Periodicals Postage is PAID in Athens, Georgia
News Service University of Georgia 286 Oconee Street Suite 200 North Athens, GA 30602-1999
®
The University of Georgia
College of Education class marries clinical practice with community service INSTRUCTIONAL NEWS
3
UGA unit, Department of Education partner to make fourth-grade booklet Vol. 43, No. 14
October 26, 2015
www.columns.uga.edu
schupska@uga.edu
Peter Frey
Alice Walker, the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of The Color Purple, poses for a photo during her visit to UGA. Walker, who came to UGA as the Delta Visiting Chair for Global Understanding, spoke to capacity crowds Oct. 14 at the Chapel and Oct. 15 at the Morton Theatre in downtown Athens.
‘Learn along the way’
Pulitzer Prize-winning author Alice Walker inspires as inaugural Delta Visiting Chair aahale@uga.edu
Alice Walker, the Pulitzer Prizewinning author of The Color Purple, delivered a message of courage, empathy and self-empowerment to the UGA and Athens communities this month. Walker, who came to UGA as the Delta Visiting Chair for Global Understanding, spoke to capacity crowds Oct. 14 at the Chapel and Oct. 15 at the Morton Theatre in downtown Athens. Her message, which Walker delivered with her thoughtful, Zen-like tone, resonated with UGA students like Mansur Buffins, a second-year social studies education and African-American studies major. Buffins got to meet with Walker for an intimate conversation with several other students at
the Willson Center for Humanities and Arts Oct. 14. “I love how she lives freely,” Buffins said. “My takeaway is that I should stop worrying about what other people think of my ideas and goals and get rid of that fear of other people’s criticism and learn along the way.” Walker is the first AfricanAmerican woman to win the Pulitzer Prize in fiction. Beyond her most famous novel, The Color Purple, she has written six other novels, four collections of short stories, four children’s books and volumes of essays and poetry. Throughout her public life, she has been an international activist for civil and human rights and a forceful advocate for women and girls. Walker is the inaugural Delta Visiting Chair, which was
established by the Willson Center for Humanities and Arts through the support of the Delta Air Lines Foundation to host outstanding global scholars, leading creative thinkers, artists and intellectuals who teach and conduct research at UGA. As part of her visit, Walker met with students from UGA, Emory University and Spelman College as well as high school students from Walker’s birthplace of Putnam County at the Willson Center parlor. In this cozy setting, students asked Walker questions about her writing, her relationships and her philosophies about life. For Juhi Varshney, a third-year women’s studies and biochemistry double major at UGA, it was an opportunity to have a face-to-face talk See WALKER on page 4
UGA LIBRARIES
Sandra Deal to discuss book during UGA visit By Jean Cleveland jclevela@uga.edu
Georgia’s first lady Sandra Deal will be joined by her co-authors Oct. 28 on a visit to the UGA Libraries to discuss Memories of the Mansion: The Story of Georgia’s Governor’s Mansion, published by the University of Georgia Press. Open to the public, the talk will be held at the Richard B. Russell Building Special Collections Libraries at 10 a.m. “All homes have a story to tell, and the Georgia Governor’s Mansion is no exception,” Deal said. Deal wrote the book with
2
Ryan Seacrest to headline UGA spring Commencement By Stephanie Schupska
By Aaron Hale
CAMPUS NEWS
Kennesaw State University history professors Jennifer W. Dickey and Catherine M. Lewis to chronicle the history of the Georgia Governor’s Mansion, which opened in 1968 and includes a distinguished collection of American art and antiques. The book contains personal anecdotes and more than 200 photos from the collections of former first families. Former first families Maddox, Carter, Busbee, Harris, Miller, Barnes and Perdue shared stories and photographs about what it was like living in the “people’s house.” The foreword by Betty Foy Sanders details the complicated process of planning
the new mansion. Atlanta architect A. Thomas Bradbury’s neoclassical design features a 30-column colonnade to evoke Southern charm and grandeur while accommodating state functions and family living quarters. “The mansion has one of the most valuable collections of early federal-era art and antiques in the world, and its origin is now recorded for posterity,” said UGA Press Director Lisa Bayer.“As a unit of Georgia’s flagship university, the UGA Press is honored to have published this rich, meticulously documented, utterly engaging story of our state’s current history through its first families.”
When Ryan Seacrest takes the stage for the UGA spring Commencement ceremony May 13 in Sanford Stadium, he will have two tasks—inspire a new class of UGA alumni and receive an honorary Doctor of Humane Letters degree from the university he attended as a freshman. The Board of Regents of the University System of Georgia approved Seacrest’s honorary degree during its Oct. 14 meeting. Other than an earned doctorate, the honorary degree is the highest recognition UGA can bestow and is given to recognize a person who has a sustained record of achievements of lasting significance. Seacrest holds pre-eminent positions in broadcast and cable television as well as nationally
syndicated radio and local radio. He is celebrated internationally as host of the top-rated prime-time talent showcase American Ryan Seacrest Idol on Fox. He is host and executive producer of ABC’s annual New Year’s eve program Dick Clark’s Rockin’ Eve with Ryan Seacrest. He also has an agreement with NBCUniversal that includes on-air broadcasting and producing duties across the NBC and E! networks. On radio, Seacrest is host of On Air with Ryan Seacrest, his market-topping nationally syndicated Los Angeles morning drive-time show for iHeart Media’s 102.7 KIIS-FM, as well as a
See COMMENCEMENT on page 8
DIVISION OF MARKETING AND COMMUNICATIONS
Vice president for marketing and communications named By Rebecca Vander Plaats rebeccavp@uga.edu
Tom Jackson, who became heritage communications executive with the University System of Georgia earlier this year. As vice president for marketing and communications, HobsonPape will report directly to Morehead and will oversee the Division of Marketing and Communications, currently known as the Public Affairs Division. The office comprises four departments: news service, publications, broadcast/ video/photography and the Visitors Center as well as WUGA-FM. Under Hobson-Pape’s direction, the division will serve as the central communications and marketing unit at UGA. “The University of Georgia
Karri Hobson-Pape, cofounder and partner at Inflexion Point Marketing Group in Atlanta, has been named vice president for marketing and communications at UGA. “Karri brings the ideal combination of professional experience and strategic vision required to advance the institution’s critical marketing and communications functions,” said UGA President Jere W. Morehead. “I look forward to working with her as a member of the university’s senior leadership team.” Hobson-Pape’s appointment is effective Jan. 1. She succeeds See MARKETING on page 8
CENTER FOR UNDERGRADUATE RESEARCH OPPORTUNITIES
CURO Research Assistantship Program exceeds expectations By Camie Williams camiew@uga.edu
In its first year alone, UGA’s Center for Undergraduate Research Opportunities Assistantship Program has given more than 250 students hands-on experiences in fields ranging from molecular engineering to linguistics. The CURO Research Assistantship Program was launched in fall 2014 and offers $1,000 stipends for a nonrenewable semester of independent research
under the supervision of faculty members across campus. A total of 258 undergraduates from 78 majors participated during the 2014-2015 academic year, and more than 100 currently are taking part. Although the Honors Program coordinates CURO, more than half the assistantship participants were from outside of the program. “Participation has exceeded our expectations, especially in the interest we are seeing from faculty looking to support undergraduates
See CURO on page 8