Present Position:
Professor
Department of Speech Communication
The University of Georgia, Athens, GA 30602
(706) 542-4893
Formal Education:
Auburn University, B.A., 1960, Sociology and Speech
Communication
Florida State University, M.S., 1961, Speech Communication
Louisiana State University, Ph.D., 1967, Speech Communication [Public
Address], with minor in Sociology
Recognition:
Teaching:
Josiah Meigs Awards for Excellence in teaching,
University of Georgia, 1995
Excellence in Teaching Award, Southern States Communication
Association, 1995
Nominated by the University of Georgia for Outstanding Professor of the
Year, 1995, The Carnegie Foundtion for the Advancement of Teaching
Recognized for "excellent performance in teaching Honors courses," by
the Faculty Evaluation Committee of the Honors Council with the
endorsement of the Honors Council, 1994.
Honoratus Medal for teaching, University of Georgia, Program for Honors
Students, 1983
Outstanding Honors Professor, University of Georgia, 1976 through 1982
Outstanding Instructor, Golden Key Honor Society, University of
Georgia, 1980
Outstanding Professor, Speech Communication Department, University of
Georgia, 1983.
Research:
The Creative Research Medal for published works on
The Criticism of Southern Discourse, University of Georgia Research
Foundation,
Top Article Award for essay published in Southern Communication Journal
between 1982 and 1994 (with Thurmon Garner), by Southern Communication
Association, for: "Shift in Rhetorical Status of Blacks After Freedom,"
54 (Fall 1988), 1-39.
Honorary Membership:
Phi Kappa Phi
Honorary Life Member, 1982, and Speaker's Key, 1984, Demosthenian
Society, University of Georgia
Honorary Member, Omicron Delta Kappa, University of Georgia
Convention Paper:
Top Paper Award, by Applied Communication Division,
Southern States Communication Association, 1993
Professional Positions:
Instructor, Birmingham-Southern College, 1962-64
Teaching Assistant, Louisiana State University, 1964-66
Assistant Professor, University of Arkansas, 1966-67
Assistant Professor, Associate Professor, and Professor, University of
Georgia, 1967-present
Professional Offices:
President, Southern States Communication Association,
1976-77
Chair, Public Address Division, Speech Communication Association,
1980-81
Editorial Work(in addition to serving as outside
Referee):
Book Review Editor, Southern Communication Journal,
1969-72.
Associate Editor, Southern Communication Journal, 1972-74; 1981-84.
Consulting Editor, Free Speech Yearbook, 1973-76.
Editor of "Abstracts of Doctoral Dissertations in the Field of Speech
Communication," 1972, 1973, and 1974, in Patrick C. Kennicott, ed.,
Bibliographic Annual in Speech Communication.
Current Editor:
Editor of Representative American Speeches , with
Jean DeHart, a collection of contemporary speeches published annually
by H. W. Wilson Company since 1937; first volume, edited by Logue and
DeHart in press. )
Essay Submitted for Consideration for Publication:
"The Press Under Pressure: Georgia's Newspapers
During the Civil War," with Eugene Miller & Chris Schroll,
submitted for consideration for publication to American Journalism.
Grants:
$2,000, Kaltenborn Foundation, to support study of
communication in Georgia during the Civil War
$2,500, University of Georgia, to "support teaching and research," in
recognition of winning Honoratus Medal for teaching
$2,365, University of Georgia's Office of Instructional Development, to
investigate means of using video equipment to teach public speaking
$2,500, University of Georgia Research Foundation, to study
communication during Civil War
Convention Papers:
Southern States Communication Association:
Free Speech: The Philosophical Poles, 1972
Political Prophecy of Eugene Talmadge, 1979
Student Speeches in Georgia: Last Score of the Twentieth Century, 1984
Rhetorical Status, 1986
The Low Rhetorical Status of the Statham Sisters, 1993
Civil Liberties: Southern Women's Rhetorical Responses to the Civil War
(with Diane Miller), 1995
Mentoring, 1995
Panel on Teaching & Research, 1996
Speech Communication Association:
Public Address as Myth, 1972
Restoration Rhetoric in Georgia, 1973-74
Communal Character [extension of Rhetorical Status], 1987
Rhetoric Under Fire, 1988
Waldo W. Braden: Public Address Scholar of South and Nation, with
Howard Dorgan, 1989.
Divided We Stand: For Ralph McGill, response to Gettysburg Address,
1993.
Symposium on the Antebellum Press, the Civil War, and Free Expression,
sponsored by the West Chair of Excellence in Communication & the
University of Tennessee at Chattanooga, 1995
"The Press Under Pressure: Georgia's Newspapers
During the Civil War," with Eugene Miller & Chris Schroll.
Offices and Committees, Southern States Communication
Association:
Nominating Committee for Association, 1969
Chair, Nominating Committee, Rhetoric and Public Address Division, 1972
Member-at-Large, Executive Council, 1971-73
Vice-Chair and Chair, Rhetoric and Public Address Division, 1974-75;
1975-76
Vice-President-Elect; Vice President; President; 1974-75; 1975-76;
1976-77
Committee on Free Speech
Committee to Select Editor of Southern Speech Communication Journal
1973-74
Chair, Speech Teacher of the Year Committee, 1978
Committee to Select Papers, Rhetoric and Public Address Division,
1981-82
Committee to Select Outstanding Article published in Southern Speech
Communication Journal, 1984-85
Committe to Select Outstanding Teacher, Southern States Communication
Association, 1995-1998
Offices and Committees, Speech Communication Association:
Chair, Nominating Committee, Public Address
Division, 1974-75
Nominating Committee of Association, 1974-75
Committee on Goals, 1975-76
Chair, History of Public Address Committee, 1976-78
Vice-Chair and Chair, Public Address Division, 1979-80; 1980-81
Committee to Select Winner of Wicheln's Speech Award, 1978
Legislative Council, 1974-76; 1980-82
Nominating Committee, Public Address Division, 1982-83, 1984-85.
Guest Speaker:
Georgia Speech Communication Association, 1975
Alabama Speech and Theatre Association, 1976
Louisiana Speech Association, 1976
Wright State University, 1976
Presidential Address, Southern Speech Communication Association
convention, 1977
Workshop on Research, Southern Regional Honors Council, University of
Georgia, 1980
Accounting Club, University of Georgia, 1982
Speeches to Demosthenian Society, University of Georgia, 1980, 1982,
1983, 1984, 1985, 1986
Referee for Journals:
Southern Communicaton Journal
Critical Studies in Mass Communication
University Governance:
Department of Speech Communication:
Chair, Personnel and Advisory Committee, 1974-75
Coordinator of Graduate Studies, 1972-74
Chair, Committee on Graduate Studies, 1972-74
Representative to Advisory Committee and Executive Committee, College
of Arts and Sciences, 1970
Representative to Arts and Sciences Faculty Senate, 1973-74; 1976-77
Chair, Personnel Committee, 1978-79
Library Representative, 1970-83
Co-Chair, Ten-Year Self-Study, 1979-80
Head, Department of Speech Communication 1983-1988
Chair, Rhetoric Committee, 1989-93
Executive Committee, 1994-96
Rhetoric Committee, and Personnel Committee, 1994-96
Speech to Workshop forGraduate Teaching Assiistants, 1995
Franklin College of Arts and Sciences:
Freshman and Sophomore Advisor, 1970-74
Chair, Committee on Academic Standards, Faculty Senate, 1973-74
Social Sciences Promotions Committee, 1978-79; 1983-84; 1987-88;
1990-91; 1991-92; 1992-1993.
Chair, Social Sciences Area Committee, Honors Council, 1981-82; member,
1983-84; Chair, 1992-95
Chair, Committee to Evaluate Honors Faculty Teaching, 1982-83; 1991-1992
Honoratus Awards Committee, 1983-84
Chair, Committee to Propose Ph.D. in Speech Communication, 1984-85
Dean's Advisory Committee, 1989-90
University-wide:
Committee to Evaluate Language Education
Department's Graduate Programs
University-wide Promotions Committee, Behavioral and Social Sciences,
1977-78; 1981-82; 1989-90.
Committee on Creativity in Letters, to nominate persons for Creative
Research Medal in humanities, 1979-80
Elected to represent Social Sciences Division to University Council,
1980-83
Committee to Study Proposed Combined A.B./B.S. and M.B.A. Degree
Program, 1982-83
Graduate Membership Committee, Phi Kappa Phi, 1979 to 1985; Chair
1982-83
Faculty Advisor, Demosthenian Literary Society, 1981-1988
Lectured to University-wide Workshop for Teaching Assistants, 1987.
Lectures for Senior Scholar Seminar sponsored by Office of Vice
President for Academic Affairs, 1989, 1991, 1992.
Chaired committee for the Office of Vice President for Academic Affairs
to consider Graduate Faculty status for candidate for position in
Social Sciences Division.
Promotion and Tenure Committee, Women's Studies Program, 1993.
Affiliate faculty member, Women's Studies Program, 1994
University Honors Council, 1980-83; 1983-86; 1991-96
Chair, Social Sciences Area Committee, Honors Council, 1992-96
Vice President's committee to evaluate the Department of Insurance,
Legal Studies, Real Estate, and Management Science, 1994.
Speech to workshop sponsored by Office of Instructional Development for
University's Graduate Teaching Assiistants, 1995
Talk to Noon Seminar on "Teaching Tips from the 1994-1995 Meigs Award
Recipients," sponsored by Office of Instructional Development, 1995
Speech to Phi Kappa Literary Society, on Ralph McGill & Eugene
Talmadge, 1995.
Instruction:
Presently Teaching these Courses:
Fundamentals of Public Speaking
Rhetorical Criticism
Communication Strategies in Social Movements
Seminar in American Public Address
Seminar in Rhetorical Criticism
Work with Graduate Students:
Directed more than twenty M.A. theses, and served on
numerous committees. Directed Ph.D. work of Jean DeHart, Hiliary
Wilson, and Chris Schroll, all who have finished; also serve on
graduate committees for numerous students.
Library Project:
In 1979, Logue began preserving typescripts of final
persuasive speeches delivered by students in the honors communication
course. These typescripts are authentic versions of the speeches as
they were delivered and recorded on audio tape, including tentative
phrasing and possible eloquence that characterize the oral mode of
expression delivered from small note cards. Texts of 301 of these
speeches have been deposited in the University of Georgia Library. An
anthology, Student Speeches in Georgia, edited by Logue, was published
by the University of Georgia's Honors Program, sponsored by the Honors
Program Alumni Association. The speeches in that collection were
selected from those delivered in the honors course between 1979 and
1989. Proceeds from sales go to fund for undergraduate scholarships.
Participation by students is voluntary.
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