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EVENTS
- March 18, 2008
Korea-U.S. Free Trade Agreement Lecture
Wendy Cutler, U.S. Chief Negotiator
Korea-U.S. Free Trade Agreement
The Commerce Club
34 Broad Street, N.W.
Atlanta, GA 30303
11:30-1:00pm
- March 24, 2008
Globalization, Innovation, and Development Series
Joseph Wong, University of Toronto
Managing Uncertainty in East Asia's Knowledge Economy: the Case of Biotechnology
Student Center, Room 321
11:00-12:00pm
- March 25, 2008
Sparks Forum on Ethics and Engineering
Dennis S. Mileti, University of Colorado, Boulder
Levee Failures in New Orleans: Root Causes, Solutions and Implications for the Engineering Community
Clary Theater, Student Success Center
4:00-6:00pm
Japanese Film Series
Ugetsu (1954)
Student Success Center, Clary Theatre
7:00-9:00pm
Science Fiction Film Series
Blade Runner (1982)
Library East Commons area
7:00-9:00pm
- March 27, 2008
Japanese Film Series
Kwaidan and Ghost Story (1964)
Student Success Center, Clary Theatre
7:00-9:00pm
- March 28, 2008
Workshop on Original Policy Research
J. Chandler, School of Public Policy
Trendy Solutions - Why do states adopt Sustainable Energy Portfolio Standards?
DM Smith Community Room basement
11:00-12:00pm
Econ Spring Research Seminar Series
Junso Lee, University of Alabama
Habersham, Room 136
11:00-12:30pm
Japanese Film Series
Hoichi, The Earless and Weird (1964)
Student Success Center, Clary Theatre
7:00-9:00pm
- March 31, 2008
The Sam Nunn Bank of America Policy Forum 2008
Dr. Mohamed ElBaradei, Director General, International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)
Nonproliferation and the Global Nuclear Renaissance: Bridging the Gap
Global Learning Center
8:00-5:00pm
Ivan Allen College Founder’s Day Luncheon
2008 Ivan Allen Jr. Prize for Progress and Service, Ted Turner
GT Hotel Ballroom
12:30-2:15pm
Japanese Film Series
Kairo (Pulse) (2001)
Student Success Center, Clary Theatre
7:00-9:00pm
- April 1, 2008
WST Center presents
Anne Walsch
Not Our Fathers’ Union: The Emergence of Women’s Unions in Japan
President's Suite C, Bill Moore Student Success Center
12:00-1:30pm
Women in International Security
Laura Holgate, President, Women in International Security
Library Commons Performance Space
4:00-6:00pm
Science Fiction Film Series
Terminator 2: Judgment Day (1991)
Library East Commons area
7:00-9:00pm
- April 2, 2008
Innovations in Economic Development Forum
David Altig, Sr. Vice President, Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta
Virtual Worlds' and Economic Development: Not Just A Game
Centergy Building @Tech Square, Hodges Conference Room, Third Floor
12:00-2:00pm
WST Learning Community Event
Rosalind Meyer
Stein House study lounge, 4th St. Apartments
6:00-8:00pm
- April 3, 2008
CISTP Presents
Richard J. Samuels, MIT
Securing Japan: Tokyo's Grand Strategy and the Future of East Asia
Wardlaw, Gordy Room
11:45-1:00pm
- April 4, 2008
International Research Opportunities
Wardlaw Building, Gordy Room
10:00-3:00pm
Workshop on Original Policy Research
Agrita Kiopa, School of Public Policy
DM Smith Community Room basement
11:00-12:00pm
Econ Spring Research Seminar Series
Dennis Novy, University of Warwick
Habersham, Room 136
11:00-12:30pm
CISTP Lecture
Mr. Nick Young
Civic Activism and the Chinese State: My experience as a reporter in Beijing
Student Success Center, Press Room
11:45-1:00pm
DramaTech
Urine Town
DramaTech Theatre - Black Box
8:00-10:00pm
- April 7, 2008
Marilyn Brown, Professor, SPP
Energy And American Society: Thirteen Myths
DM Smith, Room 105
5:00-6:00pm
- April 8, 2008
Science Fiction Film Series
Trekkies (1997)
Library East Commons area
7:00-9:00pm
- April 9, 2008
CISTP Lecture and Luncheon
Korea Initiative
Wardlaw Building, Gordy Room
11:45-1:00pm
DramaTech
Urine Town
DramaTech Theatre - Black Box
8:00-10:00pm
- April 11, 2008
HTS presents Michael Neufeld, NASM
Von Braun: Dreamer of Space, Engineer of War
Library, Neely Room
2:00-3:30pm
- April 11-13, 2008
Conference on the History of Science and Technology (HoST)
Robert C. Williams Paper Museum and Emory University
8:00am-9:00pm
- April 14, 2008
Managing Your Sponsored Project
DM Smith, Room 303
1:00-2:30pm
- April 15, 2008
INTA Spring Reception
Senator Sam Nunn
Wardlaw Center, Gordy Room
6:00-8:00pm
Ivan Allen College Website
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Ted Turner Honored at Founder's Day Luncheon
At the annual Ivan Allen College Founder's Day
observance on March 31, Ted Turner, Chairman, Ted Turner Enterprises,
Inc., will receive the 2008 Ivan Allen, Jr., Prize for Progress and
Service. Presenting the award will be Sue V. Rosser, Dean of the Ivan
Allen College of Liberal Arts, and Georgia Tech President Wayne Clough.
Recognition of Ivan Allen, Jr., Essay Contest Winner, Kaitlyn
Whiteside, senior, Advanced Academy of Georgia, will be given by John
Tone, Associate Dean of Undergraduate Studies and Professor, School of
History, Technology, and Society (HTS). The Ivan Allen Legacy awards,
generously underwritten by Ivan Allen Workspace, will be presented to
faculty member Greg Nobles, Professor, HTS; undergraduate student
Amanda Meng, Global Economics/Modern Languages; and alumnus Jackson
Jarrell Pair, BS INTA '97 and MS Human Computer Interaction '99. The
IAC Legacy Award recognizes individuals who epitomize the character and
values of Ivan Allen Jr. within their respective spheres. Following the
award presentations, Ted Turner will provide the keynote address
entitled "Our Common Future" at 1:30pm. |
2008 Sam Nunn Policy Forum Set for March 31
The
Sam Nunn School of International Affairs is presenting its biennial
policy forum, March 31, at the Global Learning Center. The topic this
year is Nonproliferation and the Global Nuclear Renaissance: Bridging the Gap.
Introductions and welcoming remarks will be presented by Dr. Sue
Rosser, Ivan Allen Jr. Dean of Liberal Arts, and Former Senator Sam
Nunn, Distinguished Professor, Sam Nunn School of International
Affairs. The keynote address will be presented by Dr. Mohamed
ElBaradei, Director General, International Atomic Energy Agency
entitled, "The Prospects for an Assured Multilateral Mechanism for
Nuclear Fuel Supply and Spent Fuel Management."
Two
panels will explore key issues during the day. The morning session will
focus on "Contending with the Proliferation Challenges of an Emerging
Nuclear Renaissance," moderated by Mr. Charles B. Curtis, President and
Chief Operating Officer, Nuclear Threat Initiative (NTI). The afternoon
session will examine "Policy and Technical Recommendations for
Strengthening Nuclear Assurances and Verification Today," moderated by
Ms. Laura Holgate, Vice President for Russia/New Independent States
(NIS) Programs, NTI. The closing remarks, “The Way Forward,” will be
presented by Senator Nunn. |
Tech Tests Wireless Emergency Alert System for Visually Impaired
Helena
Mitchell, Executive Director of the Center for Advanced Communications
Policy, a center within the School of Public Policy, and project
director for Wireless Emergency Communications (WEC), received good
news last month during testing of their WEC project. Results indicate
that 94 percent of blind and visually impaired test subjects found WEC
to be a significant improvement over their current methods of receiving
emergency alerts. "The advantage of accessible emergency communications
software and devices is that they can reach the user, no matter what
their activity or location, with lifesaving information," said
Mitchell. "In the end, people with disabilities have the right to
expect that the technology they use on a regular basis is capable of
providing them with emergency communications and timely warnings and
alerts." |
Research Seeks Ways to Avoid Information Overload Among Seniors
Tibor
Besedes, Assistant Professor, School of Economics, is co-investigator
with Vanderbilt University economist, Mike Shor, who were recently
awarded a $360,000 National Institutes of Health (NIH) grant. Their
research seeks better to understand why people make poor choices when
faced with complex decisions and to suggest guidelines that improve
people's decision-making performance, particularly older Americans
choosing options for Medicare Part D, the prescription benefit. Besedes
and Shor's research will result in policy recommendations for
structuring complex choices to minimize selection errors. |
Crawford Receives the Don Bratcher Human Relations Award
Hugh
Crawford, Associate Professor, LCC, has received the 2008 Don Bratcher
Human Relations Award. The award honors members of the campus community
who are engaging in exemplary human relations work by realizing the
need for and importance of cultivating an environment wherein value is
placed upon the broader concerns of all humanity. Crawford will be
recognized for this award at the Faculty/Staff Honors Luncheon, which
will be held on April 10th, 2008 at 12:00pm in the Student Center
Ballroom. |
Breznitz Selected as Sloan Industry Studies Fellow
Dan Breznitz, joint Assistant Professor, Sam Nunn School of
International Affairs (INTA) and the School of Public Policy (SPP), has
been selected as an Alfred P. Sloan Industry Studies Fellow. The award
comes with a grant of $45,000. "This is a great honor that should
signal to students that multidisciplinary research by social scientists
on science and technology is both needed and highly recognized," says
Breznitz. The grant monies can be used in a largely unrestricted manner
so as to provide the most constructive possible support of his work on
research and development and economic growth. Earlier this year,
Breznitz, with UC Berkeley, also received funds from a joint Sloan
Foundation grant of $500,000 to study how to help wealthy nations stay
wealthy. |
History of Science and Technology (HoST) Conference Comes to Atlanta
This
April, IAC's School of History, Technology, and Society (HTS) will
partner with Emory's Center for Health, Culture, and Society to co-host
the annual regional HoST Conference, April 11-13. Last year's
gathering, held at the University of Mississippi, featured a
refreshingly diverse turnout of scholars. This year's conference
promises an equally intriguing roster, as HTS faculty and students will
be contributing papers and poster sessions on Georgia's management of
water consumption, NASA's evolving philosophy for Mars exploration,
yellow fever, and French interwar railways. |
Movie-viewing Habits are Changing
In an article on KNAU Arizona Public Radio NewsRoom,
Feb. 21, Janet Murray, Professor, LCC and Director of the Digital Media
Program, said a single format supported by all six major studios has a
much better chance of success than two rival ones that each take only a
chunk of Hollywood. All six major Hollywood studios are now in the
Blu-ray DVD camp, a day after Toshiba pulled the plug on HD DVD and
Blu-ray became effectively the only next-generation game in town. "It's
a big victory for the consumer," Murray said. Murray also foresees "much more content and much more
breadth of content" now that Blu-ray is the only way to go. "When
people have these higher-end screens at home, they take great pleasure
in them, and this will push ahead the delivery (of movies) in
high-definition," she said.
Movie theaters, however,
must find ways to offer an experience that differs significantly from
the home-viewing option. And unique experience needs to be more than
just the freedom to hit the pause button. Some movies simply must be
seen at the theater to appreciate them, said Murray. She points to the
big summer blockbusters and movies with a strong sense of social
significance, films such as "Star Wars" and "Glory." "When the lights
come up, there is a moment of mutual recognition — we all just saw that
together," Murray said. "It's as if you shared a dream." |
Georgia Tech Co-op Student Named 2007 CED Student of the Year
Richard
"Reeve" Ingle, a Georgia Tech Division of Professional Practice (DoPP)
co-op student, was recently named 2007 Student of the Year by the
Cooperative Education Division of the American Society of Engineering
Education (CED – ASEE). Reeve is a 4.0 senior majoring in electrical
engineering with a minor in Spanish within the School of Modern
Languages. He has already completed four co-op work terms with the NASA
Johnson Space Center in Houston, Texas, and an internship with the U.S.
Department of Defense in Ft. Meade, Maryland. "I was so impressed by Reeve as a 2005 participant in
the Mexico Languages for Business and Technology (LBAT) study-abroad
program that I asked him to serve as my TA in the program the following
year," says Vicki Galloway, Professor and Director, LBAT Mexico, School
of Modern Languages. "Being a TA in this immersion program is a very
rigorous assignment requiring not only a great deal of cross-cultural
leadership and dedication to after-hours tutoring and coaching, but the
ability to do this in Spanish and to help students maintain Spanish in
all interactions, work and play. Reeve truly exceeded my expectations
in this capacity and made himself literally indispensable. "The
School of Modern Languages applauds Reeve's dedication to language and
culture study and congratulates him on this well deserved recognition
of his accomplishments," she concluded. |
Faculty Profile - Rebecca Burnett
Rebecca
Burnett sees her arrival at Georgia Tech as a new stage in a long
career. A newly appointed Professor in the School of Literature,
Communication, and Culture (LCC), Burnett received her BA from the
University of Massachusetts-Amherst, her MEd from the University of
Massachusetts-Lowell, and her MA and PhD from Carnegie Mellon
University. Burnett came to Georgia Tech to serve as the Director of
Writing and Communication, with a charge from the Provost to create a
culture of communication at Georgia Tech across the Institute. Prior to joining LCC, she was a University Professor of
Rhetoric & Professional Communication in the Department of English
at Iowa State University (ISU). Burnett was awarded the rank of
University Professor for her research, teaching, and service, but most
especially for being a change agent, central in creating and developing
the AgComm program (one of the country's oldest, largest, and most
successful communication-in-the-disciplines programs in agriculture,
social science, and science). She was also central in creating and
developing the ISUComm program, the country's first
communication-across-the- curriculum program for an entire university
that focuses on a WOVE (written - oral - visual - electronic) approach
to communication. In addition, she was awarded the title of Master
Teacher at ISU for her innovative classroom teaching, especially with
technology in technical communication, as well as for her work with
graduate students.
Burnett sees communication as multimodal. An easy way to remember the modalities is to think of communication as WOVEN—that is, written, oral, visual, electronic, and nonverbal.
WOVEN communication is part of every discipline and profession. Burnett
is interested in expanding multimodal opportunities for communication
education to the entire Georgia Tech campus — to undergraduate and
graduate students, faculty, staff, and alumni.
In
addition to assessing the success of communication-across-the-
curriculum and -in-the-disciplines programs, Burnett has research
interests that include conflict in collaboration; risk communication
involving natural, industrial, and health hazards; communication
practices affecting women students in engineering; and international
communication. Her interest in international communication has led to
work and travel in countries including Canada, Japan, Mexico, and South
Africa, and more than a dozen others. Burnett also has
a long history as a technical communication consultant for businesses,
industries, and government agencies and as an advisor about curriculum
and professional development for educational systems. She has given
more than 500 national and international presentations and professional
development workshops, developed extensive documentation for
proprietary processes, and worked as an expert witness in products
liability cases. Although a Master Gardener in Iowa, Burnett says
she needs to learn a lot of new things about gardening in Atlanta. The
weather, soil, and native plants are entirely different, and the
drought adds an additional layer of complexity. She is currently
planning several flower gardens around her Lake Claire house, including
a shade garden, a rock garden, and border garden. She enjoys cooking,
especially breads and vegetables. She is partial to using a 120mm lens
to capture both film and digital images of people, places, events, and
objects from her national and international travels. She also reads a
lot for pleasure including classics, best sellers, nonfiction, science
fiction, and histories, but mostly mysteries. |
Student Profile - Georgia Tech Legislative Interns
Three
Tech students doing legislative internships are majors of Ivan Allen
College. Gloria Carlisle is a third year student majoring in
International Affairs and loves learning about international politics.
This passion for politics has taken her abroad and has now given her an
internship with Georgia Tech alumnus and Senator Chip Rogers
(R-Woodstock). In her spare time, she is active in her church in
Woodstock and plays the piano. Kristi
Miller is scheduled to graduate at the end of this semester with a
degree in History, Technology, and Society. She has a minor in Pre-Law
and a 4.0 GPA. Miller may be best known around campus as the captain
for Georgia Tech’s women’s tennis team, which won the NCAA National
Championship last year. Miller plans to pursue a professional tennis
career before enrolling in graduate school. Her internship assignment
is in the office of House Higher Education Committee Chairman Bill
Hembree (R-Winston).
Hailing
from Fitzgerald, Georgia, George Ray is a third year student studying
Public Policy and Management. On campus, Ray is a member of the Student
Government Association and serves on the President's Council Governing
Board, in addition to teamleading two past sections of Georgia Tech's
freshman seminar course. Ray is currently working as a legislative
intern to the Speaker of the Georgia House of Representatives, and
plans to attend law school after graduation.
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