UGA Columns March 27, 2017

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Road Dawgs visit Georgia high schools during spring break to talk about UGA OUTREACH NEWS

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Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center performs ‘Russian Twilight’ April 2

March 27, 2017

Vol. 44, No. 30

www.columns.uga.edu

UGA GUIDE

4&5

Undergraduates to present findings at CURO Symposium By Stephanie Schupska schupska@uga.edu

Peter Frey

The Honorable Steve Jones, a judge in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Georgia, speaks at a ceremony at Oconee Hill Cemetery for the reinterment of the remains of 105 individuals uncovered during the renovation of Baldwin Hall.

‘Meaningful reflection’

From spectator injuries at baseball games to invasive garlic mustard plants in forested areas, more than 550 UGA undergraduates are gearing up to share their research findings at the annual CURO Symposium April 3-4 at the Classic Center in downtown Athens. The 554 participants, presenting either as individuals or groups, mark a new high for the event hosted by the Center for Undergraduate Research Opportunities and eclipse last

year’s record-breaking total by 146 students. The volume of undergraduates isn’t the only number of note. This year marks the first that nonHonors Program students make up more than half of participants with 53 percent of the total. CURO, administered by the Honors Program, was expanded to all undergraduates in 2010. “It has been a great pleasure to observe the overall growth in student participation in the CURO Symposium over the past several years, especially with regard to non-Honors students,” said

See SYMPOSIUM on page 8

COLLEGE OF VETERINARY MEDICINE

UGA, community leaders pay tribute to individuals Veterinary Medical Center marks whose remains were discovered at Baldwin Hall two-year anniversary of opening

By Krista Richmond krichmond@uga.edu

Dr. Gregory S. Broughton of the UGA Hugh Hodgson School of Music looked to the sky and took a deep breath before beginning a moving a cappella version of “Amazing Grace,” a vocal tribute to the men, women and children whose remains were discovered during the construction of the Baldwin Hall expansion. Broughton, the Honorable Judge Steve C. Jones of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Georgia, the Rev. Dr. Winfred M. Hope of ­ Ebenezer Baptist Church, West, who delivered the opening prayer and benediction, and UGA President Jere W. ­Morehead, joined approximately 125 members of the community for a Reinterment Ceremony

March 20 at Oconee Hill ­Cemetery. “Despite all that we do not know, it is our privilege to join together today—in complete reverence—to pay tribute to these individuals as they assume their final resting place in the historic Oconee Hill Cemetery,” Jones said. “While we cannot call to mind their personal stories or life histories, we can hold these individuals with care and compassion in our hearts and in our minds.” The remains of those unidentified individuals were meticulously catalogued and placed in 105 funeral boxes before they were laid to rest in Oconee Hill. Oconee Hill Cemetery will provide for the perpetual care of the reinterment site. This site is marked by a granite marker that reads: Here lie the remains of 105 unknown individuals, originally interred

READ MORE

UGA plans next steps in research on Baldwin Hall site

See page 8

during the 19th century. The vast majority of the 30 remains able to be identified were those of men, women and children of African descent, presumably slaves or former slaves. Others were of European and Asian descent. Their remains were discovered in November 2015 during the University of Georgia’s Baldwin Hall construction project adjacent to the Old Athens Cemetery. In March 2017, they were respectfully reinterred here. May they continue to rest in peace. Jones also quoted Paul See BALDWIN on page 8

By Cindy H. Rice cindyh@uga.edu

This March marks the two-year anniversary of the opening of the new Veterinary Medical Center for the UGA College of Veterinary Medicine. “It has been an exciting and busy two years,” said Dr. Gary Baxter, associate dean for clinical services. “Our new facility has had a positive impact on not only our students but also on the animals that we care for at our hospital and their owners and on the veterinarians and staff who work there.” Located at 2200 College Station Road, the center opened March 25, 2015, and includes the college’s Veterinary Teaching Hospital and a Veterinary Education Center. Before moving, the

AUGUSTA UNIVERSITY/UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA MEDICAL PARTNERSHIP

COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING

By Sam Fahmy

By Mike Wooten

college’s hospital was handling more than 24,500 animal visits per year in one of the smallest veterinary teaching hospitals in the U.S. “Since day one, the new facility has been a vast improvement with nearly three times the space and an impressive list of state-of-the-art medical equipment,” Baxter said. “But what I am especially proud of is what we have accomplished since moving in. Anyone can occupy a building, but I feel like our faculty, staff and students have really made the most of this amazing opportunity that we were given by the state of Georgia and by our generous donors.” Highlights for the Veterinary Medical Center from the past two years include: • Handled more than See CENTER on page 8

Campus dean continues to work toward advancing Engineering students tackle real-world problems in Georgia medical education, research and outreach efforts sfahmy@uga.edu

A consensus builder by nature, one of the first priorities that Dr. Shelley Nuss had after being named campus dean of the Augusta University/UGA Medical Partnership was to bring the faculty and staff together to define a shared vision that would guide their work going forward. “I wanted to get cohesion around who we are, where we’re going and what we’re doing,” explained Nuss, who was named campus dean a year ago this month. “It was very clear from that

process that we want to train the best physicians for the community and the state, while being recognized as a premier medical campus with innovative, forward-thinking teaching strategies.” Nuss explained that active learning pedagogies hone students’ critical thinking skills and prepare them for practice in today’s rapidly changing health care environment. Small-group and case-based learning have always been a hallmark of the educational experience at the Medical Partnership, and students are increasingly gaining research experience. Nuss pointed out that a record 30 out of the 40 first-year

students will be participating in research projects this summer under the direction of UGA, AU and Medical Partnership faculty. Shelley Nuss N u s s joined the AU/UGA Medical Partnership as campus associate dean for graduate medical education in 2010, the same year that the first class of students enrolled. Those students graduated in 2014, See DEAN on page 3

mwooten@uga.edu

From a research pool in the basement of a building on South Campus to cities and towns in every corner of Georgia, students in the UGA College of Engineering are serving the state by tackling real-world challenges through their work on senior design projects. The yearlong projects are part of a capstone course that tests seniors on all the engineering concepts and skills they’ve learned and practiced during their undergraduate studies. The projects also

provide valuable engineering expertise to help communities across the state address critical needs. “As an engineering program in a premier land-grant, liberal arts university, we are in a unique position to positively impact communities and support economic development,” said Donald J. Leo, dean of the College of Engineering. The College of Engineering’s approach to its capstone senior design course differs significantly from many other engineering programs, where there may be little interaction between students and actual clients. In many programs,

See ENGINEERING on page 7


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