Newsletter  Volume 3 Issue 6
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Dianne Becht
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(or send email to emeriti@emory.edu) 

 

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Upcoming Events

   
We are in the process of establishing  events for 2017

Links will posted soon!

There will be Lunch Colloquiums on January 9 and January 23!


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, whether it is forming a book club or a photography club, or getting together to take a hike.  Send email to the following link to contact member who would like the same activity!

 

 

   


December 19, 2016

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 year certainly ended on a high note with our last Lunch Colloquium of the semester given by EUEC Member Ron Schuchard.  Thanks to Linda Matthews' fine report, you can read all about the Colloquium, but unfortunately can't taste the holiday cookies or bubbly that you missed or see the toys brought for Toys for Tots.  Ron brought a collection of the Eliot books he has published--a stunning achievement and he is not yet finished. 

 

EUEC has received some good news in the last month.  We will be hosting the 2018 AROHE Conference and we received a Conference Subvention Fund grant from CFDE to help defray the costs.  Please read the article below and let us know if you have suggestions for the conference.  There is a group of us already working to develop the program.

 

Thanks to those of you who have let me know about your activities; I encourage more of you to do the same.  It is important for faculty trying to make a retirement decision to realize that their faculty life definitely does not have to end at retirement; Ron Schuchard, for example, retired so that he would have more time to devote to his research!  On a related note, the winners of our faculty awards for scholarly achievement and service are announced below.  I hope you will be able to attend the awards and new members reception to congratulate our winners and greet our new members.

 

Finally, thanks to so many of you who have supported EUEC in a variety of ways, including financially. We are the organization we are only because of you!


I am very grateful to John Bugge, Herb Benario, and Gretchen Schulz for help with proofing and editing.  
 
LCDec5TopLunch Colloquium December 5




'Putting all of Tom together": Adventures and Revelations in Editing T. S. Eliot's Prose, 1974-2016




Ronald Schuchard

Goodrich C. White Professor of English, Emeritus

Click to read below about this Colloquium  

AwardsTopEUEC Awards and New Members Reception March 27

On March 27 we will celebrate the winners of our annual EUEC Faculty Distinction and Service awards and the winner of the Heilbrun Fellowship--and welcome new members.

Click here to find out who won the awards
 


AROHE (Association of Retirement Organizations in Higher Education) has signed a contract with the Emory Conference Center Hotel, so EUEC will be hosting the 2018 Conference here at Emory. Save the dates: October 7-9, 2018!
 
Our hosting of this Conference has been greatly aided by the awarding of a substantial grant from the Emory Conference Center Subvention Fund, administered by the Center for Faculty Excellence and Development. Without that grant, it is not clear that it would have been financially viable for AROHE to meet here.
 
Our Planning Committee (Gray Crouse, John Bugge, Gretchen Schulz, Holly York, Marilynne McKay, and Pat Douglass) is already at work. We want this Conference to be the best ever, and for that to happen we will need your help. The goal of most people who attend the AROHE Conference is to learn how they can either build a retirement organization at their college or university, or make the one they have better.
 
Our first step in planning is to identify the resources at Emory that can provide information that will help in building retirement organizations. We certainly plan to use EUEC as a model of a faculty retirement organization, but what can we do to make EUEC even better? Many retirement organizations in the U.S. serve both faculty and staff. What are the advantages and disadvantages of that alternative model, and whom do you know at Emory or elsewhere who could speak to issues relevant to retirement organizations? Your thoughts and suggestions are most welcome. The more people who contribute to this discussion, the stronger the final results will be!
 
In other AROHE news, John Bugge has served two terms, for a total of six years, on the AROHE board. He will be rotating off the board in January and we all owe him a big debt of gratitude for the work he has put in on the board and in shining a national light on EUEC and its activities. There was an election for new board members in November, and Gray Crouse was elected as a board member, so EUEC will continue to be represented at a national level.

A Season of Thanks and Giving














Leaving the Thanksgiving holiday and approaching the end of the year provides an opportunity for reflection about the year and what has been worthwhile and what is worth supporting.
 
Our yearly donation campaign began in early August with a mailing to all our members. It is difficult for me to express how appreciative and grateful I am on behalf of EUEC for your generosity. Funding from members is an important part of our budget and in particular helps us to do programming that we could not otherwise do. Over 100 of you have already made a donation for this year.
 
For those of you who have not yet made a donation, there is still time! If you are comfortable making donations online, there is a link in the left-hand column of this newsletter that you can click and that will take you to Emory's secure website for donating. If you would prefer to make a donation by mail, you can send an email request to Dianne Becht (dianne.becht@emory.edu) and she will be glad to send you a donor form and return envelope, or you can just mail a check payable to Emory University directly to EUEC at The Luce Center, 825 Houston Mill Road NE #232, Atlanta, GA 30329. If you are not sure whether you have made a donation this year, Dianne will be glad to check for you.
 
Thank you all for your generosity and support this year.



Healthcare Newsletter



Our healthcare newsletter that describes the Medicare options for Emory employees upon retirement has just been extensively rewritten.  We hope that it will be a helpful guide for both staff and faculty who are faced with a complicated array of choices of healthcare plans.  If you know of an Emory staff or faculty member who would like a copy, or if you would like a copy, just send a request to Gray Crouse, gcrouse@emory.edu.

InMemTop


We note the passing of EUEC Member Bill Elmer, Professor Emeritus of Biology.

Click here to read more below.

NewMemBotNew Members
 

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

Gary E. Freed, DO, FAAP, FACOP, Professor Emeritus of Pediatrics

In Transition 

Peter Sebel, BS, MD, PhD, MBA, Professor of Anesthesiology  

  


LCDec5BotLunch Colloquium December 5



"Putting all of Tom together": Adventures and Revelations in Editing T. S. Eliot's Prose, 1974-2016 

Ronald Schuchard, Goodrich C. White Professor of English, Emeritus
 

Members of the EUEC received an early holiday treat when Ron Schuchard, Goodrich C. White Professor of English Emeritus, presented a fascinating and entertaining paper describing his scholarly journey of the past forty-plus years gathering and editing the prose writings of T. S. Eliot.  Ron's Eliot odyssey began as a graduate student in the 1960s at the University of Texas, Austin (with a Ph.D. thesis on the nature of T. S. Eliot's classicism) and has continued throughout his career at Emory, begun in 1969.   He presented the paper in honor and memory of Valerie Eliot and expressed appreciation for the Heilbrun Fellowship award that has enabled him to complete the last two of eight volumes of The Complete Prose of T. S. Eliot:  The Critical Edition, published by Johns Hopkins University Press (US) and Faber and Faber (UK).

 

Ron paid tribute to Valerie Eliot, T. S. Eliot's second wife, whose generosity over a thirty-eight-year friendship made his work possible, and whose dedication to the publication of Eliot's correspondence and unpublished writings has left an invaluable legacy for students and scholars and for modern literature.  Though his first attempts, some six years after Eliot's death in 1965, to gain her permission to read restricted Eliot materials went unheeded for several years,Ron continued to pursue his detective work in uncovering Eliot's fugitive uncollected prose from all around the world.   Finally, in 1974, on a research trip to Ireland working on W. B. Yeats, he encountered Dame Helen Gardner, a scholar of Eliot who taught at Oxford, who gave him a personal introduction to Mrs. Eliot.  Thus, through serendipity and perseverance, Ron found himself in Mrs. Eliot's drawing room in London, sipping a large glass of straight Old Grand-Dad Bourbon (not an ice cube in sight) while being grilled by Mrs. Eliot on what exactly he wanted and why.  Ron wanted to see Eliot's Clark Lectures held by King's College Library, Cambridge, which Eliot had closed to researchers. The 1926 lectures, delivered weekly at Trinity College over three months, centered on Eliot's thoughts about poetry from Dante to Donne and the metaphysical poets.  Finally, she agreed to give permission for him to read them, but not to quote from them.

 

A profuse thank you note after their meeting and letters and photocopies of materials sent to her over the following twelve years brought no response, until one day, in 1987, Ron found in his department mail box a letter from Valerie Eliot, referencing his letter of 1975 and asking if he would still be interested in editing Eliot's lectures. The immediate reply was, of course, a most emphatic yes!  Thus began the publishing collaboration that would consume so many years of scholarship.                                    

 

In the twelve years between 1974 and 1987, Valerie Eliot had become overwhelmed with the burdens of carrying out her husband's wishes regarding the handling of his writings and papers after his death in 1965, only eight years after their marriage.  She had become Eliot's secretary and personal assistant at Faber and Faber when she was 22 years old, fulfilling a cherished dream from the time she was fourteen years old and heard John Gielgud read "The Journey of the Magi."  From that time on, her goal in life was to be T. S. Eliot's secretary.  She enrolled in a secretarial course (never attending university) and, after a series of positions with other writers, managed to gain, through a family friend, an interview with Eliot, who was impressed by her knowledge of poetry.  Their marriage many years later, when she was thirty and he sixty-eight, was an exceptionally close one.  She had a complete knowledge of all his work, and Eliot left instructions with her, as the sole executrix of his estate, about what he wanted done with his papers and writings.   He also told her that if the lost manuscript of The Waste Land were to be discovered (as it was, in 1968, at the New York Public Library), he wanted it published and he wanted her to edit it.  She carried out his wish in regard to that manuscript and, with the assistance of Ezra Pound (who had made numerous marginal notes on the original manuscript), the facsimile edition came out, to great critical acclaim, in 1971, a work that remains a major landmark in Eliot scholarship.  During the 1970s and 1980s she was also collaborating with Andrew Lloyd Webber on the musical Cats, based on Eliot's Old Possum's Book of Practical Cats, a project that brought her considerable wealth and enabled her to keep Faber and Faber afloat. At the same time, she had begun editing Eliot's correspondence for publication, the first volume appearing in 1988.  By 1987, when she wrote to Ron after a silence of twelve years, she had begun to realize that she would need help in editing and publishing all the materials she had vowed to make available.

 

Beginning in 1988, Ron worked closely with Valerie Eliot to edit and bring out the Clark Lectures.  She provided Eliot's correspondence relating to the lectures, identified in Eliot's personal library the various poetry editions he had used, answered a barrage of questions that only she could answer, and worked with him closely on resolution of problems.  Finally, she stood firm before a group of hostile Faber and Faber directors who sought to delay or hinder the publication, unhappy about publishing an academic scholarly work and about an American having been chosen to do it.  When Mrs. Eliot firmly told them that the edition would go forward in the form that Ron had presented it, the discussion and querulous questions ended.  The Varieties of Metaphysical Poetry, which included the Turnbull lectures at Johns Hopkins as well as the Clark lectures, appeared in 1993.  In 1994, Valerie Eliot traveled to Atlanta, her first trip to the South, to receive an honorary degree from Emory University, a trip that provided her with a memorable visit to services at old Ebenezer Baptist Church, an experience that she recounted many times. 

 

This 1993 publication and a later one in 1999 (Eliot's Dark Angel:  Intersections of Art and Life) placed Ron in a position to urge Mrs. Eliot toward an edition of all of Eliot's unpublished prose writings, a project that had been consuming his scholarly passions for thirty years.  Again through serendipity, a talk before the Grolier Club of New York (the largest and most prestigious gathering for rare book and manuscript collectors), in which Ron noted the problem for scholarly studies of the uncollected prose, sparked the interest of two Eliot enthusiasts among the membership.  They told Ron on the spot that a trust that they managed would finance the publication of all of Eliot's prose if Mrs. Eliot would give permission for the publication.  The catch was that the Johns Hopkins University Press would have to be the American publisher, since the trust supported Johns Hopkins.  A letter sent to Faber and Faber went unanswered, Mrs. Eliot never seeing the letter, and the proposal languished for five years until, in 2004, while teaching in Emory's British Studies program in Oxford, Ron traveled to London to have tea with Valerie (as he now called her).  There, after showing her a letter from Ted Hughes urging publication of Eliot's collected prose, Ron asked her if she would think about this, now that she was publishing Eliot's collected letters.  She suddenly said that, yes, it was time for the collected prose to be published, for "putting all of Tom together," and she asked for Ron's help, quickly given and accepted.  Moreover, she said, the project should be all of the prose, not just the uncollected prose.  Suddenly, it seemed his scholarly dream would be realized, and after the trust renewed its support and Faber and Faber reluctantly agreed to Hopkins as the American joint publisher for online and print versions, the deal was struck.

 

The project would prove to be even more massive than Ron had envisioned.  Eliot had published in a wide variety of journals and many fugitive periodicals, in books of essays, newspapers, organizational newsletters, ephemeral school publications, and church newsletters, and presented scores of lectures that had never been printed.   Ron noted that Eliot "was never careful about his bibliography; he often gave his only copy of a talk to his host."  Eliot "collected only 99 essays in volume form as his personal canon during his lifetime."  There were an additional 680 uncollected items in the Gallup bibliography, with no way to know how many other as yet unknown items there might be.  Ron now had access to the many boxes and cabinets of personal papers in Mrs. Eliot's flat, all restricted materials in American and British libraries, and the entire Faber and Faber archive (stored in an underground tunnel once used by American soldiers during the WWII bombing raids), containing all of Eliot's daily incoming and outgoing correspondence as editor, publisher, author, and lecturer.  Going through it all presented a daunting task.   A Guggenheim Foundation grant supported Ron's research in London during the academic year 2006-2007.  During that year of living with the archives, Ron discovered over 200 prose items in print not in the bibliography and hundreds of uncollected and unpublished typescripts.

 

Back at Emory, Ron received the enthusiastic support of Deans Bobby Paul, Rick Rubinson, and Lisa Tedesco, and the Eliot prose project became one of the new digital projects for the Lewis H. Beck Center for Electronic Collections in Woodruff Library, under the expert guidance of Alice Hickcox.  Undergraduate and graduate students were trained to create a database of digital images and electronic texts that now contains over 1400 prose items.  Ron also trained the students in the detailed work of establishing accurate texts and in the principles of annotation and cross-referencing, creating a cadre of student digital wizards and editorial assistants.  As the database grew and the project grew more massive, Ron realized that he needed to appoint co-editors if the now projected eight 800-page volumes were to be completed.  Professor Warwick Gould of the University of London, a co-editor with Ron of the W. B. Yeats letters, offered a Senior Research Fellowship in the Institute of English Studies and helped create an Anglo-American editorial team from Harvard, Yale, Oxford, and Cambridge.  Ron and Professor Gould also founded, in July 2009, the T. S. Eliot International Summer School, opened officially by Seamus Heaney and Mrs. Eliot, to attract younger scholars who had shied away from Eliot studies due to the impossibility of permissions to do their research.  That institute, now in its ninth year and with editions appearing and archives open, is thriving with bright young Eliot scholars from many countries.  Mrs. Eliot's health soon after began a slow decline through dementia (she died in 2012), but over forty years she had devoted her life to "putting Tom together" and her devotion had been rewarded before her death.

 

Ron's account of his detective work in seeking out hidden prose writings provided fascinating insights on little known aspects of Eliot's life and work, a life he said was "lived large."  For example, locating fugitive prose writings brought to light Eliot's immense range of intellectual charity, or caritas, throughout England from the 1930s through the 1950s.  Separated from his first wife, Eliot spent many evenings giving talks to church groups, secondary schools, and charitable organizations for women, children, and the disabled.  Letters to and from individuals belonging to these groups led to the search for copies of such talks in their files and publications.  Once when Eliot visited Chichester, the bishop invited Eliot to write what became Murder in the Cathedral and later asked him to write an essay for a new publication, the Chichester Diocesan Gazette, an essay that now appears in the collected prose, only one of many examples of the lectures and essays that Eliot contributed to such organizations and venues throughout England in his passion to enrich communal, religious, and civic life.  Toward the end of WWII, he went regularly to the Churchill Club to give lectures for American service men and women on American and British poets and supported other wartime aid organizations.  Very few knew of these activities, taking place as they did simultaneously with publication of his openly acknowledged literary work, service as president of the Virgil Society, and performance of other cultural roles.  In the midst of all of this, he continued his responsibilities at Faber and Faber, maintaining a massive correspondence, essentially living three lives at once.

 

Ron described one final example of Eliot's unknown writings, a foreword that he wrote for a manuscript of a memoir, written by a Pole who had escaped from the concentration camp at Auschwitz, smuggled to England.  The manuscript, scheduled to be published in a Polish literary journal with Eliot's foreword, never appeared, but a young Polish scholar at the Eliot summer school dug through the papers of the Polish Institute in London, located the correspondence, and identified the manuscript's author, unknown for over fifty years.  Though the manuscript itself has not been found, the foreword will appear in the collected prose.  In this story lies another Eliot and Emory connection.  One of those who likely assisted in smuggling the manuscript out of Poland was a Catholic resistance member, Czeslaw Milosz, who was then translating Eliot's The Waste Land.  Milosz later gave a reading at Emory and married a young Emory dean who had shown him around campus.  The story of the manuscript is still being investigated.

 

With volumes five and six in press, and volumes seven and eight being assembled, the detective work goes on, but the completion of the landmark publication is in sight. The contents of the volumes are also available through Project Muse, an online resource for peer reviewed academic journals and electronic books in the humanities and social sciences, fully searchable and available 24/7, an outcome that could not have been imagined in 1974 when Valerie Eliot first gave permission for access to T. S. Eliot's Clark lectures.  Ron's talk proved a fitting end to the 2016 Emeritus College Lunch Colloquium series, a journey through the joys, adventures,occasional setbacks, and eventual fulfillment of a scholar's life. 

 

--Linda Matthews

 
 
 
FABotFaculty Activities


Dana Greene 
Dean Emerita, Oxford College 
 

Dana Greene, dean emerita of Oxford College, presented a keynote address at the Elizabeth Jennings Symposium at Oxford University on October 29th.   Greene is writing a first biography of this twentieth-century English poet. 
 

Brenda Bynum
Senior Lecturer Emerita, Department of Theater Studies

 
On Thursday, January 26, Brenda will be named the Center for Creativity & Arts 2017 Atlanta Community Impact Artist. That award recognizes significant contributions in creativity and the arts by members of the Emory community as well as by individuals or groups from Fulton or Dekalb counties.
 

 
James Larry Taulbee 
Associate Professor Emeritus of Political Science


The 11th edition of Larry Taulbee's text, Law Among Nations, will be published 2/8/2017.  Reviews of the 11th edition include the following:

Thorough, insightful, informative, and readable, Law Among Nations is the gold standard for international law textbooks. This text includes a brilliant compilation of legal material, and is essential reading for students of international law at all levels.
Jeffrey S. Merton, Florida Atlantic University


Don Saliers
William R. Cannon Distinguished Professor of Theology and Worship, Emeritus


This past year has been a busy one for Don in a variety of areas:

Music
  • Organist and choirmaster for Sunday services at Cannon Chapel: Emory University
  • Continuing as Artistic Director of Emory Chamber Players: 
    -several memorial services and weddings at Emory
    -played for the launch event for Samuel Becket's Letters, Vol. IV
    -Bennington Chamber Conference, 2014, 2016
    -preparing to play with Will Ransom and Elena Choclakova in "Bach Bowl"
Teaching and Lecturing
  • Lectured to seminar and retreat in Seoul, South Korea,   Sept. 4-10, 2016
  • Teaching one course a semester, currently a combined course on Worship and the Arts at Columbia Theological Seminary with both Columbia and Emory students, Fall Term, 2016
  • Several teaching events in local churches and high schools in Atlanta
  • Serving on the Academy for Spiritual Formation retreats (5-Day and Two-Year) at retreat centers in Pennsylvania, Nebraska, Texas, Virginia, and Alabama
Research and Writing
  • Publish a monthly column in The American Organist as national chaplain to the American Guild of Organists
  • Serving on editorial boards: Weavings, and the Journal of the Yale Institute of Sacred Music.
  • Preparing a manuscript Commentary on the Psalms (Westminster/John Knox)
Consultancy
  • Working with the North Georgia Annual Conference of the United Methodist Church to plan Annual Conference worship in 2017
Other Service
  • Some Saturdays at the Intown Collaborative Ministries Food Pantry
  • Active with the Interfaith Children's Movement in Atlanta

Ron Gould
Goodrich C. White Professor of Mathematics, Emeritus
 

Ron is a recently-retired member who reports that he:
  • continues to direct 3 Ph.D. students.
  • gave invited talks at 2 American Mathematical Society (AMS) meetings, in October at the University of Denver and in November at NC State.
  • was the Bernard Lecturer at Davidson in October giving two hour talks, one to a general audience and one a research talk for the department.
  • will also be giving an invited research talk at the joint National Meeting of the AMS and Mathematical Association of America (MAA) this January here in Atlanta.
  • has submitted two research papers this fall and has several more in progress.
 
  

James W. Flannery
Winship Professor Emeritus of the Arts and Humanities


 

Once again, one of our members has been profiled in the Druid Hills Magazine.  Jim Flannery is called "Irish-America's Renaissance Man" and his work on W. B. Yeats and the Southern Celtic Christmas concert is highlighted.  The complete article may be read by clicking here.

 


AwardsBotEUEC Awards and New Members Reception March 27 


Many thanks to our Award and Honors Committee for their work in determining the winners of this year's Distinguished Faculty Awards and Distinguished Service Award.  The Committee is chaired by Helen O'Shea, with members Pat Douglass, Donna Brogan, Jim Keller, and Jim Roark. On March 27, we will be honoring the following recipients:

EUEC Distinguished Faculty Awards
  • Sidney L. Kasfir, Professor of Art History, Emerita
  • Stephen Nowicki, Charles Howard Candler Professor of Psychology, Emeritus
  • Russell E. Richey, Dean Emeritus, William R. Cannon Distinguished Professor of Church History, Emeritus
  • W. Ronald Schuchard, Goodrich C. White Professor of English, Emeritus

EUEC Distinguished Service Award
  • Marianne Scharbo-DeHaan, Professor of Nursing, Emerita

Heilbrun Distinguished Emeritus Fellowship
  • W. Ronald Schuchard, Goodrich C. White Professor of English, Emeritus
The Awards Ceremony honoring these people and our new members will be on March 27, from 2:00 to 4:00 p.m., at 6 Executive Park Drive (the location of OLLI).  I hope you will be able to come and celebrate with us.

 
InMemBotIn Memoriam


EUEC Member William Arthur Elmer (Bill), age 78, died on December 8, 2016.  He was born on May 12, 1938 in Bridgeton, NJ, the youngest of 8 children, to John A. and Ruth Cornwell Elmer.  After graduation from Bridgeton High School, he attended Susquehanna U. and received his BA degree with a double major in Biology/Chemistry and a minor in Philosophy.  He was awarded an MS degree in 1963 in Biology/Organic Chemistry at New Mexico Highlands U.  He matriculated at the U. of Connecticut where he was awarded the PhD degree in Developmental Genetics in 1967.  He then moved to Oak Ridge, TN, where he carried out a two-year study at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory on the biochemical basis of crystalline lens differentiation. 

In 1969, Bill accepted a position as Assistant Professor of Biology at Emory University, Atlanta, GA.  He attained the rank of Professor of Biology in 1992.  Among his honors and awards was
the Emory Williams Award for Excellence in Teaching given to him in 1993.  He retired in 2001 and particularly enjoyed giving a course entitled Genes, Embryos, and Birth Defects for OLLI.
 
You can read the complete obituary by clicking here.


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WalkBotWalking the campus with Dianne


Did you guess Cannon Chapel (top photo) to correctly identify the photos in the last issue? 

On the left is a close-up of the pipes from the organ located within the sanctuary.  The photo on the right is of the water font located in the hallway corner as you enter the sanctuary.  Please visit the building and see if you can spot these items among some of the other interesting features of Cannon Chapel.
 
 

For our last photo/walk of 2016 I'm simply going to leave you with evidence that Santa and his helpers may very well exist and have embraced technology and new modes of transportation.  Happy Holidays everyone!!!





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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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