Athens, Ga - The University of Georgia chapter of
the Blue Key National Honor Society will recognize three Georgians for their
civic contributions at its annual awards banquet Oct. 2.
State Rep. Jerry
L. Keen, government administrator Jerry R. Griffin, and former UGA law school
dean C. Ronald Ellington will receive the Blue Key Service Award for their
contributions to the nation, state, UGA, and their community. In addition,
business analyst Amy Mulkey McGowan will receive the Young Alumnus Award.
The banquet,
which is open to the public, will be held at the Georgia Center
for Continuing Education Conference Center and Hotel. The pre-banquet reception
begins at 6:30 p.m., and the dinner starts at 7 p.m. Reservations, which are
$30 per person, can be made by contacting Janet Lance at (706) 542-0017 or jholcomb@uga.edu.
Keen, who is
serving his fifth term in the Georgia House of Representatives, will speak at
the banquet. In addition, winners of the AT&T Student Leadership Award, the
Richard B. Russell Student Leadership Award, and the Tucker Dorsey Memorial
Scholarship will be announced.
Keen, who
represents House District 179 in Glynn
County, is being honored
for his civic contributions to the state and for his continuing support of
higher education and UGA. During his time in the General Assembly, he has
authored legislation to eliminate state income tax on capital gains and provide
state income tax credits for private donations of green space property to
qualified land trusts.
In 2006, Keen
authored a bill that authorized lifetime electronic monitoring of convicted sex
offenders. The law, which has become a model for other states, also established
minimum mandatory prison sentences for those convicted of sex crimes. Keen also
played a key role in passing legislation for tort reform, the Voter ID bill and
the Woman’s Right to Know bill.
Elected by the
Republican Caucus to be the house majority leader for the third consecutive
term, Keen currently serves on the Rules, Appropriations, Ethics and Insurance
committees.
A UGA alumnus, Griffin earned a bachelor’s degree in risk
management and insurance in 1967 and a master’s degree in public administration
in 1970. He is being honored for his civic contributions to the state and for
his continuing support of higher education and UGA.
He has served as executive director of
the Association County Commissioners of Georgia since 1986. During that
time, Griffin
has managed a staff that has moved ACCG from an organization focused only on
representing county interests before the General Assembly to an organization
capable of providing leadership to critical issues facing the state and its
counties.
Griffin is board chairman of GEBCorp, a company
ACCG created under his leadership to administer retirement and deferred
compensation programs for local government employees. He is also active in
various professional organizations and serves on several advisory boards and
councils. He is a member of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s
Administrator’s Local Government Advisory Committee, the Dean’s Advisory
Council in UGA’s College
of Agricultural and
Environmental Sciences, and the Georgia State University MPA Advisory
Committee.
Ellington is being honored for his career
in the field of law and for his continuing support for academic programs at
UGA.
He received his undergraduate degree from
Emory University
and his law degree from the University
of Virginia. He received
his master of laws degree from Harvard, after being awarded a fellowship in law
and the humanities for graduate studies there. He then practiced with the law
firm Sutherland, Asbill & Brennan in Atlanta
for three years before joining the UGA law faculty in 1969.
Ellington served as dean of the law
school from 1987 to 1993. In 2006, he was one of three professors campus-wide
to be named a Josiah Meigs Distinguished Teaching Professor, UGA’s highest
honor for teaching excellence. Ellington retired at the end of the 2008-2009
academic year but continues to teach.
A respected educator and scholar,
Ellington has been presented on multiple occasions with the Faculty Book Award
for Excellence in Teaching by students at the law school and has received the
Professional Responsibility Award. In 1994, he served as a Senior Teaching
Fellow at UGA and, in 2000, he was inducted into the university’s Teaching Academy.
McGowan is being honored for her
professional and civic contributions and her continuing support of UGA. A First
Honor and summa cum laude graduate, she received her bachelor’s degree from
UGA’s Terry College of Business in 2001. She joined the Atlanta office of McKinsey & Company, a
worldwide business-consulting firm that serves Fortune 100 companies, as a
business analyst.
A beauty pageant competitor, McGowan won
Miss UGA and Miss Atlanta titles before being crowned Miss Georgia in 2002. She spent that
year representing the Miss America organization throughout the state in support
of mentoring and the Georgia Mentoring Partnership, which she helped form. She
later worked in private equity as an associate at CHB Capital Partners in Atlanta. In May 2008,
McGowan earned her M.B.A. from Harvard’s Graduate School of Business and
rejoined McKinsey & Company.
The Tucker
Dorsey Memorial Scholarship is named for a former Blue Key student who died in
an auto accident in 1965. The scholarship recognizes students for outstanding
service and leadership.
The AT&T
Student Leadership Award recognizes a male and female student for outstanding
leadership qualities and achievements.
The Richard B.
Russell Award recognizes a Blue Key student for outstanding leadership ability
and potential.
Founded in 1924,
the Blue Key honor society has more than 300 chapters throughout the U.S.
The UGA chapter, which was started in 1926 as the second in the nation, has
presented the Blue Key Service Award since 1964 to distinguished citizens who
have made important contributions to the nation, state, UGA, and their
community.
More information
about the Blue Key Honor Society is available online at www.uga.edu/bluekey.
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