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  December 5, 2005
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campus newS

University community mourns passing of two pioneers

Liz Murphey, champion for women’s sports, dies after short illness

Liz Murphey
Elizabeth Dee “Liz” Murphey, one of the leading figures in the evolution of women’s intercollegiate athletics at UGA and nationally, died Nov. 23 at Northeast Georgia Medical Center after a short illness. She was 72.

Born May 6, 1933, the Newnan native was not only an outstanding women’s golf coach but also led UGA’s women’s sports program to prominence in the 1980s and 1990s as its senior woman administrator.

Murphey joined the university faculty in 1967 as an assistant professor of physical education and women’s golf coach. She coordinated the women’s club sports program until being named assistant athletic director for women’s sports in 1978. Under her leadership, UGA won eight of the 14 SEC women’s all-sports awards, which were presented annually to the outstanding program in the conference. During her tenure, UGA women’s teams won four national team championships and 31 individual national titles.

When the university officially added women’s golf as an intercollegiate sport in 1978, Murphey already had a solid foundation in place. She led the team to 21 team and 18 individual titles from 1978-86. Under Murphey, UGA finished in the top 10 at each national championship between 1979 and 1983, while Terri Moody and Cindy Schreyer won individual national titles in 1981 and 1984, respectively.

Murphey won the 1984 National Coach of the Year Award and is a charter member of the Collegiate Golf Hall of Fame. Her teams finished second in the 1981 AIAW tournament and third at the 1983 NCAA tournament. One of Murphey’s many honors was the Rolex Meritorious Service Award for her contributions to collegiate golf. She was inducted into the University of Georgia’s Circle of Honor—one of the school’s highest tributes paid to former athletes or coaches—in 2001. For more than three decades, the women’s golf team annually has hosted the Liz Murphey Collegiate Classic at the UGA Golf Course, drawing some of the nation’s top teams. Murphey retired from UGA May 6, 1996.



Glenn Burton, famous for his work with grains and grasses, dies at age 95
Glenn Burton

Glenn W. Burton, 95, a farm boy who became world famous for his work which improved pearl millet—a food staple for 90 million people around the world—and his development of turf grasses for golf courses and grazing, died Nov. 22 in Tifton. Funeral services were held there Nov. 25.

A native of Clatonia, Neb., Burton earned a bachelor’s degree from the University of Nebraska in 1932 and M.S. and Ph.D. degrees from Rutgers University in 1936. He took a position as principal geneticist with the Division of Forage Crops and Diseases of the Agricultural Research Service of the U.S. Department of Agriculture at the Coastal Plain Experiment Station in 1936. He continued in that position as head of the grass plains breeding department for more than 61 years.

In 1950, when the Coastal Plain Experiment Station became a part of UGA, Burton became a member of the faculty of the College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences, serving as chairman of the agronomy division until 1964 when he was named Distinguished Alumni Foundation Professor.

In the early 1960s, Burton sent a small sample of his hybrid pearl millet seeds to India, enabling that nation to increase ­production from 3.5 million to 8 million tons within 10 years. Similar increases were seen in Pakistan and several African nations.

“Helping feed the hungry of the world is my greatest accomplishment,” Burton once said. “It was important to me because I saw those hungry people, and I was able to help them.”

Burton also developed nutritious grasses for cattle. His first hybrid, known as coastal Bermuda grass, doubled forage production in the South. His grasses were also credited with improving golf courses and football fields in the Southeast. After his formal retirement in 1997, Burton continued his research program with funding from his salary savings.

Burton’s research is described in more than 750 publications and resulted in more than 60 honors including election to the National Academy of Sciences in 1980, the U.S. President’s Award for Distinguished Federal Civilian Service in 1980 and the National Medal of Science in 1982.

 


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