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Columns::June 16, 2003
Vacine development specialist is named GRA Eminent Scholar
Law dean is stepping down from post at end of fiscal year
School of Social Work dean named associate VP for academic affairs
Search committee formed to identify A.D. candidates
Logistical support manager receives pharmacys Employee of the Year Award
Retirees
Show and tell
Campus News
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| Dawg Camp counselors are now planning for the coming season: From right, counter-clockwise, Neema Froutan, senior biology major; Jonathan Katz, sophomore biology major; Winters Richwine, senior accounting and finance major; Nathan Copeland, senior genetics and psychology major; Shomari Ruffin, senior biology and psychology major; Katie McDermott, junior marketing major; and Bobby Wechsler, junior marketing major. (Photo by Peter Frey) |
Leaders of the pack
Couples $1 million gift will be used to help strengthen programs that develop leadership skills in students
By Larry B. Dendy
ldendy@uga.edu
An Atlanta couple has given the university $1 million to help strengthen programs that develop leadership skills in UGA students.
The gift from Andrew M. (Jack) Head and Jane S. Head went into an endowment that supports UGAs Student Leadership Center. The center conducts programs designed to help students be more successful in school and after graduation.
The gift--the largest ever to the student leadership endowment--will help expand an event called Dawg Camp, which
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| Senior Winters Richwine (center) is executive director of Dawg Camp, which teaches incoming freshmen basic leadership skills and helps get them involved in campus activities. (Photo by Peter Frey) |
teaches incoming first-year students basic leadership skills and helps get them involved in campus activities. Currently only about 400 of the more than 4,000 freshmen attend the program, but officials plan to increase participation to more than 2,000 students over the next seven years.
Jack and Jane Head, both UGA graduates, made their gift in honor of Jacks late father and mother, John and Jacqueline Head, both of whom graduated from the university in 1942. Jacqueline Head died in 2002, and John Head died in March 2003.
A terrace adjacent to the new Student Learning Center will be named the Jacqueline and John Head Terrace in recognition of the gift.
My parents loved the University of Georgia and believed strongly in campus and community involvement, says Jack Head. We are excited that this gift will enable a large group of freshmen to have the opportunity to attend Dawg Camp.
President Michael F. Adams expressed appreciation to Mr. and Mrs. Head for their precedent-setting support. Through this gift, Jack and Jane help foster a commitment to leadership and service that they, and Jacks parents, exemplify in their own lives, Adams said. This is an investment in Georgias future, and thats the best gift of all.
Richard Mullendore, vice president for student affairs, says the gift provides an important boost for the student affairs divisions top strategic goal.
There is no more basic requirement for UGA than preparing our students to be future leaders in the state and nation, says Mullendore. We know that students learn best through real-life practical experience gained by participating in campus activities and engaging in meaningful service projects in the community. This gift will enable many students to have that valuable experience.
The gift also coincides with some organizational changes being made to strengthen leadership programs, Mullendore says.
The Student Leadership Center is the new name for a unit previously known as the Office of Student Leadership Development Programs. Dawg Camp is the new name for a program, begun in 1996, that was called the B.I.G. (Busily Involved at Georgia) Event. Students who attend the three-day Dawg Camp in the summer prior to entering UGA learn about UGA history and traditions, participate in team-building exercises, get advice on managing time, money and stress, and find out how to join student organizations and work on service projects. Many graduates of the program rise to leadership positions on campus and are active in the Athens community.
In addition to Dawg Camp, the Student Leadership Center coordinates 10 other programs, including Leadership UGA, the UGA LeaderShape Institute, the Leadership Resource Team, the Arch Society, two scholarships and an awards program that recognizes outstanding student leaders.
Jack and Jane Head have been strong supporters of student leadership at UGA and had previously pledged $50,000 for the leadership endowment. Jack Head is chair of the advisory board for student leadership programs, and the couple is active in the UGA Parents and Families Association.
Beginning with Jack Heads parents, John and Jacqueline, the Head family has a long association with UGA. Jack Head received a business degree from UGA in 1975, and both his siblings are graduates. Jane Head received a degree from UGAs education college in 1977. The couples oldest daughter, Katie, is a junior, and another daughter, Emily, will enroll for fall semester. |
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