Newsletter  Volume 6 Issue 5
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Upcoming Events

Lunch Colloquium
Robert Schapiro
MONDAY
November 4, 2019

WEBCAST ONLY
Robert Schapiro
November 4, 2019

Lunch Colloquium
Frans De Waal
November 18, 2019

October 28, 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
 
It is a busy time around here. This afternoon we are delighted to have Nanette Wenger speak about cardiovascular health in women--a topic on which she is a world expert--and then later in the afternoon there is a pop-up reception hosted by the Provost toward building a faculty club. On Wednesday, there is a reception celebrating the 50th anniversary of the Woodruff Library. Some of you were on campus at the time; the opening of that building must have been a powerful symbol of Emory's aspirations to develop as a national university.
 
Next week Robert Schapiro will offer a Lunch Colloquium on a topic of great interest to many of us. In the past, a talk about the upcoming Supreme Court term might have seemed somewhat esoteric, but not anymore.
 
There is also information below on our upcoming excursion to the Shakespeare Tavern to see King Lear. Be sure to get your tickets in advance if you would like to join with us. Full information is given about how to do that.
 
Finally, it is a pleasure to announce the recipients of the Heilbrun Fellowships for this year. The fellowships are for emeriti faculty in the arts and sciences and represent a great opportunity for eligible faculty.
       
I am very grateful to Gretchen Schulz, Ann Hartle, and Marge Crouse for help with editing and proofing.  
Oct28TopTODAY!!  Afternoon Seminar--Monday, October 28

Nanette Wenger receiving EUEC Distinguished Faculty Award.


 
 
 
 
 
Understanding the Journey: The Past, Present, and Future of Cardiovascular Disease in Women
 
The Luce Center  
Room 130
2:00-3:30 










Nanette Wenger, MD, MACC, MACP, FAHA, Professor Emerita of Medicine



LCNov4TopLunch Colloquium--Monday, November 4








From Justice Kennedy to Justice Kavanaugh: The United States Supreme Court in a Time of Transition

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







Robert Schapiro, Asa Griggs Candler Professor of Law, Emory University School of Law





ShakeTopShakespeare Excursion--Sunday afternoon, November 24

Chris Kayser as King Lear (photo by Daniel Parvis)


JOIN US FOR AN EMERITI EXCURSION TO THE SHAKESPEARE TAVERN 
 
This fall, we are scheduling our group visit to the Atlanta Shakespeare Tavern for Sunday afternoon (afternoon, not evening), November 24, so we may together enjoy the final performance of the Company production of King Lear that begins its run on November 2 (with previews from October 31). And note that if you cannot join us on the 24th, you may want to make arrangements to attend one of the many performances planned before then. Click here for more information about this play and the Tavern.
 
 

FATopFaculty Activities



HeilTopHeilbrun Distinguished Emeritus Fellowships Awarded

Fellowships to emeritus faculty in the Arts and Sciences are funded by a generous contribution from the family of Emeritus Professor of Psychology Alfred B. Heilbrun Jr.  This year there are two recipients:  Kristin Mann and Oded Borowski. 

Click here to read below about their projects
Do you remember when Woodruff Library opened?

Photo: The Woodruff Library when it first opened; the open-air bridge on the right side provided access over the ravine to the Candler Library.


Rosemary Magee sends along this invitation to the 50th Anniversary Celebration:


InMemTop



We note the death of members Dollie Daniels and Charles Strickland.

Click here to read more below

Psychiatry and the Humanities




Phyllis Rosen would like our members to know that they are invited to participate in

a new series that is being initiated around Psychiatry and the Humanities.  Jericho Brown is the first presenter in the series on Nov. 12 in the evening at the Emory Brain Health Center- 12 Executive Park Drive.  For more information, please contact Phyllis:

 

 

Phyllis Rosen LCSW

Philanthropy and Community Relationships

Senior Associate

Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences

Emory University School of Medicine

12 Executive Park NE- Suite 250

Atlanta, GA 30329

prosen@emory.edu

 

 

 

LCNov4BotLunch Colloquium--Monday, November 4


From Justice Kennedy to Justice Kavanaugh:
The United States Supreme Court in a Time of Transition

Robert Schapiro, Asa Griggs Candler Professor of Law, Emory University School of Law


For most of his thirty years on the United States Supreme Court, and especially after the retirement of Justice Sandra Day O'Connor in 2006, Justice Anthony Kennedy stood at the center of a divided court.  Though he generally sided with his more conservative colleagues on a range of important issues, from the death penalty to abortion to affirmative action, Justice Kennedy moderated the conservative trajectory of the Court.  His replacement by Justice Brett Kavanaugh opens a new chapter in the history of the Court.  The 2018-2019 Term of the Court gave some indication of the Court's new direction, with Justice Kavanaugh offering some surprising and unsurprising votes.  The Supreme Court Term beginning in October 2019 promises to be more revealing and more controversial, as the Justices grapple with topics including immigration, LGBT rights, and gun control, and they may well return once again to abortion and the Affordable Care Act. In this Colloquium, Robert will review some of the key decisions from last year, preview some of the significant cases of this Term, and discuss the larger themes of the Court's evolving jurisprudence.

 

About Robert Schapiro

 

Robert Schapiro is Asa Griggs Candler Professor of Law at Emory University and co-director of Emory Law's Center on Federalism and Intersystemic Governance. He served as dean of Emory University School of Law (2012 to 2017) and interim dean (2011 to 2012). He was previously associate vice provost for academic affairs for Emory University. He served as Emory Law's associate dean of faculty (2006 to 2008) and as associate faculty director for Emory's Halle Institute for Global Learning (2008 to 2010).

 

Schapiro received the Emory Williams Distinguished Teaching Award in 2009, the Ben F. Johnson Faculty Excellence Award in 2004, the Most Outstanding Professor Award (as voted on by Emory Law's graduating class) for the 2000-2001 academic year, and the Professor of the Year Award from the Black Law Students Association in 2001.  Currently, he teaches courses on federal courts, constitutional law, and civil procedure. 

 

Professor Schapiro taught for two years at Duke Law School before coming to Emory.  Prior to that, he served as a clerk for Judge Pierre N. Leval, then of the US District Court for the Southern District of New York, and for Justice John Paul Stevens of the US Supreme Court. He worked with the law firm of Sidley & Austin in Washington, DC, where he practiced general and appellate litigation.

 

Schapiro received a BA from Yale University in 1984, an MA from Stanford University in 1986, and a JD from Yale Law School in 1990.

 

 

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ShakeBotShakespeare Excursion--Sunday afternoon, November 24




Word is that this production of King Lear that so many name as the best ever written by anyone (as our resident Shakespearean, Gretchen, would agree) will be very powerful indeed. Certainly Atlantans who have followed the much-and-deservedly-lauded career of Chris Kayser, the actor playing Lear, can expect him to be up to the part, one of the most challenging in the world repertoire. And Gretchen can attest that the others in the cast are top-notch actors, too, well qualified to make the play as unbearable as it tends to be when it is well done. (Just sayin'.)
 
The good people at the Tavern have applied discounts available for educators and seniors and groups and also applied the value of some passes Gretchen receives for each production so as to set the cost of tickets for anyone who calls in to ask for "Emory Emeriti Tickets" at $27.50 for the excellent seats they will hold for us on the main floor of the theater. Those of you who would like to join the group (and note that family and friends are welcome to attend with you) 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 there 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 tickets you would like, and pay for them.
 
Becky will keep a master list of those who've called in, the number of our reserved tickets already claimed, and the number remaining unclaimed.  If and when all our tickets (we've got them holding 24) are claimed, she will let Gretchen know, and if it's possible to up the number in our group at that point, Gretchen will do so and let you know (though you should note that you may need to pay more for your ticket(s) should you decide to add yourself to the group late in this process). We will need to release any unclaimed tickets by the Wednesday before the Sunday afternoon we're attending, that is, the 20th before the 24th.
 
If you have not attended a production at the Tavern before, do visit the website for information on location, parking, and the possibility of eating (or at least drinking) while you watch the show. (The food and drink available are good and reasonably priced though the menu for this afternoon performance will be less extensive than it is for evening performances.)
 
AGAIN, DO NOTE THAT THE SHOW ON THIS PARTICULAR SUNDAY BEGINS AT 2:30 (and will run to about 6:00). Plan to arrive in plenty of time to park and get into the Tavern (to pick up your tickets at the ticket counter) by 1:45 or 2:00 at the latest, 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 Tavern 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 for the ASC production of this extraordinary play (or make arrangements to see it on your own sometime during its run). You'll "never, never, never, never, never" be sorry you did--however sad it may leave you feeling. (Again, just sayin'.)

FABotFaculty Activities

 
Ron Gould   
Goodrich C. White Professor Emeritus of Mathematics 
 
  
 
Ron gave an Invited lecture at the Erdos Memorial Lecture Series at the University of Memphis, Sept. 12 - 15, 2019, with the title, "Saturation Versus Weak Saturation."
 
He also has a new paper being published:  On a conjecture on spanning trees with few branch vertices, with W. Shull in J. Combin. Math. Combin. Computing, 108(2019), 259-283.
 
 
James Larry Taulbee 
Associate Professor Emeritus of Political Science
 
 
Larry Taulbee reports that not only is his band playing the Halloween gig above, but it is also playing the night before at a "clubhouse" in Canton (250 seats already sold out).  
  
He also reports making progress on the book on the "new world of mercenary employment" which however has required some re-thinking of his original premises about why we employ mercenaries. In the meantime, "more data points than I want have emerged.   This may be a good thing, but...."
 
 
 
 
 
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HeilBotHeilbrun Distinguished Emeritus Fellowship Recipients


Kristin Mann, Professor Emerita of History

My Heilbrun Fellowship will fund the expansion and preparation for digital publication of "Freedom Papers: A Database of Cartas de Alforria, Salvador, Bahia, 1820-1850," the most comprehensive database of cartas de alforria (freedom papers) of slaves in the province of Bahia, Brazil, during the nineteenth century, and one of the most comprehensive for Brazil as a whole in any period. Forty-four percent of all Africans sold into the transatlantic slave trade during its 350-year history were transported to Brazil - 15% to Bahia and 19% in the nineteenth century. The database contributes significantly to the study of slavery in Brazil by helping historians better understand the paths that enslaved women and men forged to freedom during the institution's expansive last century. It illuminates, moreover, the restricted meaning of that freedom by documenting the conditions placed on the slaves' manumission at the moment it was granted.

 

The database is being created, however, not primarily to study manumission but to advance research on the biographies of the individual men, women, and children enslaved in Africa and transported to the Americas, as well as on the lives of their descendants. This work, once regarded as impossible except in rare cases, is now on the cutting edge of the study of the slave trade and slavery. It has been inspired by the transformative Voyages: Transatlantic Slave Trade Database, which was created at Emory University under the distinguished leadership of Woodruff Professor Emeritus David Eltis. Voyages took the individual slaving vessel as the unit of study. Scholars around the world are now pushing beyond the slaving voyage to investigate the lives of individual enslaved Africans. "Freedom Papers" is a product of such research conducted while writing a book Transatlantic Lives: Slavery and Freedom in West Africa and Brazil. The work narrates the remarkable stories of two groups of Yoruba-speakers who were enslaved between 1820 and 1850 during the protracted civil wars that followed the collapse of the great Oyo Empire. Some of these men, women, and children became slaves in West Africa; others were sold to Bahia. Thanks to their own resilience and the dense networks of transatlantic exchange, travel, and communication at the heart of the huge nineteenth century Afro-Bahian slave trade, enslavement did not permanently rupture relations among the Africans at the heart of my study. They all, in time, resourcefully freed themselves and reunited in the town of Lagos on the West African coast, where they reconstructed family, ethnic, and religious bonds.

 

Transatlantic Lives pioneers a new approach to the recovery of transatlantic slave biographies. It yields powerful new insights into how the many thousands of Yoruba-speakers enslaved in the nineteenth century endured that profoundly alienating and de-humanizing experience.  Moreover, it presents a new interpretation of the origins and transformation of the now globally important Yoruba diaspora.

 



Oded Borowski, Professor Emeritus of Biblical Archaeology and Hebrew
 

After six field seasons of excavations at Tell Halif (Israel), my staff and I accumulated a large amount of material culture that needs to be prepared for final publication.  Our site, located about 12 miles northeast of Beersheba, is a mound containing over 23 different layers of occupation going back to the third millennium BCE (Before the Common Era) and up to modern times.  Our work concentrated on a layer that contains the remains of a fortified town from the 8th century BCE, which was destroyed by an Assyrian military campaign that is well documented in the Bible and in extra-biblical sources.  The campaign, which took place in 701 BCE, was led by the Assyrian King Sennacherib in reaction to a revolt headed by the Judean King Hezekiah.

 

Besides pottery, the remains recovered by our archaeological excavations contain many data that need to be analyzed, including organic remains (seeds, wood), animal bones (domestic and wild), land snails and marine shells, lithic and metal implements, and more, all of which relate to daily life in this town.  Analyses of these finds help identify economic and cultural relationships between the town's inhabitants and surrounding regions.  Some samples help determine what type of climate was prevalent during the period of the town's destruction.

 

In addition to the remains from the 8th century BCE, we discovered numerous fragments of mold-made clay figurines from the Persian-Hellenistic period (4th-2nd c. BCE).  These objects, very typical to the region and period, became intermingled with the earlier remains when activities in a later period (probably Roman-Byzantine) were carried out in this part of the site.  We assume that the tremendous number of figurines is a result of the existence of a cult center at the site, but we do not know whether these figurines were made locally or imported.  We are conducting analyses of the clay used to determine their origin.  A new branch of the figurines analysis is the study of fingerprints left by their makers, which might help find out whether they were produced by a single or multiple artists.

 

All these analyses are performed by several experts located at academic institutions and labs in several countries and require financial output.  The Heilbrun Fellowship will support in part the expenses involved in these analyses that will provide information to be included in the publication of the final results.

 

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InMemBotIn Memoriam


Dollie Daniels of Athens, Georgia, was born April 30, 1930, and died September 17, 2019 at age 89. After teaching kindergarten for 10 years, she received her BA from Eckerd College, St. Petersburg, Florida, and her master's in public health from Emory University. She received the Shepard Award for her master's research in 1992 and was presented the Award of Distinction for Outstanding Service and Contributions to the University in 1994. She retired from Emory in 2002 after more than 20 years of teaching and providing administrative, academic, career, and personal counseling to students.
 
Daniels was a force during her 23-year tenure at Emory and left a lasting impact on the university and her colleagues. She was known for her dedication to her students, her ambition, and her tenacity. Daniels was one of three people running the epidemiology department in its very earliest days. One of her colleagues at the time, Nancy Thompson, PhD, MPH, emeritus professor, was immediately struck by Daniels' tremendous work ethic. "She was working on her undergraduate degree in a distance learning program from Eckerd College while working more than full-time in our tiny program and running analytic medicine computer labs in the evening," Thompson recalls.   
 
 
 
 
Charles Strickland, PhD, Professor Emeritus of Educational Studies
 
We received notice of the death of Charles Strickland on October 12, 2019.  Unfortunately, we have no other information.
 
 
 
 


WalkBotWalking the Campus with Dianne


Our last walk led us to a new and improved hospital tunnel.  The space is filled with so many sights and sounds.   As you walk through the underground walkway, you may hear birds singing, children playing or gentle waterfalls, as well as seeing recipes, exercise suggestions and beautiful pictures of various spots in Georgia.   It's a great place to walk during a rainy day or when there is a chill in the air that is a bit too cool for comfort.  I love walking the tunnel and have to remind myself that I'm actually underground. 

For more information, please click here.



 

Autumn has finally arrived and with it wonderful cool, crisp days!  Let's take a look at a large building on campus with one side almost hiding behind a bank of trees. 


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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