UGA Columns June 27, 2016

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Skidaway Island campus dedicates new Springer Mountain Farms Pavilion CAMPUS NEWS

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Georgia Museum of Art showcases works from Mixografia Workshop Vol. 43, No. 38

June 27, 2016

www.columns.uga.edu

UGA scientists part of team studying malaria resilience By James Hataway jhataway@uga.edu

The electric buses, which should arrive on campus in 2017, are part of the university’s strategic plan to advance campus sustainability.

Going green

State awards UGA $10 million, ACC $6 million to buy electric, hybrid buses By Sara Freeland freeland@uga.edu

UGA has been awarded $10 million from the state of Georgia to purchase 19 electric buses, and Athens Clarke County received $6 million to buy 10 hybrid-electric buses. The funding was announced June 22 at a ceremony in the Governor’s Office and was awarded by GO! Transit Capital Program, a competitive funding program administered by Georgia’s State Road and Tollway Authority. UGA will provide $5 million in ­matching funds. The 40-foot electric buses emit no pollution, are quieter and have lower operating costs than existing diesel powered buses. The buses

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should arrive on campus in 2017 and are part of the university’s strategic plan to advance campus sustainability. “We are grateful to Gov. Deal and the Georgia General Assembly for backing this important transportation initiative, and I thank the Go! Transit Capital Program for supporting our proposal,” said UGA President Jere W. Morehead. “This significant investment will put the University of Georgia at the forefront of advancing innovative and cost-effective campus transportation.” The buses will augment the university’s existing fleet of 59 diesel buses and will replace the university’s oldest buses. “We tested several electric buses on campus over the past year

and found that not only did they perform well, our student drivers and passengers really liked them,” said Robert Holden, associate vice president for Auxiliary Services. “By adding sustainable electric buses to our UGA fleet, we also are helping to raise the air quality in our community.” UGA’s Campus Transit system serves 11 million passengers a year—including UGA students and Athens community members. Buses in the UGA system, which is the state’s second largest bus system in ridership behind Atlanta’s MARTA system, drive a combined 900,355 miles a year. The new electric buses are expected to use 171,000 fewer gallons of diesel in a year. The battery-powered See BUSES on page 2

Researchers at Emory University, UGA and the Georgia Institute of Technology, along with national and international collaborators, will investigate the mechanisms behind “resilience” following malaria infection. The investigators believe learning why malaria causes acute, potentially lethal disease in some humans and animals, while others are much more resilient or tolerant, could lead them to better intervention strategies, including new and better drugs, for malaria and other diseases. The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency and the Army Research Laboratory are supporting the research through a $6.4 million contract. The research partnership is part of DARPA’s THoR (Technologies for Host Resilience) program and is termed the

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HAMMER (Host Acute Models of Malaria to study Experimental Resilience) project. Malaria, which is transmitted through mosquito bites, is the most widespread human parasitic disease and is endemic in approximately 100 countries. It causes fever, pain and other acute responses, and in severe cases it can become deadly within days of the onset of symptoms. Resilience in some people and non-human primates allows them to control the disease and avoid adverse outcomes, so that the disease is not incapacitating, said Mary R. Galinski, principal investigator for the project and a professor of medicine and infectious diseases at Emory University School of Medicine, Emory Vaccine Center and Yerkes National Primate ­Research Center. The researchers hope they may identify features associated with

See MALARIA on page 4

DIVISION OF STUDENT AFFAIRS

Wise Family Foundation expands meal plan scholarship program By Stan Jackson ugastan@uga.edu

More UGA students will be able to concentrate on their education and worry less about finding meals thanks to a significant six-figure gift from the R. Halsey Wise and Lisha S. Wise Family Foundation to the Let All the Big Dawgs Eat Food Scholarship, which is an integral part of the university’s commitment to overall need-based scholarship programs. The food scholarship sponsors UGA Food Services meal plans for students with demonstrated need. Established by the Division

of Student Affairs in 2015 with an initial gift from Wayne and Robin Hoover of Atlanta, the program began with two student recipients. Over the following year, additional support from alumni and donors, as well as the contribution of four food scholarships from UGA Food Services, has enabled the program to support more than a dozen students, nine this past semester alone. The Wises’ gift will transform the scholarship to make an exponentially greater impact. “Our gift is aimed at a goal of addressing food insecurity and eliminating hunger at UGA,” said

See MEAL on page 4

SAVANNAH RIVER ECOLOGY LABORATORY

COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES

SREL to launch new outreach UGA, Italian university partner to establish dual-degree program in sustainable agriculture program in Burke County By J. Merritt Melancon jmerritt@uga.edu

To promote collaboration on some of the biggest challenges facing agriculture today, UGA’s College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences is partnering with the University of Padova in Italy for a groundbreaking dual master’s degree program in sustainable agriculture. On May 3, administrators and faculty from the University of Padova and UGA met in Padova

in northern Italy to sign a memorandum of understanding finalizing the dual-degree program. The first students will be enrolled this fall. Both the University of Padova, which is the top-ranked agricultural university in Italy, and UGA, which houses one of the best colleges of agriculture in the U.S., are leaders in precision and sustainable agriculture. “This innovative program will not only provide UGA graduate students with outstanding ­training, it will also provide them with a

unique opportunity to learn about the challenges, opportunities and leading edges of their field on another continent,” said Suzanne Barbour, dean of the UGA Graduate School. “This experience will serve our students well when they enter the job market in our increasingly global economy. I hope the dual-degree program in sustainable agriculture will be a model for others to follow as they develop comparable offerings in other disciplines.”

See AGRICULTURE on page 4

By Vicky L. Sutton-Jackson vsuttonj@uga.edu

UGA’s Savannah River Ecology Laboratory will begin working this summer with the community of Shell Bluff in Burke County to help its residents understand the impacts of nuclear industrial operations in the surrounding area. The Shell Bluff community, near Waynesboro, is in close proximity to both the U.S. Department of Energy’s Savannah River Site in Aiken, South Carolina, and Georgia

Power’s Plant Vogtle. The three-year program, a collaboration with Georgia Women’s Action for New Directions, an A tlanta-based nonprofit, will ­ engage and address residents’ concerns about the real and perceived risk of environmental contamination from nuclear industrial operations in the surrounding area. The Savannah River Ecology Laboratory will be responsible for program development and implementation, including a pre- and

See OUTREACH on page 4


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