Newsletter  Volume 5 Issue 15
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Lunch Colloquium
Cassandra Quave
Monday, April 22, 2019


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April 15, 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
 
The past two weeks have been extremely busy, as we have held two of our major annual programs during that time, as well as presented a Retirement Seminar for active faculty. We had great turnouts for both the Awards and New Members Reception and for the Sheth Lecture. You can read much more about those events in the articles below.
 
The Awards and New Members reception is a celebratory event. We can certainly celebrate with the award winners but we can also celebrate our many new members (63!), many of whom are not yet retired. It is our members who make the Emeritus College a vital and welcoming organization. The award winners this year reflect the global nature of our membership: one of the Distinguished Faculty Awardees and one of the Heilbrun Fellowship recipients no longer live in the Atlanta area. Our goal is to make each of our members feel a part of the Emeritus College whether they live close to campus or around the world.
 
The Sheth Lecture was certainly a highlight of the year. Professor An-Na'im spoke eloquently of "Creativity in Later Life," the theme of the lecture series, and challenged us to think about what a universal human rights declaration would be. Thanks to Holly York, you can read about his talk below and the video of his talk will soon be on our website.
 
The speaker for our Lunch Colloquium next Week, Cassandra Quave, is an example of the profile of many new faculty at Emory. She is an excellent scientist of course, but she has appointments not just in two departments, but in two different schools: The School of Medicine and Emory College. She also is the founder of a biotech company to make commercial use of her research into plants used in traditional medicine. In addition, her research is breaking new ground in the search for therapeutic materials. It all adds up to what should be a fascinating talk!
 
Our Retirement Seminar was about the Emeritus College and some of our programs and materials intended to serve faculty considering retiring. Thanks to our members who participated: Helen O'Shea, Holly York, Ron Gould, and Mike Kutner. They were clearly persuasive, as there were six attendees who stated their interest in joining the Emeritus College (and they will be listed in the next newsletter), and five who wanted to be part of our Retirement Mentoring program.
      
I am very grateful to Gretchen Schulz, Ann Hartle, and Marge Crouse for help with editing and proofing.  
 
LCApr22TopLunch Colloquium--Monday, April 22





Exploring Nature's Bounty: Drug Discovery from Plants used in Traditional Medicine




The Luce Center
Room 130
11:30-1:00





Cassandra Quave, Assistant Professor of Dermatology and Human Health and Curator of the Emory Herbarium



HamTopSunday, May 5--Hamlet


TO BE [THERE] OR NOT TO BE [THERE]? THAT IS THE QUESTION.
 
JOIN US FOR THE EMERITI EXCURSION TO THE SHAKESPEARE TAVERN
 
  
This year, we are scheduling our group visit to the Atlanta Shakespeare Tavern for Sunday evening, May 5th, so we may together enjoy the final performance of the Company production of Hamlet that began its run this past weekend.  



ShethTopSheth Distinguished Lecture--April 8
 
 
 
 
Our annual Sheth Lecture was a great success.

 
AwardTopAwards and New Members Reception--Tuesday, April 2




Our annual Awards and Honors Reception and Recognition of New Members and Donors was another wonderful program in which we celebrated the vitality of the Emeritus College.
 

NewMemTopNew Members




FATopFaculty Activities

LCApr22BotLunch Colloquium--Monday, April 22

In the Gorani village of Borje

Exploring Nature's Bounty:
Drug Discovery from Plants used in Traditional Medicine


Cassandra Quave, Assistant Professor of Dermatology and Human Health and Curator of the Emory Herbarium
 
Pursuant to her training as a medical ethnobotanist, Cassandra's research focuses on the documentation and biochemical analysis of botanical remedies and foods in applications for anti-infective and anti-cancer therapeutics. Her research is supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health, industry contracts, and philanthropy. To date, she has authored more than 60 publications, 2 edited books, and 3 patents. She is the co-founder and CEO/CSO of PhytoTEK LLC, a drug discovery company dedicated to developing solutions from botanicals for the treatment of antibiotic-resistant infections and recalcitrant wounds. Cassandra has been the subject of feature profiles in the New York Times Magazine, BBC Focus, Brigitte Magazin, and the National Geographic Channel. Her work has been featured on NPR, in the National Geographic Magazine, and in several major news outlets including the Washington Post, The Telegraph, CBS News, and NBC News.

About Cassandra Quave

Dr. Quave received her BS in Biology and BS in Anthropology and Human Biology from Emory University in 2000. After taking a few years off from school to travel and begin field research in Italy, she returned to academia to earn her PhD in Biology (with a focus on ethnobotany and natural products research) at Florida International University's Center for Ethnobiology and Natural Products from 2003-2008 with Dr. Bradley C. Bennett. She received training as a post-doctoral fellow in microbial pathogenesis at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences Department of Microbiology and Immunology from 2009-2011 with Dr. Mark S. Smeltzer. She completed a second post-doctoral fellowship from 2011-2012 with Dr. Michelle Lampl in the Center for the Study of Human Health at Emory University.

You can access her website by clicking here.

An extensive and nicely illustrated article on her work in Emory News last year ("The Plant Hunters") may be seen by clicking here.

A 2012 article in Emory Magazine, detailing her own many medical issues growing up and her development as a scientist ("Medicine Woman") may be read by clicking here.

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ShethBotSheth Lecture--April 8


Dr. Abdullahi An-Na'im, Charles Howard Candler Professor of Law, delivered the sixteenth annual Sheth Distinguished Lecture titled "Prospects of Epistemological Self-Determination" on April 8 at the Miller-Ward Alumni House. Professor An-Na'im also holds an appointment in Emory College of Arts and Sciences and is a senior fellow of Emory's Center for the Study of Law and Religion. He is an internationally recognized scholar in the fields of cross-cultural perspectives related to Islam and human rights.  

 

In keeping with the Lecture's traditional theme of "Creativity in Later Life," Professor An-Na'im explained that two days before, he had celebrated his seventy-third birthday and thus was qualified to personally embody "later life." He defined "creativity" as resistance and the ability to express oneself even under the harshest conditions while keeping one's sense of humility. Born ten years before the end of British colonial rule in Sudan, Professor An-Na'im has experienced much of the turmoil that has marked this period in the history of his native land.

 

He highlighted the dilemma of what he calls "epistemological self-determination" for post-colonial and dissident scholars as he personally experienced it. He discussed how such scholars need to navigate the pull of western academic and disciplinary conformity on the one hand and the push of personal and communal self-determination on the other.

 

In the 1970s Professor An-Na'im taught in Khartoum and became part of the resistance movement, for which he was sentenced to two years in prison. Now a U.S. citizen, he is still Sudanese, and sees the country as under constant threat of Sharia law.  He said again that creativity is about challenging norms, and to be persuasive in challenging ideas about Sharia, he calls for the use of language that will reassure people that it is not Islam itself that one is challenging, but rather the political policies that may be put into place in its name.

 

Professor An-Na'im underlined what he called the myth of "academic neutrality," and stated that not to take a stand on an issue could be in fact support of the status quo. To think that one "stands high and dry," he said; was really to take a position in defense of the status quo.  

 

He noted that the concept of human rights, brought to Sudan by the British in colonial days, is foreign to Sudanese culture. Because it is so bound up in the framework of Western democracies, it can be a challenge to step back and realize that it is not taken as a given by all cultures. When the U. N. Universal Declaration of Human Rights was adopted by the General Assembly in 1948, only four African Nations were represented. Africa was then seen as a "sovereignty vacuum" open to all and up for grabs.

 

His participation in the movement in Sudan has been intended to prepare the way for a paradigm shift in the interpretation of Sharia there. The creativity required for living this challenge in the face of the powers that be depends more on relationships, on respectful interaction among those with differing views, than on interpretation of religious faith.

 

For more information on Professor An-Na'im's work, you can see his personal website by clicking here.    

 

His Wikipedia page can be seen by clicking here.   

 

--Holly York



NewMemBotNew Members

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

Deborah Thoreson Slover, MM, Senior Lecturer in Music



Members in Transition

Michael Moon, PhD, Professor of Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies

 

Gregg Orloff, PhD, Director, CancerQuest; Assistant Professor, Hematology and Medical Oncology; Senior Lecturer, Biology



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HamBotSunday, May 5--Hamlet


This year, we are scheduling our group visit to the Atlanta Shakespeare Tavern for Sunday evening, May 5th, so we may together enjoy the final performance of the Company production of Hamlet that began its run this past weekend.  (And note that if you cannot join us on the 5th, 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.)
 
Word is that this production of the play so many name as the best ever written (though our resident Shakespearean, Gretchen, would argue that Lear is even better) is very powerful indeed. Certainly, Lee Osorio, the actor playing Hamlet, ought to be up to the part! He won the Suzi Bass award for best performance by an Atlanta area actor last year when he played Richard II in the Tavern production of the history play about that doomed monarch (simultaneously so weak and so strong). And Gretchen can attest that the others in the cast are top-notch actors, too, well qualified to "hold the mirror up to nature," as Hamlet says actors should do.
 
As last year, Gretchen will negotiate 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 she receives 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.  To begin with, she will have them hold 10 seats on the main floor and 10 seats in the boxes. Last year, those seats were $33 and $29 apiece. This year's rate hasn't yet been determined, but should be comparable. Those of you who would like to join the group 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 Gretchen know. If it's possible to up the number in our group at that point, Gretchen 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 3rd before the 5th.
 
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 and drink available are good and reasonably priced.)
 
DO REMEMBER THAT THE SUNDAY SHOWS BEGIN AT 6:30 (and this production of Hamlet will run to to about 10:00). 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. The best bet for parking is the parking deck of Midtown Hospital, the entrance to which is directly across from the entrance to the Tavern (at 499 Peachtree Street). Park and exit the deck on Level D--the best exit for Peachtree Street and the Tavern. You'll pay the $5 charge on your way out of the deck. If you need parking closer to the Tavern, check the aforementioned website for information on the accessible parking that's right behind the Tavern (off of Courtland).
 
Here's hoping you will choose to join us at the Tavern--that is, choose "to be [there]"-and NOT "to be [square]."



AwardsBotAwards and New Members Reception--April 2


Our annual Awards and New Members Reception is one of the highlights of the year because we recognize the accomplishments of our members, we welcome new members--an essential element of any vital organization, we thank our members who have donated during the year, and we honor those members who have died in the past year.

The program began with remarks from Tim Holbrook, Vice Provost for Faculty Affairs and the person to whom the Emeritus College reports.


Vice Provost Holbrook is a strong supporter of faculty and a champion for faculty excellence, and to hear him speak so positively about the Emeritus College was a great way to start the program.

Next on the program was the presentation of the Distinguished Faculty Awards, that you can read about below by clicking here.

The awarding of the Heilbrun Fellowships by Dean Elliott can be read below by clicking here.

The 63 new members (!) who joined since last year's reception, 16 of whom had not yet retired, were listed in the program, and those who were able to attend the reception were acknowledged.  The 103 people who donated to the Emeritus College were also listed and thanked by everyone present with a hearty round of applause.  The 18 members who died in the past year were also recognized.  You may see the program listing of these people by clicking here.


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DFADistinguished Faculty Awards

Two of our members were given Distinguished Faculty Awards.  The first awardee emphasized the dispersed nature of our membership:  Cory Kratz, Professor Emerita of Anthropology, no longer lives in the Atlanta area, but "attended" the reception via Skype.  It should also be noted that her distance also did not prevent her from being awarded a Heilbrun Fellowship in 2014.  She was nominated by Lisa Tedesco, Dean of the Laney Graduate School and Martine Brownley, Goodrich C. White Professor of English.  Both of her nominators were in attendance; she was presented the award by Martine Brownley.

Cory Kratz and Martine Brownley

The nomination letter read as follows:
 
We write to nominate Dr. Corinne Kratz for this year's EUEC Faculty Award of Distinction. After twenty years at Emory, Dr. Kratz retired from her position as Professor of Anthropology and African Studies in August 2013. Since then, she has remained actively engaged with Emory, particularly with the Laney Graduate School, and has continued to be an energetic and prominent scholar, contributing to scholarship at national and international levels and serving a number of professional organizations. Her work manifests the research excellence, intellectual leadership, and engagement of the "spirit of Emory" outlined through the One Emory plan.
 
Dr. Kratz co-founded the LGS's flagship Grant Writing Program (GWP) in 2002, and codirected it until she took over full program directorship in 2011. She continued to direct it for two years after her retirement, through 2014, and even after turning over GWP administration to a new director, Dr. Kratz has continued to serve as faculty for the three annual multi-day workshops and to be central in developing two new grant workshops and in reviewing all applications. The GWP provides essential pedagogy and professionalization to graduate students in the humanities in research design and grant writing. Over the years its students have had remarkable success with their grant and fellowship applications.
 
In 2012 Dr. Kratz founded, along with colleagues in Cape Town, the African Critical Inquiry Program. This partnership between LOS and the Centre for Humanities Research (University of the Western Cape) continues and expands international collaboration with South African institutions and colleagues over a decade, begun when Dr. Kratz co-directed the Center for the Study of Public Scholarship. ACIP supports annual workshops on public humanities topics and research grants to African doctoral students pursuing degrees in South Africa. She has been Emory's director of the program since its founding and raises funds to support the program each year. ACIP assists LOS and Emory in fostering meaningful long-term international linkages.
 
In addition to continuing to lead these two major programs in retirement, Dr. Kratz also served on the Laney Development Council from 2013-2016. Her commitment to working with LGS and furthering graduate education and international engagement has not flagged since she stopped regular classroom teaching.
 
Dr. Kratz has been equally active in professional organizations during this time. She was on the Board of the Council for Museum Anthropology from 2013-2018. She created their initial social media presence on Facebook and continues to manage the CMA's page. She was just elected to a 3-year term (2018-2021) on the Executive Board of the American Anthropological Association. For two years (2015-2017) Dr. Kratz also served on the Fundraising and Planning Committee for the Arts Council of the African Studies Association, as ACASA prepared to hold their Triennial Symposium on African Art in Ghana in 2017. This year she was invited to serve as a Research Affiliate at the Pitt Rivers Museum at Oxford University (UK), and she continues to be a Research Associate of the Museum of International Folk Art in Santa Fe.
 
Dr. Kratz has presented roughly a dozen conference papers in Europe, Africa, and the US since 2013, including keynotes, regular participation at the American Anthropological Association meetings, and invitations to speak in the 150th anniversary public lecture series at Harvard's Peabody Museum and to participate in a Wenner Gren-funded conference at Stanford's Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences. She also received a program grant in 2013 from the Wenner Gren Foundation's Historical Archives program to prepare the research materials and professional papers of Dr. Ivan Karp (1943-2011) for deposit with the National Anthropological Archives, a project that she completed in 2014.
 
Since 2013 Dr. Kratz has published peer-reviewed articles in a number of major journals (African Arts, African Studies Review, Africa, Kronos, Museum Anthropology), edited collections, and a significant encyclopedia. Her wide-ranging papers draw on her research in Kenya with Okiek communities, her work on ethnographic museums, and her analyses of exhibition design, photography, and visual studies. She is currently co-editing a special issue of the journal Anthropology Southern Africa with South African colleagues, preparing a paper for an edited volume entitled Museum Temporalities: Time, History, and the Future of the Ethnographic Museum to be published by Bloomsbury, and working on a monograph on her own research to be published by Duke University Press.
 
With this profile of activity, scholarship, service, and engagement, we believe Dr. Corinne Kratz is exactly the kind of Professor Emerita who should receive a Faculty Award of Distinction from the Emeritus College. We hope that you might consider honoring her with that award this year.
 
The second member to be honored was Ron Gould, Goodrich C. White Professor Emeritus of Mathematics, whose award was presented by Gretchen Schulz.
 
Ron Gould and Gretchen Schulz
 
Gretchen's nomination read as follows:
 
You might well wonder why an English professor long retired from the Oxford campus of the university is recommending a Mathematics professor quite newly retired from the Atlanta campus for this EUEC Faculty Award.  The answer lies in the fact that we are both among the many retirees who have become members--and very involved members--of Emory's Emeritus College and who have thereby come to know one another, if only recently, after having spent decades at the same institution with no contact at all. (I might note that the fact long-time but no-see colleagues do finally get to know one another is one of the great benefits of membership in the Emeritus College.)
 
Since my own involvement with the College has entailed scheduling speakers for our twice-monthly Lunch Colloquiums, speakers often drawn from our membership, I make every effort to stay informed (more informed that most would be) about what our members are up to--and what they might be able and willing to share with the rest of us in a Colloquium. (In short, I collect c.v.s. and other info about all new members.) Ron has been on my list of "promising potential speakers" ever since he retired in September 2016. Though I confess that, at that time, a glance at his long list of publications left me as confused about the primary subjects of his work as a Shakespeare scholar like me might well be, I also discovered that he has often spoken to general audiences on math-related topics with broad appeal.  Now that he's come through some health-related concerns that had him struggling for a while and is thriving physically as well as intellectually again, I hope to schedule him to present to our "general audience" sometime this coming summer.  It's about time we had someone from math do so, and topics Ron has addressed in other venues, like "Some Unusual Applications of Mathematics" and "Math and Marriage-Don't Call the Lawyers" and (one he offered an appreciative group just this past fall) "How I Gained an International Reputation as a Gambler" sound very attractive to me.  [Note:  Ron gave a talk on that last subject for our February 25 Lunch Colloquium on very short notice.  We much appreciated his willingness to step up in those exigent circumstances. But that's Ron.] 
 
Of course, given the criteria for this award, "professional contributions since retirement to Emory University or its affiliated institutions as well as contributions to local, state, regional, national, or international communities or professional organizations that reflect the 'spirit of Emory,'" I know you'll be more interested in what Ron has done since September 2016 than in what we hope he'll do in the next several months.  And I can tell you that a glance at his most recent c.v. reveals a record of significant achievement (indeed, really remarkable achievement) in the two years and five months since his "retirement."  Not only has he continued to work with students completing their PhD under his direction (and shepherded three of them to completion and then to positions teaching, at the University of Connecticut, Colby, and Emory itself).  And not only has he presented papers, as a "featured speaker," at 10 institutions and associations from all around the country (with 2 more such presentations scheduled for this March). But he has also published 13 (that's thirteen!!!) papers-and submitted 2 more.  And that is not to mention the work he has done (again, in this same brief time period) on the editorial boards of 5 journals (while serving as a referee for others).
 
In closing, I should mention that the quality of Ron's "professional contributions" both before and since retirement has not gone unnoticed and unrewarded by those who understand considerably more about his scholarly work than I do.  He did receive a Heilbrun Distinguished Emeritus Fellowship in 2017 for his proposal to continue work on three projects he has been long involved with, "chorded cycle structure in graphs," "saturation in graphs," and "spanning trees and degree conditions."  The particulars of the 13 papers published (and 2 submitted) in the time since he received the Heilbrun award certainly show Ron fulfilling the promise of the projects he proposed--and then some. I think it's time we accord him the recognition that accomplishment and the others noted above deserve with an EUEC Faculty Award of Distinction. 
 
 
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HeilbrunHeilbrun Distinguished Emeritus Fellowships

Named in honor of Alfred B. Heilbrun, Jr., Professor of Psychology, Emeritus, and funded through a generous gift from his family, the Fellowship offers emeritus faculty in the Arts and Sciences an opportunity for heightened engagement in active research and scholarship.  Up to two fellowships are offered annually, each for a twelve-month term that follows the academic calendar.

 

The Heilbrun Fellowships are a remarkable resource for support of emeritus faculty in the Arts and Sciences.  The fellowships were presented by Michael Elliott, Dean of the College.   

 

One fellowship was awarded to Ann Hartle, Professor Emerita of Philosophy:

 

 

 

Dean Elliott stated the following about Ann Hartle's research:

Dr. Hartle's research focuses on the nature of philosophy and early modern philosophy -- subjects that she taught for over three decades at Emory.  She has published, by my count, nearly 30 articles over the course of her career, and four single-authored monographs -- including her two most recent books concerning the philosophy of Michel de Montaigne.  One of the things that I admire so much about her scholarship is the value and rigor with which she thinks about how philosophy can guide us through contemporary issues of public life.  For instance, in 2012 she received support from the NEH to develop a freshman seminar on the question, "What is Civility?" -- a question that, it's safe to say, seems now more urgent than ever.  From that seminar, she has written an essay on "Liberal Education and the Civil Character" that has recently been accepted for publication by Modern Age.

 

Dr. Hartle is receiving the Heilbrun Distinguished Emeritus Fellowship to support the research of her latest book, to be titled The World Montaigne Made.  This project goes beyond the exposition of Montaigne's philosophy to bring that figure into contemporary debates concerning moral and political issues -- including the value that we place on "authenticity," the disappearance of civility in public life, and the potential role of liberal education in fostering its return.  These are old, enduring questions, but they are also timely, contemporary ones.

 

A second fellowship was awarded to John Lucchesi, Asa G. Candler Professor Emeritus of Biology.  This award is another indication of the widespread nature of our membership as John currently lives in North Carolina, and was unable to attend the reception.


Dean Elliott spoke of John Luchessi's proposal:

Over the course of a long and distinguished career that included chairing Emory's Department of Biology, Dr. Lucchesi was a leading investigator of epigenetics -- the study of how gene expression changes and evolves without changing the underlying DNA -- and his research focused on subjects such as the genetic regulation of development, the regulation of DNA transcription, and the architecture of chromatin.  His research at Emory was supported by the National Institute of General Medical Sciences and the National Science Foundation, and his honors include being named a fellow tothe American Association for the Advancement of Science, being elected President of the Genetics Society of America, and also serving as the President of the Drosophila Researchers Board.  He appears as an author or co-author on approximately 90 research publications-- and that's not even counting review articles or book chapters.

 

Dr. Lucchesi has already completed one book since his retirement in 2015:  His book Epigenetics, Nuclear Organization, and Gene Function is slated for publication by Oxford University Press.  We are pleased to award him the Heilbrun Distinguished Emeritus Fellowship to support him in his next work:  a comprehensive monograph on the role that epigenetic regulation plays in the core evolutionary mechanisms of adaptation, selection, and speciation.

 

 

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FABotFaculty Activities

 
Donna Brogan 
Professor Emerita of Biostatistics
 
 
 
The annual Donna Brogan Lecture is this afternoon in the Rollins School of Public Health.
 
 
        
 
     
WalkBotWalking the Campus with Dianne


Our last walk led us to the Performing Arts Studio on North Decatur Road.   As mentioned, we've been here before, but only for a look at the outside of the building which still very much resembles a church. 

According to Emory's website: 
 
The 260-seat Performing Arts Studio (PAS) was created within the church building adjacent to the Burlington Road Building. PAS became an active venue for smaller music recitals.

The Performing Arts Studio was originally the church sanctuary. It was converted to a small lecture/performance hall in 1997. It has retractable audience seating for 250 and a sprung dance floor. In addition to serving as a multi-media classroom for large music lecture classes, this space also serves as a performance space for the jazz Big Band and combos, the world music ensembles, student voice and guitar recitals, and guest lectures.

Below you will find a photo of the lighted stairs among the audience seats, as well as another view of the stage area.



Our next walk is going to take us to a place on campus many of you may not have even heard of....it's probably one of the most interesting places I've visited thus far.

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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