Newsletter  Volume 5 Issue 14
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Upcoming Events
 

EUEC  Awards and New Members Reception
April 2, 2019
Governors Hall
Miller-Ward Alumni House
2:00 pm


SHETH LECTURE
April 8, 2019
Governors Hall
Miller-Ward Alumni House
11:30-1:00 pm


Lunch Colloquium
Cassandra Quave
Monday, April 22, 2019


Contact Other Members

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Travel
 
If you would like to  
find out about a travel destination or find other EUEC members who would like to travel with you, send an email to:

Find other members to get together for shared interests.  Send email to the following link to contact members who would like the same activity!

 

   

April 1, 2019

This issue of our newsletter is sent to members and friends of the Emory University Emeritus College (EUEC). I hope the newsletter will help keep you informed about our activities and help you feel connected with our members throughout the U.S.  On the left are links to our website and links to contact either me or the EUEC office.   

 
With best wishes,
Gray 


Gray F. Crouse
Director, EUEC
In this Issue:
DirectorMessage from the Director
 
Our Lunch Colloquium last week by Helen and Don O'Shea was, as predicted, a beautiful experience. Those of us who have seen their gardens knew we were in for a visual treat. What we also found is that the gardens today are the product of enormous amounts of planning and work over a long period of time. You can get some sense of that work from Delia Nisbet's article below. The recording of their talk will be on our website in a week or two and will be well worth viewing if you were not able to attend last week.
 
Tomorrow will be one of our major celebrations of the year as we honor our award winners and recognize our new members and the many donors who have contributed in the past year. Then, a week from today, is our Sheth Distinguished Lecture, another highlight of the year. It is an honor to have Professor Abdullahi An-Na'im speak, and, thanks to the generosity of the Sheths, there will be a lunch for all of those attending. A link for registration is contained in the article below about the lecture.
 
In this issue we welcome more new members who will head the cohort of new members to be celebrated next year. What a great start for that group! We also celebrate some major accomplishments of faculty members--be sure to read about their activities below.  
 
There is also an article about a "Deans' Pop-Up" that is one of a series of events to gather faculty together as an example of the type of activity that would be fostered by the existence of a faculty club on campus. Thanks to Mike Kutner for his continuing work on this matter.
 
I also want to thank Peter Sebel, Steve Nowicki, and Jeff Pennell for the retirement seminars they have given in the past few weeks. Each seminar has been very well received and has helped to increase our visibility on campus. Our last in the series will be April 10 in which several of our members will help explain Who We Are and What We Do.
 
Finally, we note the passing of Luella Klein. She died in January, but we only found out about her death last week. Please let us know whenever you learn of a member's death.
     
I am very grateful to Gretchen Schulz, Ann Hartle, and Marge Crouse for help with editing and proofing.  
 
Sheth Distinguished Lecture--April 8
 
 
 
 
Our Sheth Distinguished Lecture is next week.  Professor Abdullahi Ahmed An-Na'im, Charles Howard Candler Professor of Law, will give the lecture on April 8.  Professor An-Na'im is also an associated professor in the Emory College of Arts and Sciences, and senior fellow of the Center for the Study of Law and Religion of Emory University. An internationally recognized scholar of Islam and human rights and human rights in cross-cultural perspectives, he teaches courses in international law, comparative law, human rights, and Islamic law. His research interests include constitutionalism in Islamic and African countries, secularism, and Islam and politics.  He received an LLB (Honours) from the University of Khartoum (Sudan) in 1970, an LLB (Honours) and Diploma in Criminology from the University of Cambridge (England) in 1973, and a PhD (Law) from the University of Edinburgh (Scotland) in 1976.
 
The Sheth Lecture, made possible by a generous donation from Dr. Jagdish and Mrs. Madhu Sheth, will be in Governors Hall of the Miller-Ward Alumni House at 11:30 a.m. on Monday, April 8.  A special feature of this lecture is that lunch is provided and so reservations are necessary.  You may register by clicking here


LCMar25TopLunch Colloquium--Monday, March 25








How Does Your Garden Grow?



 






Helen O'Shea, RN, PhD, Professor of Nursing Emerita, and
Don O'Shea, PhD, Professor of Physics Emeritus, Georgia Institute of Technology


Click here to read more below about this Lunch Colloquium


AwardTopAwards and Honors Reception--Tuesday, April 2




Our annual Awards and Honors Reception and Recognition of New Members and Donors will be tomorrow, Tuesday, April 2.  If you have not yet registered, click here to register to attend this special event.
 

Faculty Club


The following invitation was sent to Emory faculty last week:

Dear Colleagues:
 
The Office of the Provost is pleased to partner with the Rollins School of Public Health and the Nell Hodgson Woodruff School of Nursing to present the second Deans' Pop-Up, "Promising Strategies to Promote Faculty Excellence," on April 15, 12:00-2:00pm.  The event will be held in the Lawrence P. and Ann Estes Klamon Room, found on the 8th floor of the Claudia Nance Rollins Building of the Rollins School of Public Health.  Faculty and administrators from the Rollins School of Public Health and the School of Nursing as well as Emory College and the Goizueta Business School will talk about successful initiatives implemented in their own departments and schools that propel faculty to success in research, teaching, and service. A light lunch will be served.
 
Register by clicking HERE.  Please register by Monday, April 8, 2019
 
Deans' Pop-Ups are designed to convene faculty from a variety of schools and research areas across the university and to provide a sample of the type of programming and cross disciplinary exchange that will be facilitated by an eventual faculty club, planning for which is underway.
 
We hope to see you there!
 
Sincerely,
Tim Holbrook 
Vice Provost for Faculty Affairs
 
The significance of that invitation is that it is linked to the role that a faculty club can play in fostering faculty excellence.  John Bugge and Mike Kutner worked very hard in promoting the formation of a faculty club and now Mike Kutner is continuing with that work.  I wanted to illustrate this article with a picture of a faculty club.  A Google image search revealed what I think has been an issue at Emory:  Most faculty club images were of very old-style "clubby" spaces that reeked of status and privilege.  I used a picture of the Brandeis Faculty Club that seems to be a better model of what we would like to see at Emory.


NewMemTopNew Members




FATopFaculty Activities

InMemTop



We just learned of the death of Luella Klein.


LCMar25BotLunch Colloquium--Monday, March 25


How Does Your Garden Grow?


Helen O'Shea, RN, PhD, Professor of Nursing Emerita, and
Don O'Shea, PhD, Professor of Physics Emeritus, Georgia Institute of Technology


Usually, in writing a summary, one focuses on concise and objective facts; however, when it comes to introducing Helen and Don O'Shea's presentation to the EUEC Lunch Colloquium on Monday, March 25, I must deviate from these rules and begin with quotes from Roberto Burle Marx, the first Brazilian to become a landscape architect, who, in his essay "A Garden is like a Poem," writes:

 

To make a garden is an art, you have not only to know the plants, but to understand the landscape and to organize nature on the basis of aesthetic laws....A garden is like a poem or like music and must be constructed as such, with crescendo and dramatic moments, but with simplicity and density, and the plants used must be native to the locality.

 

In viewing and listening to the presentation, I thought that Don and Helen O'Shea might have been inspired by Marx's essay when they began envisioning and creating their garden.

 

 

 

 

The presentation began by identifying the geographical site of the house and property, which is located at 1146 Lullwater Road, property that they bought in 1973. According to the O'Sheas the property is an elongated rectangle with large, old growth trees. The beautiful old house (that needed work itself) was designed by Leila Ross Wilburn, who designed several other houses in Druid Hills. At the time of the purchase, there were several mature azaleas and dogwoods in the front yard, and in the backyard there were a garage and a picnic area surrounded by native azaleas, mature Indica, and Kurume hybrid azaleas. Further in the back, according to the O'Sheas, there was a nearly impenetrable forest.

 

In 1987, they added a large multipurpose room at the back of the house, which changed the size and shape of the nearby part of the backyard.

 

In 1991, in consultation with Hastings Gardens, they adopted a plan, hoping to plant at least one garden area a year for five years (in the front yard, the backyard, and the now not quite so "impenetrable forest" they call the "wayback"). This did not work out very well. Five years later, they had done only one such area garden. In 1996, hoping to do better, they signed a contract with Landscaper # 1. A new garden entry was created with a stone path through a newly established rose garden, allowing entry to the forested area further back. One of the most important goals was that plants throughout that area and around the house, too, were selected so that there would be something blooming every month of the year.

 

After eight more years, in 2004, when Helen retired from full-time work and had more time to pursue plans, including her plan to become a Master Gardener, the O'Sheas chose Landscaper #2 to update the design. The new construction included the addition of three stone walls (both beautiful and useful in diverting run off from rain that had been washing out plants and mulch and even hardscape) and a stone path (winding all about) as part of the design. The goal of that work and the attendant planting was to provide "different rooms" one could visit when the plants would be full grown.

 

 

 

 

At this stage of the presentation, we saw several pictures that were taken in 2004, portraying fern, azaleas, and rhododendrons. Then we saw a whole series of gorgeous pictures showing how things have changed in the 15 years since then, in which years the garden has evolved into a blending of 24 area gardens, among them a rock garden, a white garden, inspired by a visit to the white garden at Sissinghurst castle, an herb garden, with several special beds including a picnic circle bed, a back upper wall bed, a shade bed with ferns and hostas, a fern glade, a spring bulb bed, and many more.

 

It is difficult to describe accurately in words what our senses were able to perceive in viewing the photos of the wonderful mass of plants (especially blooming flowers) that comprise the garden. For a certainty, Don and Helen O'Shea have created a garden that, in Marx's words, is like a poem.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

During their presentation, Helen and Don O'Shea provided also a "gardener's schedule" for the upkeep of the garden during winter, spring, summer, and autumn (weeding being a primary activity in each season) and tips for avoiding mistakes (such as they themselves have made) and achieving successes (such as they themselves have had).

 

The amount of loving care and effort that they have dedicated to the continuous growth of the garden is quite impressive. I am sure that the gardeners among us, even the other Master Gardeners (and we have quite a few), learned much on this occasion. The video tour of the garden with which the occasion concluded (lovely music included) left us all feeling as though we had just visited in a more-than-virtual way.

 

--Delia Nisbet

 

 
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NewMemBotNew Members

New members are the lifeblood of any organization. Please make a special effort to welcome them to EUEC! 
     


Members in Transition

Gary S. Hauk, PhD, University Historian
 

Michael Kuhar, PhD, Candler Professor of Neuropharmacology, Georgia Research Alliance Scholar, Senior Faculty Fellow, Center for Ethics of Emory


Anna Leo, MFA, Associate Professor, Department of Theater and Dance

Rosemary M. Magee, PhD, Senior Faculty Fellow, Fox Center for Humanistic Inquiry
 
Shaoxiong Wu, PhD, Research Professor, Emory College 


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FABotFaculty Activities

 

Rudolf Makkreel

Charles Howard Candler Professor Emeritus of Philosophy

 
Immanuel Kant
Rudi updates us on his activities since his Heilbrun Fellowship:
 

Since my 2014-15 Heilbrun Fellowship for a book on the Enlightenment philosopher Immanuel Kant (1724-1804), I have published 12 essays. Because of prior commitments many were not just about Kant. Some of them were on hermeneutics, which is about interpretation and how it relates to everyday understanding and scientific explanation. These essays developed themes from the book Orientation and Judgment in Hermeneutics that I published with U of Chicago Press in 2015 and that came out in paper in 2017.

 

Five other published essays had Kant in the title. Three were based on talks I gave in Philadelphia, Vienna, and Pisa with Heilbrun support and will appear again as chapters in the projected book. My working title is "Kant's Worldview: Relating Understanding and Judgment to Human Comprehension." Kant is a complex thinker, so although I now have a twelve-chapter draft, I am still revising some of them.

 

The final set of essays I published were about Wilhelm Dilthey (1833-1911), a German philosopher of history and the human sciences, who was the subject of my first book. Although the Kant book is still in progress, I did complete the sixth and last volume of the Selected Works of Dilthey that I have been co-editing with a German philosopher since the 1980s. This volume, which is scheduled to be released in September by Princeton University Press (Wilhelm Dilthey: Selected Works, Volume VI Ethical and World-View Philosophy), contains my translations of some of his last writings, including his "System of Ethics," "The Essence of Philosophy," "Types of Worldview," and "The Problem of Religion." I also wrote a long introduction for the volume.

 

 

 

Corinne A. Kratz

Emory Director, African Critical Inquiry Program

Professor Emerita of Anthropology and African Studies

   

 

 

 

Cory's article "Kinship in Action, Kinship in Flux: Uncertainties and Transformations in Okiek Marriage Arrangement" just came out in African Studies Review.  She did some of the final revision and editing while she had the Heilbrun Fellowship.  The abstract for the article is:

 

For Okiek in Kenya, marriage arrangement is a nexus where transformations of personhood and social relations, changes in land tenure, and shifting state engagements come together in ways that shape individual and family lives as well as communities. This article sketches transformations in Okiek life and marriage arrangement and considers how Okiek have managed interlineage discussions central to marriage arrangement. It explores the social dynamics, evocative rhetorics, uncertainties, and moral imaginations through which people constitute lineages and affinal relations in changing circumstances, and situates these processes within a longer historical trajectory of socioeconomic and demographic change.

 

The entire article can be found on the Cambridge University Press website.

   

 

  

Bradd Shore

Goodrich C. White Professor of Anthropology

 

 

 

Bradd is one of our members who joined before retirement.  This colloquium represents his formal leave-taking from the department as he will retire at the end of this academic year. 

      

 

 
     
InMemBotIn Memoriam



Luella Klein, MD, Professor Emerita of Gynecology and Obstetrics, died on January 13, 2019 at the age of 94.  She graduated summa cum laude from the University of Iowa with a BA degree in 1946 and received her MD degree from the University of Iowa in 1949. She completed a rotating internship at Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio, and completed training in internal medicine and general surgery prior to completing residency in obstetrics and gynecology in 1955. After residency, Dr. Klein joined the faculty in obstetrics and gynecology at the School of Medicine, Western Reserve University, in Cleveland, Ohio. In 1955, she was elected a United States Senior Fulbright Scholar attending post-graduate medical school and performing research at the University of London in London, England until 1957.

 

On March 1, 1986, Dr. Richard Krause, Dean of Emory University School of Medicine, announced the appointment of the very first Emory School of Medicine female Department Chair, Dr. Luella Klein.  She had worked as a full-time faculty member in the Department of Gynecology and Obstetrics since 1967. She held the academic rank of Professor and was the Director of the Maternal and Infant Care Project at Grady Memorial Hospital. During her tenure within the department, she was noted for her teaching abilities and her excellent clinical judgment.

 

Dr. Klein's sub-specialty in maternal-fetal medicine served as the foundation for her work as the Director of the Maternal and Infant Care Project located at Grady Memorial Hospital. Throughout her 60-year career, Dr. Klein championed equality in health care for adolescent, low-income, and incarcerated women of color, women with disabilities, women with HIV, and other underserved populations. In addition to her time as Chair of the Department of Gynecology and Obstetrics Dr. Luella Klein's accolades also include: the first female President of the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, the Georgia Obstetrical and Gynecological Society, the Atlanta Obstetrical and Gynecological Society, Atlanta Women Physicians Association, and member of the American Board of Obstetrics and Gynecology (ABOG).

 

Dr. Klein won much recognition for excellence in her professional career. She was a Charles Howard Candler Professor, a recipient of the Emory School of Medicine Alumni Association's Arnall Patz Lifetime Achievement Award, and received the Mary Lynn Morgan Award from The Center for Women at Emory.

 

Dr. Klein's complete obituary may be read by clicking here.

 

A tribute to Dr. Klein by Penny Castellano, MD, Interim Chair, Department of Gynecology and Obstetrics, including a video tribute, may be read by clicking here.  

 

 



WalkBotWalking the Campus with Dianne

Did anyone recognize Dobbs Hall from our last walk?   The dorm can be found on the main campus right off Asbury Circle.  As I mentioned, the courtyard looks like a charming place to sit and relax, that is, if it's not inhabited with lots and lots of students! 

According to the plaque in front of the building, it is a residence hall originally built in 1916 for professional school students, and named in honor of Samuel Candler Dobbs, who was a former president of the Coca-Cola Company, and made a large donation to Emory University.

Dobbs Hall is a favorite of many students. The hall's smaller rooms make for a close-knit community that the residents enjoy.  Each room is air-conditioned and furnished with moveable furniture.   
 
If you would like to get a look inside Dobbs Hall, please click here.




For our next walk, let's go inside, just long enough to get out of the early onset of pollen.  In this next place, you can enjoy many different types of entertainment....and I'll give you a couple of hints:   It's not the Schwartz Center and we've visited this place before -- on the outside. 


Where will you find this on the Emory campus? 



 
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Emory University Emeritus College

The Luce Center
825 Houston Mill Road NE #206

Atlanta, GA 30329

   

Emory University Emeritus College, The Luce Center, 825 Houston Mill Road NE #206, Atlanta, GA 30329
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