undergraduate Theresa Young is helping to design and implement one
FACTS
Mary Caplan
Assistant Professor School of Social Work Ph.D., Social Welfare, University of California, Berkeley, 2013 M.S.W., Social Welfare, University of California, Berkeley, 2004 B.A., Sociology, University of Oregon, 1993 At UGA: Two years such project: a study of the relationship between poverty and shame. She first volunteered to help and later was awarded a research assistantship from the Center for Undergraduate Research Opportunities. “Three things immediately drew me,” Young said. “First, I did not know anything about the research process and wanted to learn. Second, I have known for a long time that I wanted my career to involve the ostracized of society, and third, an opportunity to learn from her was something I did not want to pass up.” Such comments from her students are not unusual. Caplan’s classes are popular, despite their reputation for requiring a lot of reading and writing. Doctoral students in particular face a daunting workload from her, yet last spring they voted her the School of Social Work’s Ph.D. Professor of the Year. What Caplan takes special pleasure in, though, is seeing her students develop an interest in research. Currently she is working with six undergraduate and graduate students on various research projects about the lived reality of poverty. “I’m very proud of that,” said Caplan.
OFFICE OF GOVERNMENT RELATIONS
McCullick named community relations coordinator By Leanna Brown lkbrown@uga.edu
Alison Bracewell McCullick joined UGA’s Office of Government Relations Jan. 11 as its community relations coordinator. “Alison is an outstanding addition to the university’s efforts to develop beneficial partnerships across Athens-Clarke County and surrounding counties,” Griff Doyle, vice president for government relations. “As a university with more than 200 years in this community, our positive local relationships have been integral to the character and success of the University of Georgia. I look forward to growing that relationship
and seeing where Alison’s leadership takes us.” In her new role, McCullick will head the Office of Community Relations, succeeding the recently retired Alison McCullick Pat Allen. The office serves as the primary liaison between UGA and the Athens-Clarke County government, businesses, neighborhoods, nonprofit organizations, community leaders and individuals. “I am grateful for the opportunity to serve the University of Georgia and
my hometown in this very meaningful way,” McCullick said. “Community engagement for me is both a passion and a professional privilege. I look forward to continuing the important work of enhancing town-and-gown partnerships that will benefit both our students and citizens.” McCullick brings more than 20 years of experience in government and community relations to her new position. A native of Athens and a graduate of UGA, she was most recently the director of outreach and communications for the GRU/UGA Medical Partnership. Before joining the Medical Partnership, she spent seven years working in the office of Secretary of State Cathy Cox.
QUESTIONS&ANSWERS
columns.uga.edu Jan. 11, 2016
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CAES By Terry Marie Hastings
correctly, quickly and in full compliance with all the applicable rules and regulations.
thasting@uga.edu
The Office for Sponsored Programs and Contracts and We want faculty and Grants merged at the beginning their departments to feel of the fall semester into a single more supported across unit called Sponsored Projects the full spectrum of reAdministration to streamline search administration and improve the efficiency activities—from proposal and effectiveness of research preparation, submission, administration at UGA. resubmission, award neThe combined unit, recomgotiation, award accepmended by faculty and administance to award setup, invoicing and reporting. trative groups, came to fruition We want them to think through a combined effort of of the team of individuthe Office of the Senior Vice President for Academic Affairs als who assist them as and Provost, the Office of the “their” team and think of Vice President for Research Sponsored Projects as “the and the Division of Finance place that can help me.” and Administration. Dorothy Kozlowski “The creation of SponDavis: Since both pre- and post-award staff are in the sored Projects Administration Sponsored Projects Administration is directed by two UGA staff same building, we can underscores this university’s members with extensive experience in research administration: more easily collaborate commitment to its faculty Cathy Cuppett, director of pre-award activities and director of on answering complex members, who should experi- the Office for Proposal Enhancement in OVPR, and Allison Davis, questions, and researchence the highest level of service director of post-award accounting and associate controller in ers and departments are as they compete for and manage University Business and Accounting Services, who say recent seeing clearer responses funding that enables them to changes have led to benefits for researchers. to inquiries about their advance health, security and our sponsored projects. land-grant mission of service,” said Pamela Whitten, senior There’s more comvice president for academic munication, so all involved affairs and provost. have a better understandOver 30 Sponsored Projects ing of everyone’s responAdministration staff, now cosibilities. This is a great located in Tucker Hall, work benefit to the researchers, in teams under the Sponsored since they typically go to Projects umbrella to meet the their department business needs of UGA faculty as well as managers and accounthe staff who support researchtants first when they have ers in their departments. Sponquestions. sored Projects Administration is directed by two UGA staff Columns: What changes members with extensive experican researchers look for in the near future? ence in research administration: Davis: Researchers can Cathy Cuppett, director of look for improved cuspre-award activities and directomer service, improved tor of the Office for Proposal communication of busiEnhancement in OVPR, and ness process improvement Allison Davis, director of postand the enhancement of award accounting and associate research administration support. controller in University Business and Accounting Services. Cuppett and Davis report to Carl Bergmann, associate vice Cuppett: Sponsored Project Administration teams are visiting president for research. Post-award accounting has fiscal com- their departments to meet researchers face-to-face and talk pliance reporting responsibilities to the Controller’s Office. about their research. Putting names with faces has made our The two directors talked about how Sponsored Projects work more rewarding and given us a personal connection to Administration has changed UGA researchers’ experience the documents we see. Instead of just making an award, we with proposal submission and grants administration, and know we are helping specific faculty further their research. In the next few months we will be visiting additional departments. what’s next. We are looking forward to meeting researchers across campus. Columns: What’s different now for UGA researchers? We will also be working to further automate some research Cuppett: Faculty members now have a centrally located team administration functionality in the e-Research Portal, includof research administrators who assist them instead of disparate ing prompts for no-cost extension requests, and a more userindividuals around campus. They can make one call or send one friendly budget module. Finally, we are improving our training email to any team member and get their questions answered opportunities for research administrators around campus.
Start to finish
UGA takes team approach to proposal and award administration
WEEKLY READER
Alumnus writes novel set in Athens
The Painter J.W. Deas 3-Day Ranch Press Paperback and e-book: $9.99
Life can be complicated for a liar and fake artist. As a university art student in 1992, Andy has stealing bits and pieces from other works down to a science. His deception is so deeply rooted within himself, he is even beginning to believe some of his own lies. When Andy meets Henry, an actual artist, his life tumbles further down the rabbit hole. Henry lives in the shadows of Athens, unable to face humanity for his own dark reasons. When the two join forces, Henry gives Andy the keys to the art kingdom, a move which will alter both of their lives. Andy must decide between the life he’s painted using someone else’s brush or finding his true self within the gray. The Painter, a coming of age novel, is written by J.W. Deas, a UGA graduate and art educator.
Wheat breeder receives research foundation’s 2015 Inventor’s Award By Sharon Dowdy sharono@uga.edu
As a young man working on his family’s farm in Perry, Jerry Johnson loved the sight of wheat growing in the fields. Decades later, Johnson, now a respected plant breeder and crop and soil sciences professor, received the 2015 Inventor’s Award from the UGA Research Foundation for his work breeding wheat varieties Jerry Johnson for farmers in Georgia and across the Southeast. “I grew a lot of wheat and soybeans with my father and my uncle. I always thought the wheat was pretty growing in the fields during the wintertime, when everything else is brown and there are no leaves on the trees,” he said. Johnson attended Abraham Baldwin Agricultural College and UGA, completing his undergraduate degree in agronomy. While at UGA, he worked with Morris Bitzer in his wheat breeding program before accepting an assistantship at Purdue University.There, he earned master’s and doctoral degrees in plant breeding and genetics. He was an assistant professor at the University of Maryland before returning home to UGA in 1977 to teach and conduct research at the Griffin campus. Thirty-eight years later, Johnson has produced close to 50 wheat varieties. Throughout his career, he made at least 1,000 wheat crosses annually, which led to an average of two new wheat varieties each year. To breed a new variety, Johnson takes two plants and crosses them together to get what’s called an “initial cross.” He watches those crosses grow generations for about six years before selecting the best crosses. Three more years of field testing gives Johnson time to view, evaluate and record the new variety’s performance. All of the wheat varieties released through Johnson’s research program in UGA’s College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences were bred to increase farmers’ yields while decreasing the impact of insects and disease. “The primary goal is that we breed for yield—because that’s how farmers get paid—and excellent test weight,” he said. “To maintain the yield, we have to build in Hessian fly (a major wheat pest) and soil-borne disease resistance. Other diseases, like leaf rust, can be controlled with fungicides if necessary, but there’s a cost involved there.” Johnson, who recently retired but plans to help transition the UGA wheat breeding program into the hands of Mohamed Mergoum, newly named program breeder, is most proud of AGS2000. UGARF licensed AGS2000 to Georgia-based AgSouth Genetics and the variety “helped them become successful,” Johnson said. The total gross license revenue received by UGARF from the commercialization of Johnson’s varieties totals nearly $3 million.
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CYBERSIGHTS
Columns is available to the campus community by subscription for an annual fee of $20 (secondclass 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 columns@uga.edu
Editor Juliett Dinkins Art Director Janet Beckley
Veterans Resource Center updates site
Photo Editor Dorothy Kozlowski
svrc.uga.edu
The Student Veterans Resource Center has launched a new website that provides a more complete onestop shop for prospective and current students. The website is the conduit between the university’s student veterans and the resources and opportunities available to them. Additionally, prospective students
will find the site useful as they move through the admissions and matriculation process. “UGA is quickly becoming one of the nation’s top institutions for student veterans, and we hope our website will entice prospective students to apply and will help them navigate once they are on campus,” said Ted Barco, director of the SVRC.
Senior Reporter Aaron Hale Reporter Matt Chambers The University of Georgia is committed to principles of equal opportunity and affirmative action. The University of Georgia is a unit of the University System of Georgia. I
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Special Collections Libraries Faculty Fellows
2015-16 cohort of Senior Teaching Fellows
Eight faculty were selected for the 2015-16 cohort of Senior Teaching Fellows. The senior faculty will focus on professional growth in undergraduate instruction, sharing of ideas, and strengthening courses and teaching methods in a synergistic community of learners. From left: Rahul Shrivastav (VP, OVPI), Roy Legette, Hamid Arabnia, Terry Centner, Betsy Vonk, Linda Renzulli, Joel Lee, Shelley Zuraw, Eddie Watson (director, CTL), and Dana Bultman. More information on the Fellows is at http://ctl.uga.edu/faculty/ctl_senior_teaching_fellows .
FELLOWS
from page 1 conducted at UGA,” said David Lee, vice president for research. “We join NAI in celebrating their contributions to science and society.” Chu is a former faculty member in the pharmaceutical and biomedical sciences department. His research focuses on nucleoside and carbohydrate chemistry, antiviral chemotherapy, cancer chemotherapy, structure-based drug design and molecular modeling, and antiviral drug discovery for bioterrorism. His antiviral drug clevudine, marketed under the trade names Levovir and Revovir, is used in the treatment of chronic hepatitis B infections in South Korea and the Philippines. “Dr. Chu is one of the most prolific and productive inventors at the University of Georgia,” Lee said. “His work has led to dozens of inventions and patents, and his development of clevudine has improved the lives of countless individuals suffering from hepatitis B.”
Chu is the recipient of numerous prestigious awards, including the NIH Merit Award, the UGA Inventor of the Year Award and the John A. Montgomery Award, which is given biannually to an outstanding scientist in recognition of a contribution that results in significant advances in chemotherapy. Chu holds 63 U.S. patents and more than 130 international patents that have been licensed to 10 companies. He is a co-founder of both Pharmasset, which was acquired by Gilead for $11 billion in 2011, and, more recently, he co-founded Atea Pharmaceuticals to explore novel antiviral therapeutics. Although officially retired, Chu maintains an active research program on drug synthesis and is currently developing treatments for hepatitis B and C infections. Hanna is world-renowned, especially for his development of superior, sterile, warm-season
Bulletin Board University Woman’s Club
The University Woman’s Club will meet Jan. 12 at 11 a.m. in the Fellowship Hall of Central Presbyterian Church, 380 Alps Road. Guest speaker Elizabeth Gardner, project coordinator for Watershed UGA in the Odum School of Ecology, will discuss “The Trickle-Down Effect of Water in Our Community.” A nominating committee also will be appointed at the meeting.
Tobacco cessation classes
Registration is open until Jan. 14 for the College of Pharmacy’s “Beat the Pack” tobacco cessation program. Meetings will be held on Tuesdays Jan. 19 through Feb. 23 from 5:45-6:45 p.m. at the UGA Training and Development Center building, 315 S. Thomas St. Parking at the center is free after 5 p.m. The program is free, but space is limited to 10 participants. The registration form and fliers can be downloaded as PDFs at http://t.uga.edu/1Du . Register by faxing a completed registration form to 706-542-6022; emailing the completed registration form to m onicaw@uga.edu ; or calling 706-542-3893.
OLLI activity fair
The Osher Lifelong Learning Institute will host its next OLLI Bash, an
activity fair for current and prospective members and guests, Jan. 15. Open to the public, the activity fair will be held from 1-3 p.m. at Central Presbyterian Church, 380 Alps Road. OLLI Bash will feature displays and information about the spring semester’s 176 courses in 24 categories, 21 luncheon programs and travel/study trips as well as OLLI@UGA’s social events and 30 special interest groups. For more information, go to www.olli.uga.edu .
Grant proposal deadline
The UGA Parents and Families Association’s Parents Leadership Council is accepting grant proposals for the 2016-2017 academic year to fund program and events that enhance the student experience at UGA. Grant applications are due by the close of business Feb. 12. Grants will be accepted only from UGA schools, colleges, units, departments, divisions or student organizations registered with the Center for Student Organizations. Proposals must demonstrate a direct and positive affect on student life at UGA. Grants will be awarded in the spring by a committee established by the Parents Leadership Council. Since 2002, the council has funded $1.3 million in grants to several programs and organizations on campus,
Faculty members, from left, Ben Ehlers, history, Amma Y. Ghartey-Tagoe Kootin, theatre and film studies and the Institute for African American Studies, and Kathleen deMarrais, lifelong education, administration and policy department, look over archival materials in a December workshop for the inaugural Special Collections Libraries Faculty Fellows. Representing a range of disciplines, the 11 Fellows will participate in workshops and seminars this spring to develop archives-centered courses that they will teach beginning in the fall at the special collections libraries. The program is a joint effort of the UGA Libraries and the Center for Teaching and Learning to broaden the scope of fields using special collections materials in classes. In addition to Ehlers, Kootin and deMarrais, the other Fellows are Garrison Bickerstaff (Division of Academic Enhancement), Cynthia Camp (English), Brian Drake (history), Hilda Kurtz (geography), Akela Reason (history), Spencer Simril (English and the Division of Academic Enhancement), Kristen Smith (public relations) and M. Montgomery Wolf (history). More information about the program is at http://t.uga.edu/1Z3 .
bermudagrass cultivars bearing the prefix name “Tif,” an homage to the location of his decades of research and trials: UGA’s Tifton campus in south Georgia. The term “Tif” is recognized in the turfgrass industry worldwide as a symbol of quality. “Wayne Hanna’s career could be considered a success based on numbers alone,” said Derek Eberhart, director of UGA’s Innovation Gateway, citing Hanna’s 16 issued and three pending patent applications; 17 trademarks registered for plant cultivar names worldwide; three issued foreign patents; six Plant Variety Protection certificates; and more than 230 intellectual property agreements related to his cultivars. Hanna’s patented plants have generated more than $7 million in gross license revenue plus another $3 million from plants protected by PVP certificates.
including the Counseling and Psychiatric Services Center at the University Health Center, the Office of International Education and the Office of Student Financial Aid. The complete list of guidelines and requirements is at parents.uga.edu . For more information, email Diane Johnson, director of the Parents Leadership Council, at dfjohn@uga.edu .
Research participants sought
Researchers in the College of Arts and Sciences’ psychology department are conducting a study to learn more about how families communicate about emotions in their marital and parenting relationships. Those eligible to participate in the study must be married and have a child between the ages of 7-11. Participation in the study will involve completing questionnaires at home and a one-time campus visit of one to two hours in the psychology building. Both parents and the child are required to attend the session together. Participating families will receive $75. For more information, call 706-542-1299 or email ugamarriagelab@gmail.com . Bulletin Board is limited to information that may pertain to a majority of faculty and staff members.
FACILITY
from page 1 Hank Huckaby, who led the construction of the Complex Carbohydrate Research Center while serving as UGA’s senior vice president for finance and administration, a role he held until 2006. “It will be an important factor in the land-grant university here doing what it should do and needs to do to serve the people of this state, to bring more economic development and also improve the health of our population.” The center has operated in various locations on UGA’s campus since its founding in 2012. The new facility will give the researchers better opportunities to collaborate with each other and with faculty housed in the Complex Carbohydrate Research Center. “With the interactions of the Complex Carbohydrate Research Center and the CMM, we’ll be able to really address fundamental problems in health science, and I’m really looking forward to seeing that happen,” said Alan Darvill, director of the Complex Carbohydrate Research Center. “The Center for Molecular Medicine will enhance UGA’s mission and reputation in the biomedical research area,” said Stephen Dalton, director of the CMM. “I’m delighted to be associated with the center and to be collaborating with Dr. Darvill in this venture and with the Complex Carbohydrate Research Center. I look forward to the building’s construction and to the many great scientific discoveries that will come out of the center in the future.” CMM research groups will focus on stem cells and regenerative medicine, vaccine development and therapeutics, and human disease models such as diabetes and other metabolic diseases, neurological and cardiovascular disorders, and obesity and biomedical glycobiology. The center will train undergraduate and graduate students to become the next generation of leading biomedical scientists, such as M.D./Ph.D. student Miranda Hayworth of Oak Ridge, North Carolina, who conducted research under Dalton’s direction. “Research, without a doubt, enhances the quality of modern medicine, and I hope that the many undergraduates here at UGA interested in the field of medicine will take advantage of the tremendous biomedical research opportunities that the new Center for Molecular Medicine will generate,” said Hayworth, who successfully defended her dissertation and now is completing her medical education at the Georgia Regents University/UGA Medical Partnership in Athens.
ON THE WEB cmm.uga.edu