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Alumni Association lecture marks Founders’
Day ceremony |
By Larry B. Dendy
ldendy@uga.edu |
The UGA Alumni Association will mark
UGA’s 220th anniversary Jan. 27 with the annual Founders’
Day Lecture at 3 p.m. in the Chapel.
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Ron Carlson |
Ronald L. Carlson, emeritus professor in the School of Law, will present
the lecture, titled “Dramatic Moments in the Pursuit of Justice.”
Carlson, who held the Fuller E. Callaway Chair in the law school,
is an authority on evidence, trial practice and criminal procedure
and is often contacted by state and national news media for expert
commentary on high-profile court cases.
The Founders’ Day Lecture is sponsored by the Alumni Association
and the Emeriti Scholars, a group of retired faculty members who are
especially known for their teaching abilities and who continue to
be involved in the university’s academic life through part-time
teaching, research and service assignments.
The lecture will be on the date that UGA was established in 1785 when
the Georgia General Assembly adopted a charter creating the university
as America’s first state-chartered institution of higher education.
When Carlson, who is a member of the Emeriti Scholars, finishes his
lecture, Suzette Talarico, professor of political science, and Kathryn
Kay, a student, will make brief commentaries on his remarks. A reception
will be held in Moore College immediately following the program.
Deborah Dietzler, executive director of the Alumni Association, says
students, faculty, staff and the public are invited to join alumni
for the lecture.
“This is a way to celebrate our academic mission and take advantage
of the experience and talents of the Emeriti Scholars, who represent
the high level of excellence we enjoy at UGA,” she says.
All of the Emeriti Scholars are members of UGA’s Teaching Academy
and were Senior Teaching Fellows. Several have won the Josiah Meigs
Award—UGA’s highest teaching honor—and all have
received other awards for outstanding classroom teaching.
In addition to developing the Founders’ Day Lecture, members
of the group have worked with the Honors Program, teaching courses
and seminars, lecturing at special events and serving as mentors to
Honors students.
As part of the Founders’ Day tradition, the Alumni Association
and Emeriti Scholars each year add a book to the collection that the
two groups created in the Hargrett Rare Book and Manuscript Library.
The book being added this year is the second edition of A
Pictorial History of the University of Georgia by retired history
professor F. Nash Boney.
Carlson joined UGA’s law faculty in 1984 and assumed partial
retirement in 2001. He continues to teach two courses in spring semester
and in 2003 was a visiting professor at the Ohio State University
law school.
He has received every faculty honor presented by the law school student
body at least once, and has been chosen by four senior classes to
serve as class marshal at law commencements.
The author of numerous books and articles in law reviews, Carlson
won an American Bar Association award in 2000 for significant contributions
to legal continuing education at the national or state level. He received
the Roscoe Pound Foundation’s 1987 award honoring a single national
law professor for teaching trial advocacy, and in 1992 he received
the Federal Bar Association’s highest award for distinguished
service.
Carlson has been a lawyer in numerous trial and appellate cases and
has argued appeals before the U.S. Supreme Court. He was a trial
counsel in a landmark federal case that established the right of mental
patients to adequate and humane treatment. He was also an author of
a Federal Bar Association brief to the Supreme Court in a major case
involving the corporate attorney-client privilege. |
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