Newsletter  Volume 4 Issue 19
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Upcoming Events



June 4, 2018
Lunch Colloquium
Susan Margulies
Please click here to register

WEBCAST
Lunch Colloquium
Susan Margulies
Please click here to register




June 18, 2018
Lunch Colloquium
Al Padwa
Please click here to register

WEBCAST
Lunch Colloquium
Al Padwa
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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 members who would like the same activity!

 

   

 
May 28, 2018

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
 

Although Memorial Day weekend may mark the start of summer, our activities are certainly not ending!  We had a fascinating Lunch Colloquium last Monday by Monica Modi Khant.  Thanks to Lee Pasackow's article below, you can read about her talk, and also see the recording on our videos page.  I want to thank Don O'Shea who is doing the final step of processing of those video files.  I have been struggling for months to find a solution for that final step on a PC; fortunately, he can do it easily on his Mac!

 

Our next two Lunch Colloquiums on June 4 and June 18 are described in this newsletter issue.  I will be here for both of them, but in England and Wales in between, and it seemed better to have a somewhat larger issue this time than try to put out an issue while I am gone.  The next two Colloquiums are given by scientists, but are on completely different topics.  It is a real privilege to have Susan Margulies here, and the topic of concussion has never been hotter, although most attention has been focused on athletes.  In terms of "hot" topics, drug prices are certainly another one and we will hear our own Al Padwa talk about drug price shenanigans.

 

Please don't overlook the Shakespeare excursion that Gretchen Schulz is organizing for June 10.  The production of As You Like it sounds extraordinary and it doesn't get much better than being able to go with EUEC colleagues at a reduced price!  If you are interested, be sure to get your tickets before they disappear.

 

There is much more in this issue, including an article on the second of our Distinguished Faculty Award recipients, Marilynne McKay, information on summer OLLI courses, and the names of many new members to celebrate.

 

I am very grateful to Herb Benario and Gretchen Schulz for help with proofing and editing.  
 
LCJun4TopLunch Colloquium--June 4



Pediatric Concussion Biomechanics: What We Need to Know
 
The Luce Center
Room 130
11:30-1:00
 
 

Susan Margulies, Wallace H. Coulter Chair of the Coulter Department of Biomedical Engineering (BME) at Georgia Tech and Emory University, and a Georgia Research Alliance Eminent Scholar in Injury Biomechanics
 
 
LCJun18TopLunch Colloquium--June 18

 

   
Keeping Up with the Latest on Big Pharma, Drug Costs, and the Salutary Story of Cialis


The Luce Center 
Room 130 
11:30-1:00



Al Padwa, William P. Timme Professor of Chemistry Emeritus

 

Click here to read below more information about this Lunch Colloquium

LCMay21TopLunch Colloquium--May 21








Pursuing Law in the Public Interest: 
Fighting the Good Fight









Monica Modi Khant, Executive Director, Georgia Asylum and Immigration Network (GAIN)

Click here to read more below about this Lunch Colloquium


NewMemTopNew Members



DFATopDistinguished Faculty Awards

Wenger, McKay, and Mitchell

As part of our series focusing on members who were recipients of this year's Distinguished Faculty Awards, we highlight Marilynne McKay.

Click here to read more about Marilynne

OLLI Summer Courses


Registration for OLLI summer courses is now open.  You can get more information about OLLI and register for courses at olli.emory.edu.  You can see the complete  catalog of courses by clicking here.  There are two summer sessions:  a short session from June 4-29 and a long session from July 9-August 24.  The OLLI courses are given at the Emory Continuing Education location in Executive Park, with convenient free parking.  OLLI is in great need of additional teachers and our membership comprises one of the most talented and experienced pools of candidates.  If you would like more information about teaching at OLLI, please contact John Bugge or Dorothy Fletcher, members of our Teaching and Mentoring Committee.
 
Shakespeare Excursion--June 10


AS YOU WILL DEFINITELY LIKE IT:

 

 

 

JOIN US FOR THE EMERITI EXCURSION TO THE SHAKESPEARE TAVERN

 

 

This summer, we are scheduling our group visit to the Atlanta Shakespeare Tavern for Sunday evening, June 10, so we may together enjoy the final performance of the Company production of As You Like it that began its run last weekend.  (And note that if you cannot join us on the 10th, you may want to make arrangements to attend one of the many performances planned between now and then.) Go to www.shakespearetavern.com for more information. 

 

As most of you will know, this is one of Shakespeare's most delightful plays. And this particular production of the play is recommended both by Atlanta's own Suzi Bass Awards judges and by Emory's own Don and Helen O'Shea, who have been raving about the production ever since they saw it on opening night.  Company CEO and Artistic Director Jeff Watkins himself has said this is the finest production of the play he has ever mounted--and I, Gretchen Schulz, Emeritus College Shakespearean-in-Chief, can say that's really saying something since I have seen ALL of the productions of this play that Jeff has done (since the mid-eighties) and they've ALL been splendid.  If this really IS the splendidest . . . well, we may find we have to review it with one of the many famous quotes from the play itself, Celia's review of the hugely complicated and hugely comical situation she and Rosalind find themselves in once they enter the forest of Arden:

 

wonderful, wonderful, and most wonderful wonderful! And yet again wonderful, and after that, out of all hooping. 

 

I, Gretchen, have negotiated terms for our group visit with the people at the Tavern, applying discounts available for seniors and educators and groups and applying the value of some passes I receive for each production so as to set the cost of tickets for anyone who calls in to ask for "Emory Emeriti Tickets" as low as possible for the excellent seats they will hold for us on the main floor and in the boxes along the sides and just back of the main floor.  We've got 10 seats on the main floor (at $33 each) and 15 seats in the boxes (at $29 each). Those of you who would like to join us should call the Tavern at 404-874-5299 and push 0 (when directed) for the Box Office.  That should connect you with Becky, who's in charge of the Box Office and who knows about our group reservation, so all you will need to do is identify yourself as one of the Emory Emeriti group, specify how many of which kind of tickets you would like, and pay for them. She will keep a master list of those who've called in and the number of our reserved tickets already claimed and those remaining. unclaimed.  If and when all our tickets are claimed, she will let me know. If it's possible to up the number in our group at that point, I will do so and let you know. You may be able to decide to add yourself to the group even late in this process. But we will need to release any unclaimed tickets by the Friday before the Sunday evening we're attending, that is, the 8th before the 10th.

 

If you have not attended a production at the Tavern before, do visit the website (through the link above) for information on location, parking, and the possibility of dining (or at least drinking) while you watch the show. (The food may not be "out of all hooping," but it is good and it is reasonably priced.)

 

DO REMEMBER THAT THE SUNDAY SHOWS BEGIN AT 6:30 (and run to about 9:30). Plan to arrive in plenty of time to park and get into the Tavern (to pick up your tickets at the ticket counter) by 5:45 or so, especially if you do plan to eat and/or drink. I myself would recommend parking in either the parking deck of Midtown Hospital, the entrance to which is directly across from the entrance to the Tavern (at 499 Peachtree Street) or the automated open lot at the corner of Peachtree and Renaissance Street (just half a block north of the Tavern).  In the former case, you'll pay on your way out of the deck. In the latter case, you'll pay in a machine at the front of the lot just after you arrive.  I would advise against parking anywhere else.

 

I hope you'll be able to gather for "one more gaudy night."  Whoops. That's a quote from another Shakespeare play . . . not this one . . . and if you're the first to tell me which other play, I'll treat you a drink of your choice, "as you like it," at the Tavern on the 10th. 

 

 

 



LCJun4BotLunch Colloquium--June 4


Pediatric Concussion Biomechanics: What We Need to Know 

Susan Margulies, Wallace H. Coulter Chair of the Coulter Department of Biomedical Engineering (BME) at Georgia Tech and Emory University, and a Georgia Research Alliance Eminent Scholar in Injury Biomechanics

Research in the area of pediatric concussion biomechanics is challenging, as no one knows better than Dr. Margulies, who's been involved in this research for decades now. Work with human subjects, even adults, is affected by issues with patients' awareness of and willingness to report their symptoms. And though animal models can and do provide a controlled laboratory setting for relevant investigation, most animal models involve more severe brain injuries than concussion, limiting their applicability to the human situations we care most about. Of late, work with animals is proving more applicable, however.  And emerging research in objective, involuntary neurofunctional metrics and biomarkers is bridging the gap between human and animal research and providing important insights into the biomechanics of concussion, offering a rational foundation for both prevention and treatment.

About Susan Margulies

Susan was named Chair of BME in August of 2017, becoming just the fourth chair in the department's history. Before assuming her current position, she was professor of bioengineering at the University of Pennsylvania.  She received her BSE in Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering at Princeton and PhD in Bioengineering from the University of Pennsylvania, and was a post-doctoral fellow at Mayo. With over 30 years of experience in the area of traumatic brain injury research, and over 25 years in pulmonary biomechanics. she has secured over $35 million in federal, private, and industry funding to discover injury mechanisms on the macro and micro scales, and translate basic research findings to improve clinical outcomes.  The head injury research program focuses on integrating mechanical properties, animal models, instrumented dolls, patient data, and computational models to identify injury mechanisms and relate biomechanics to outcomes.  Recent studies focus on developing assessments of cognition, memory, and behavior in piglets and humans to improve concussion diagnosis and evaluate efficacy of therapies and interventions. She is a Fellow of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers, Biomedical Engineering Society, and American Institute for Medical and Biological Engineering.  Her scholarship has been disseminated in over 350 papers, abstracts, and book chapters and numerous media features.

As the new chair, Susan oversees a department that is consistently ranked as one of the nation's most prominent programs of its kind in both graduate and undergraduate education. Currently, U.S. News & World Report ranks the joint Georgia Tech/Emory biomedical engineering graduate program #3 in the United States and the undergraduate program #1. It is the largest BME department in the country, with 72 faculty at Georgia Tech and Emory and more than 1,500 undergraduate and graduate students.

 

  

LCJun18BotLunch Colloquium--June 18


Keeping Up with the Latest on Big Pharma, Drug Costs, and the Salutary Story of Cialis
 
Al Padwa, William P. Timme Professor of Chemistry Emeritus
 
Few know more about the shenanigans that determine the cost of the medicines we take--and the science behind those shenanigans--than our own Al Padwa. It's no wonder he was called as an "expert witness" when Vanderbilt and Lilly got to arguing about the rights underlying the use of Cialis for erectile dysfunction. Al can share the nitty-pretty-gritty on that and place it in the context of larger issues that arise when one is considering generic versus brand-name drugs.
 
About Al Padwa
 
Al was born in New York City and received a BA and PhD from Columbia University and was an NSF Postdoctoral Fellow at the University of Wisconsin.  He moved from his position as Professor of Chemistry at SUNY Buffalo to Emory in 1979.  
 
Al has received many national and international awards.  Certainly the most prestigious of all was the presentation in 2014 of an Emeritus College Distinguished Faculty Award.  The nomination letter by Huw Davies read in part:
 
It is with great pleasure that I write in support of Albert Padwa for a Distinguished Emeritus award. Dr. Padwa is a distinguished scholar whose contributions to the field of organic chemistry are far ranging. He is widely acknowledged as a leader in using heterocyclic natural products to inspire the creative design and development of new methods and strategies for the assembly of a diverse array of highly functionalized heterocyclic ring systems. Because of his accomplishments, he is considered as one of the most creative practitioners in the art of modern heterocyclic chemistry and its application to pharmaceutical research. He has established a truly exceptional record of achievement in scholarly research and the quality of his work is absolutely first rate. Dr. Padwa's research has concentrated on the important topics of organic photochemistry, synthetic organic chemistry, and heterocyclic chemistry using organocatalysis. He is a very productive researcher as he has published over 90 book chapters, numerous reviews, and over 600 refereed publications. The American Chemical Society recognized his accomplishments in 2000, as he was a recipient of the prestigious Cope Scholar Award. 
 
 
His chemical investigations have had a profound impact on our understanding of reactive intermediates and the types of synthetic reactions they undergo. Throughout the course of his investigations, Dr. Padwa has employed the most modern methods for his experimental studies and continues to do so. The research efforts designed and directed by him have provided results that serve as the basis for our fundamental knowledge of many areas of chemistry. Professor Padwa is a very well recognized scholar and this is clearly evident from his numerous invitations to present invited lectures at many international symposia (over 300). He has held visiting Professorships at Universities in Berkeley (California), Lyon (France), Würzburg (Germany), London (England), Melbourne (Australia), and Sendai (Japan). His list of awards includes an Alfred P. Sloan Foundation Fellowship and a John S. Guggenheim Foundation Fellowship, and his long list of special honors also includes the following: Alexander von Humboldt Senior Scientist Award, Herty Medalist of the Southeast American Chemical Society, Japan Society Promotion of Science (JSPS) Research Fellow, USA-Israeli Binational Awardee, Recipient of Emory University Scholar-Teacher Award, Southern Chemist Award of the American Chemical Society, Fulbright Hays Visiting Professorship, Recipient of the Florida Award of the American Chemical Society, Recipient of the Stone Award of the American Chemical Society, Fellow of the International Society of Heterocyclic Chemistry Award, appointment as a Fellow of the American Association for Advancement of Science (AAAS), and an American Chemistry Society ACS Fellow. 
   
Those of you who have attended one of our recent Art Exhibitions in the Schwartz Center or remember Dianne's pictures in Issue 8 of this year's newsletter will know that Al is a great mobile creator. Those of you who remember Stefan Lutz's Lunch Colloquium in September of 2016 about his mountaineering exploits might remember that Al has been a climbing companion of his.  Here is how Al explained the connection of his various interests in a Colloquium he himself offered us several years ago::
 
One of the main areas of organic chemistry that has captivated my attention for many years is a phenomenon known as "stereochemistry" which corresponds to a study of the static and dynamic aspects of the three-dimensional shapes of complex molecules. This field represents a subdiscipline of chemistry involving an investigation of the relative spatial arrangement of atoms within molecules. The study of stereochemical problems spans the entire range of organic, inorganic, biological, physical and supramolecular chemistries. This is also a very important field for drug development in the pharmaceutical industry.  In a related manner, mobiles or kinetic sculptures are examples of kinetic art that bears a strong resemblance to the structure of complex organic molecules. In common with other types of kinetic art, mobiles have parts that move or that are in motion.  Mountains are also 3-dimensional and in some ways are like life ... you see them from the bottom up and the summit seems hard to reach. However, once you are on the top, everything is clear. Many individuals who climb associate the top of mountains with success, achievement, and freedom. In contrast, the lower part of the mountain possesses many obstacles and challenges that need to be overcome. This is really not so different from bringing a stereochemical research project to fruition and getting it published.    

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LCMay21BotLunch Colloquium--May 21


Pursuing Law in the Public Interest:  Fighting the Good Fight 

Monica Modi Khant, Executive Director, Georgia Asylum and Immigration Network (GAIN)
 
Ms. Monica Khant, Executive Director of the Georgia Asylum and Immigration Network (GAIN), gave a fascinating yet sobering account of their work to provide free legal services to immigrant victims of crime and persecution.  
 
GAIN, formerly known as the Atlanta Bar Asylum Project, was formed in 2005 through the joint efforts of the Atlanta Bar Association, Catholic Charities, and associates from several top Atlanta law firms. The founders recognized that unrepresented immigrants in the Atlanta area were in need of pro bono representation. Atlanta had the distinction of being one of the worst jurisdictions in which to win an asylum case, with just a 2% success rate. Ms. Khant, who joined GAIN in 2006, has focused on rigorously screening cases in order to take on cases that have a high probability of success. GAIN currently wins 50% of their cases.  They have won 100% of their victims of violence cases.
 
GAIN offers two programs: 1) The Asylum Program assists immigrants fleeing persecution abroad by providing legal representation for their asylum cases; 2) The Victims of Violence Program provides volunteer attorneys to immigrant victims of human trafficking, domestic violence, and sexual abuse.
 
Ms. Khant noted that the Atlanta legal community is very generous with their pro bono work, handling 85% of GAIN cases. The GAIN attorneys themselves take the most difficult cases.  However, she noted that due to the conservative nature of the judges in Atlanta, it is getting harder for all the attorneys to get visas for their refugee clients.
 
GAIN partners with many organizations in the community to obtain referrals and other services for their clients such as counseling, housing, etc. They receive funding from corporations, grants, law firms, and the federal government.  
 
Attorneys from corporate legal departments such as Delta also volunteer with GAIN. Ms. Khant emphasized that GAIN vets the cases and provides support to the volunteer attorneys throughout the course of the cases, which may take up to three to four years to resolve. With the new administration, the time to adjudicate cases has increased.  
 
GAIN focuses on humanitarian options including:
  • Special Immigrant Juvenile Status (SIJS): This is a special way for minors currently in the United States to adjust their status to that of Lawful Permanent Resident despite unauthorized entry to or unlawful presence in the country. The key criterion for SIJS is abuse, neglect, or abandonment by one or both parents.
  • T visa: This allows certain victims of human trafficking and immediate family members to remain and work temporarily in the United States, typically if they agree to assist law enforcement in testifying against the perpetrators who have victimized them. Only 30% of trafficking is related to sex; 70% is labor related.  Read about the Cortes-Meza case prosecuted in Atlanta.
  • U visa: This is a nonimmigrant visa for victims of crimes (and their immediate family members) who have suffered substantial mental or physical abuse and are willing to assist law enforcement and government officials in the investigation or prosecution of the relevant criminal activity.
  
Ms. Khant concluded by remarking that those who staff and work with GAIN do not get involved with politics; they simply advocate for their clients.  We can advocate for those clients, too. Members of the Emeritus College might consider supporting the work of GAIN by contributing to their efforts with efforts of our own or attending their annual fundraiser in March.  
 
-- Lee Pasackow
  
 
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NewMemBotNew Members

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

Irwin M. Best, MD, MBA, FACS, Assistant Professor of Radiology and Imaging Sciences

Sheila Goel, MD, Assistant Professor of Emergency Medicine
 
Karl S. Hagen, PhD, Associate Professor of Chemistry

Sookyong Koh
, MD, PhD, Associate Professor of Neurology


Kristin Mann, PhD, Professor of History

W. James Parks, MS, MD, Professor of Pediatrics

 

   


DFABotDistinguished Faculty Awards

Marilynne McKay and John Bugge

John Bugge nominated Marilynne for this award and in his nomination letter wrote:

I write to offer my enthusiastic nomination of Dr. Marilynne McKay, a colleague, friend, and collaborator, for the 2018 Distinguished Emerita Award. 

 

She richly deserves it - for her achievements in her career as an Emory physician both before and after retirement; for her second career as a woman of the theater (actor, director, critic); and for her liberal service to the ongoing mission of this Emeritus College, not least through the quality of her intellectual contributions to the collective life of the mind it exists to promote.

 

A graduate of the University of New Mexico with an MS from Oklahoma State University, Marilynne worked as a medical research technologist before deciding to enroll in medical school at the University of New Mexico.  Fittingly, as a dermatologist, she followed the sun with an internship in San Diego and a residency in Miami, coming to Emory as an assistant professor in 1980.  Here she rose to Chief of Dermatology at Grady Memorial Hospital and was later appointed Executive Director of Continuing Medical Education.  Her publications include articles and book chapters on vulvar disorders for generalists, as well as for specialists in dermatology, gynecology, and psychiatry.  She co-edited a classic textbook, Obstetric and Gynecologic Dermatology, and was elected President of the International Society for the Study of Vulvovaginal Disease.  Acclaimed as an informative and entertaining lecturer, she won the Teaching Exhibit Gold Award at the American Academy of Dermatology Annual Meeting in 1987, and she organized (and for six years directed) the forum on teaching techniques at the American Academy of Dermatology.  In 1999, Marilynne "semi"-retired, moving back to her hometown of Albuquerque, where she soon found herself chairing the dermatology department at Lovelace Health System.

 

Maybe her second career as a theater person officially began when she enrolled in a Master's Program in Directing in the Department of Theatre and Dance at UNM; it was an avocation she'd been preparing for most of her adult life, in the painstaking and even theatrical preparedness behind her award-winning teaching style in medicine.   

In 2005 she returned to Atlanta with her husband, Dr. Ronald Hosek, planning to combine her interests in medical teaching with her passion for the performing arts.  That same year she was invited to deliver Emory's seventh annual Mary Lynn Morgan Lecture on Women in the Health Professions, in which she reflected on her own experiences in teaching and doing clinical medicine; with typical drollery she titled her address, "The Vulva Monologue."   I had the good fortune to be able to share a stage with Marilynne in a performance of Wit, Margaret Edson's play about a woman dying of ovarian cancer, which is set in a patient's room of a large university hospital.  Marilynne directed the production and played the leading role; everything in the production went so well because she so seamlessly melded her own performance with her long experience in medical practice. Her talents as a director have been acknowledged by her appointment as a judge for the annual Suzi Bass Awards, which celebrate outstanding work from twenty Atlanta professional theaters in twenty-six performance categories.  Meanwhile, she continues to put in at least a full day of work each week in the Department of Dermatology at Grady Hospital, where - no surprise here - in 2010 she received the Emory Dermatology Teaching Award for the quality of her instruction of residents.  Finally, there is a certain dramatic flourish, I suppose, in the fact that Marilynne is that rare being, a Baker Street Irregular, a member of a society that, in the words of the novelist Lyndsay Faye, "present[s] a mysterious face to outsiders, wreathed in gaslit fog and draped in the obscuring mists of the moors, . . . an invitation-only concern."  In 2015 her essay on "Dressers to Professors: A Spectrum of Canonical Doctors" appeared in a collection directed at Holmes-and-Watson fans entitled Nerve and Knowledge: Doctors, Medicine and the Sherlockian Canon, illustrating yet another facet of her post-retirement versatility.

Finally, I want to take note of Marilynne's exemplary service to the Emeritus College in several ways.  The first is the public-relations work she's done and continues to do on behalf of the national meeting of AROHE, the Association of Retirement Organizations in Higher Education, to be held at Emory in October and sponsored by the Emeritus College.  Here she has demonstrated another set of skills entirely - artistic creativity in drafting, layout, and web-page design, along with a formidable aptitude in management.  In addition, several of her resourceful suggestions have been the inspiration for the Interdisciplinary Seminars held in the Emeritus College each year, while her participation in them has been a source of delight.  And finally, she has contributed that most essential quantum of all to the work of the Emeritus College (it is the thing that distinguishes her above all else) - a boundless and energetic enthusiasm for the life of the mind.

 

For all these reasons I feel Marilynne McKay richly deserves one more accolade to add to her list, the Emory University Emeritus College Distinguished Emerita Award.

 

 

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FacAcBotFaculty Activities


Michael Kutner   
Professor of Biostatistics and Bioinformatics
 
 

The American Statistical Association (ASA) has selected EUEC Member Mike Kutner as the 2018 recipient of the 2018 ASA Mentoring Award.  The ASA Mentoring Award is given annually to a member who has demonstrated extraordinary leadership in developing the careers of statistics students, statisticians, or statistical researchers early in their careers.  Lance Waller, professor and chair of the Department of Biostatistics and Bioinformatics, says "Most, if not all of us, have been recipients of Mike's advice and mentoring and this award recognizes the deep and broad impact he has had on supporting the next generation of statisticians."  The award will be presented at this summer's 2018 Joint Statistical Meetings held July 28-August 2 in Vancouver, Canada.

 
Medshare Volunteers 
 

From Marianne Scharbo-DeHaan:  Above is a photo of our EUEC volunteers at Medshare along with Medshare CEO Charles Redding and Medical Director Dr. Bayor.   
 
 
Brenda Bynum
Senior Lecturer Emerita, Department of Theater Studies
 
 
Brenda will be opening for this concert by reading a letter from Vaclav Havel to Samuel Beckett.  She assures us it will be the coolest evening ever!

Emil Viklicky, the noted jazz pianist from the Czech Republic, is returning to Atlanta as part of his current U.S. tour. Enthusiasts will remember his last appearance here in 2015 when he filled Georgia State's Florence Kopleff Recital Hall to stunning reviews and then played at the Lovett School in a follow up performance. Mr. Viklicky has been among the top acoustic jazz pianists in Europe. He is a musician/composer who is hard-swinging yet lyrical and melodic. A versatile, open-minded player, he can be contemplative and impressionistic when he feels like it -- or, he can be exuberant and festive.

His U.S. tour is in celebration of the 100th anniversary of Czechoslovakia's independence from the Austro-Hungarian Empire in 1918. His visit to Atlanta is being sponsored by the Czech and Slovak School of Atlanta along with George Novak, the Czech Republic's honorary consul general in Atlanta and Global Atlanta.
 
This program will be June 1, 7 p.m., at Saint Bartholomew's Episcopal Church, 1790 LaVista Road, Atlanta, GA. 30329.  It is free, but registration is requested by clicking here.  
 
 
    
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WalkBotWalking the Campus with Dianne

The pleasant sitting area from our last walk can be found in the Claudia Nance Rollins Building.  It's just to the right of the elevators on the entry level, and as I mentioned before, one side of the area is all windows which look out onto the courtyard between the Claudia Nance Rollins, the School of Nursing, and the Grace Crum Rollins buildings.



For our next walk let's go outside.  This building, on the main campus, is beautiful with many ornate details.  I've never been inside this particular building, which makes me wonder if it is as fancy on the inside as its exterior? 

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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