AuburnReport. Auburn faculty to vote electronically for new officers in early March. February 27, 2009 Vol. 42 No. 4

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AuburnReport F o r t h e f a c u l t y a n d s t a f f o f Au b u r n Un i v e r s i t y February 27, 2009 Vol. 42 No. 4 Auburn faculty to vote electronically for new officers in early March Melissa Humble, Photographic Services Out on a limb While many homeowners associate horticulture with lawns and shrubs, Auburn student Summer Thaxton is getting a different perspective on the profession, which also includes promoting the health of trees. The sophomore from Madison was one of several students recently scaling the large oaks along College Street beside Draughon Library as part of a class taught by Department of Horticulture member Matt Wilson with assistance from Steve Nagy of Davey Tree Experts. For another view, see page 4. Auburn faculty will vote electronically from March 5-9 for a chair-elect and a secretary-elect of the University Faculty and its representative body, the University Senate. Candidates for chair-elect are Claire Crutchley of Finance and Larry Molt of Communication Disorders, and candidates for secretary-elect are Russell Muntifering of Animal Sciences and David Shannon of Educational Foundations, Leadership and Technology. Three of the four Crutchley, Muntifering and Shannon submitted statements presenting their thoughts on the university and faculty governance, and those statements are on pages 4 and 5 of this edition of the Auburn Report. The statements will also be posted, along with information about voting, at the University Senate Web site (www.auburn.edu/administration/governance/senate/au_senate.html). The winners will be announced at the annual spring session of the University Faculty, which meets at 3 p.m. March 10 in Broun Hall. At that meeting, Kathryn Flynn of Forestry and Wildlife Sciences will succeed Bob Locy of Biological Sciences as chair of the University Faculty and the Senate, and Dennis DeVries of Fisheries and Allied Aquacultures will succeed Sue Barry of Curriculum and Teaching as secretary for 2009-10. The new chair-elect and secretary-elect will assist Flynn and DeVries, respectively, for one year and will succeed them in March 2010. After leaving office as chair of the University Senate on March 10, Locy will serve for a year as faculty adviser to the Board of Trustees, succeeding 2007-08 Faculty Chair David Cicci of Aerospace Engineering in that position. The candidates for chair-elect and secretary-elect were nominated by a committee of three former Senate chairs, two former Senate secretaries and a faculty senator whose term expires this year. Chair-elect candidate Crutchley has been a faculty member in the College of Business since 1989 and an associate professor in the college since 1996. She holds a Ph.D. in finance from Virginia Tech and is an authority in corporate finance, corporate governance and in sustainability and finance. Crutchley has served on the University Senate since 2005 and is a former member of the University Graduate Council. She serves on the Senate s Steering Committee, the University Sustainability Initiative and the College of Business Undergraduate Programs Committee. Past service includes committees on faculty salaries, rules and budget advisory. Chair-elect candidate Molt is a professor and former chair of the Department of Communication Disorders and has been a faculty member in the College of Liberal Arts since 1995. A former member of the University Senate, he has served on the Calendar and Academic Standards committees. He holds a Ph.D. from the University of Tennessee and is dual certified in speech-language pathology and audiology. Secretary-elect candidate Muntifering is chair of Auburn s Academic Honesty Committee and was faculty representative to the Agriculture Committee of the Board of Trustees from 2005-07. He has served as chair of the Academic Initiatives See Faculty election, page 2

2 Aub u r n Re p o r t Fe b r u a r y 27, 2009 Experts to discuss programs to help disabled youths reach full potential Elana Greenwood Around the corner One of the signs that spring is around the corner at Auburn is the appearance of art students taking advantage of a warm February afternoon on campus lawns. The Alabama Senate Confirmations Committee is tentatively scheduled to consider the nomination of Raymond J. Harbert of Birmingham for an at-large position on the Auburn Board of Trustees on Wednesday, March 4. Harbert was selected on Feb. 13 by the Auburn University Trustee Selection Committee to fill the seat previously held by Earlon McWhorter of An- Faculty election continued from page 1 Committee of the World Food Programme and a member of the University Assessment and Program Improvement Committee. In 2002, he received the Undergraduate Teaching Excellence Award from the Auburn Alumni Association. A former member of the University Senate, Muntifering has been a member of the Auburn faculty since 1990, including service as associate director of the Alabama Agricultural Experiment Station from 1990-96. A full professor in Animal Sciences since 1994, he has been graduate program coordinator in the department since 1997. Earlier in his career, he served on the faculty of the University of Kentucky and as associate director of the Montana Agricultural Experiment Station. He holds a Ph.D. from the University of Arizona. National and state experts on educating persons with disabilities will convene Monday-Tuesday, March 2-3, at the 19th Annual Alabama Transition Conference to discuss how to better prepare youth with disabilities for the challenges they will face in adulthood. The conference at the Auburn Marriott Opelika Hotel and Conference Center at Grand National, is hosted by the Auburn Transition Leadership Institute, a research and outreach extension of Auburn s College of Education. The event consists of workshops on such topics as employment, education, social networking and interagency collaboration on behalf of youth and young adults with disabilities. Karen Rabren, director of the Auburn Transition Leadership Institute, said the conference brings together the people and the entities best equipped to assist young adults with disabilities as they seek employment or continue their education. The forum focuses on expanding the abilities of Alabama s school systems, agencies, employers and communities to help youth reach their goals in the workplace, classroom and beyond. Alabama Senate panel slated to review nomination of Harbert to Auburn Board niston. The office of Gov. Bob Riley, who is president of the Auburn Board, sent the Harbert selection to the Alabama Senate. Nominations to the Auburn Board require Senate confirmation. Harbert, chairman and chief executive officer of Harbert Management Corp., graduated from Auburn in 1982 with a bachelor s degree in industrial management. An Auburn faculty member since 1990, secretaryelect candidate Shannon is Humana-Germany- Sherman Distinguished Professor in the College of Education. A former member of the University Senate, Shannon has served on the Tenure and Promotion Committee, the Graduate Council, the SACS Self- Study and Report Writing Committee and the Creative Research Awards Review Committee as chair of Academic Program Review for the School of Nursing. Shannon, who holds a P.h.D. in research methodology and statistics from the University of Virginia, is president of the Eastern Educational Research Association and is co-editor of the journal Educational Research and Evaluation. Roy Summerford We re helping them get prepared for that next step, said Rabren, who is also an associate professor in the College of Education s Department of Special Education, Rehabilitation, Counseling/School Psychology. The next step can be difficult to negotiate, Rabren noted. A U.S. Department of Labor study released in January revealed that the unemployment rate for persons with disabilities is 13.2 percent. Do they have equal access to jobs and opportunities and are they prepared? Rabren asked. Even with the money and legislation put forth, we re still having huge unemployment rates. Hopefully what we re doing will bring improvement. The two-day conference will include a keynote address by the Reader s Digest 2008 Best of America Dream Team, which includes Ellen Porter-Levert, Mavis Crawford, Patricia De Shazior Hill, Letitia Lewis and Cheryl Best. The five Georgia educators work in special education, administration and career technical education. The event s roster also includes vocalist Daniel Ray, a disabilities advocate, and speaker Aaron Mickel, a senior from Shades Valley High School in Birmingham who participated in the 2007-08 My Voice self-determination project and serves as a member of the Jefferson County Transition Team. Transition is collaborative in nature, said Diane Glanzer, administrator of outreach programs for the Auburn Transition Leadership Institute. It encompasses not only students and teachers, but also rehabilitation counselors and job coaches, employers and parents the communities that can help support that transition period for secondary students as they go into their young adult lives. Troy Johnson AuburnReport The Auburn Report is published by the Office of Commu nications and Marketing at Au burn University. Executive Director of Communications and Marketing: Deedie Dowdle. Auburn Report Editor: Roy Summerford. Communications and Marketing contributing editors, writers and photographers: Mike Clardy, Katie Wilder, Charles Martin, Neali Vann, Jeff Eth eridge and Melissa Humble. Other contributors are based in colleges and schools throughout the university. Issues of the Auburn Report appear every other Friday during academic terms, except in the week of or after some major U.S. holidays. Copies are distributed free by campus mail to full-time faculty and staff at campus offices. Deadline for delivery of items for publication is noon on Monday before publication. Direct inquiries, suggestions and news items to the Auburn Report, 23 Samford Hall, Auburn, AL 36849. Telephone: 334/844-9984. Electronic mail: summero@auburn.edu. The Samford Tower and interlocking AU logos in this publication are registered trademarks of Auburn University and may not be reproduced without written permission from the AU Office of Trademark Management and Licensing, 06 Samford Hall, Auburn, AL 36849.

Feb r u a r y 27, 2009 Au b u r n Re p o r t 3 An evolving Charles Darwin Faculty, staff and students in the College of Sciences and Mathematics led a campuswide celebration of the 200th birthday of Charles Darwin on Feb. 12, with four persons from the college portraying the leading figure of the biological sciences at various ages. From left, Associate Professor Debbie Folkerts portrays Darwin in the latter stage of his career; graduate student Jess Stephens portrays him as an old man; Associate Professor Jonathan Armbruster portrays Darwin in middle-age, when he published On the Origin of the Species ; and Arboretum staff member Patrick Thompson portrays the 19th century science writer as a young man. Sciences and Mathematics and the College of Liberal Arts are continuing the celebration of Darwin s birthday with a series of public lectures and, on March 3, a panel discussion on evolution by Liberal Arts faculty at 3 p.m. in Room 112 of the Rouse Life Sciences Building. Melissa Humble, Photographic Services Campus Calendar Mon d ay, Ma r c h 2 Dar w i n Co m m e m o r at i v e Ev e n t Interdisciplinary panel on evolution (Elizabeth Brestan Knight of Psychology; Giovanna Summerfield of Foreign Languages and Literatures; Brigitta Brunner, Margaret Fitch-Hauser and Robert French of Communication and Journalism; and Chris Qualls of Theatre) 3 p.m., 112 Rouse Life Sciences Building Tue s d ay, Ma r c h 3 Mee t i n g University Senate, 3 p.m., auditorium, Broun Hall Pub l i c Le c t u r e The Arts and the Black Academy at Mid-Century, Julie McGee and David Driskell, 4 p.m., Jule Collins Smith Museum; part of New Perspectives Series Thu r s d ay, Ma r c h 5 Fac u lt y El e c t i o n Voting electronically through Monday, March 9; see www.auburn.edu/administration/governance/senate/au_senate.html Pub l i c Le c t u r e Leading the Way: Women, Poetry, and Social Movements in 18th Century Britain, Paula Backscheider of Department of English, 3:30 p.m., Special Collections, Draughon Library; part of Discover Auburn Series Tue s d ay, Ma r c h 10 Mee t i n g University Faculty, 3 p.m., auditorium, Broun Hall Mon d ay, Ma r c h 9 Dar w i n Co m m e m o r at i v e Le c t u r e Importance of Collections to Darwin, Jon Armbruster of Biological Sciences, followed by tour of the university s animal collection, 3 p.m., 112 Rouse Life Sciences Building Nex t Auburn Report Fri d ay, Ma r c h 13 College of Agriculture dean inducted into Hall of Honor for Alabama s ag leaders College of Agriculture Dean Richard Guthrie is one of three Alabamians recently inducted into the Auburn University Agricultural Alumni Association s Hall of Honor, a prestigious award that recognizes individuals who have had a significant impact on Alabama agriculture and agribusiness. Guthrie, who was inducted in a Feb. 24 ceremony in Auburn, is also director of the Alabama Agricultural Experiment Station and an Auburn alum. He came to Auburn in 1958 on a football scholarship and played end for the Tigers from 1958 to 1961, also lettering in track in 1959. He earned his bachelor s degree in agronomy and soils from Auburn in 1962 and his master s in soil science three years later, then received a Ph.D. in soil science from Cornell University in 1968. In 1983, after working for several years with the U.S. Department of Agriculture s Soil Conservation Service, he returned to Auburn as professor and head of the Department of Agronomy and Soils. He was appointed Richard Guthrie as acting dean of the College of Agriculture in 1985 and, in 1988, was named associate dean of international programs, a position he held until his first official retirement in 2003. Two years later, he came out of retirement to assume his current positions as College of Ag dean and AAES director. Guthrie was chosen for the Hall of Honor award in the education/government category. Those who nominated him cited his many contributions as a soil scientist, educator, international liaison and administrator. Joining Guthrie as 2009 Hall of Honor inductees were Wyeth Holt Speir Jr. of Daphne, who was chosen in the agribusiness category, and, from the agricultural production sector, Ronnie B. Holladay of Trickem. The Ag Alumni Association also paid tribute to the late Samuel H. Booker and the late Ralph W. Martin Jr. by naming them as the 2009 Pioneer Award winners. The Pioneer Award is presented posthumously to outstanding Alabama agriculturists.

4 Aub u r n Re p o r t Fe b r u a r y 27, 2009 Statement by candidate for chair-elect of University Faculty Claire Crutchley This is a time of both opportunity and challenge at Auburn University. As faculty, we enjoy an atmosphere of shared governance with our administration. President Gogue has demonstrated a willingness to listen to faculty and to implement the policies voted on by the Senate. We also are welcoming a new provost, Dr. Mary Ellen Mazey, who will bring new ideas to Auburn and work with faculty on implementation of the Strategic Plan. This gives faculty leaders, both in the Senate, and on University and Senate committees, the responsibility and the power to effect change at Auburn. The challenges are large with the economic recession necessitating cuts in Auburn s budget and the expectation of further budget cuts in the future. We will need to face the reality of smaller state allocations of funds. As a faculty member, I feel a responsibility to work with other faculty, administration, Claire Crutchley staff and students to deal with these financial challenges. We need to plan for the future and ensure that Auburn remains strong even with significant budget cuts. In my 20 years as a faculty member at Auburn, I have worked on many committees and with many people across the university. Overall, I have found that both faculty and administrators work to further the best interests of the students, faulty and staff of the university. While we may disagree about what is best and how to achieve goals, these strong views demonstrate a commitment to Auburn. With shared governance, all ideas can be expressed and brought into the open. This helps different groups know that their voice matters. I hope all who have an opinion will take the opportunity to work on committees or attend and speak up at general faculty meetings or forums designed to collect different views. Listening to many views takes time, but ideas should always be valued. From my perspective, the role of Senate leadership is to coordinate the many different constituents. We need to be open to all ideas, discuss ideas openly and work together to find solutions. My research on corporate boards has demonstrated that the most effective boards are those whose members are encouraged to share differences of opinions. Once all views have been expressed, the board then works together to come up with effective strategies. If we listen to one another with respect this leads to better solutions. I believe that Dr. Gogue has established an atmosphere at Auburn in which faculty are listened to and better ideas can emerge. While most faculty agree with an environment of shared governance, as faculty members we need to remember that with it comes increased responsibility. It is not good enough to grumble to each other about poor decisions which have been made. Instead, we need to work actively on committees to state our views. We need to speak up about issues that are important to us and our colleagues. I have worked with Senate leaders over the past several years, and I am impressed with their commitment to generate and listen to ideas to implement policies that are good for Auburn. I share this strong commitment to Auburn University. Through my many years of service on departmental, college and university committees, as well as my work in the University Senate, I am prepared to continue that work. Although the current economic situation presents challenges, I look forward to working with faculty and administrators in an open atmosphere to find solutions for the good of the university. * * * Editor s note: Both candidates for chair-elect were invited by the University Senate and the Auburn Report to submit statements. Nominee Lawrence Molt did not respond. Hanging in there In another scene from a recent class session outside Draughon Library, Horticulture major Michael Kennedy descends from one of the large oaks on the library grounds. Kennedy, a junior from Opelika, was one of several students recently participating in a horticulture class session on arboricultural climbing techniques related to the professional care and maintenance of mature trees in parks and on the grounds of many businesses and older homes across the South. In March, two students from the department will compete nationally at the Professional LandCare Network Student Career Days in Pomona, Calif. Additional information about the class is on page 1. Melissa Humble, Photographic Services

Feb r u a r y 27, 2009 Au b u r n Re p o r t 5 Statements by candidates for University Faculty secretary-elect Russell Muntifering David Shannon Shared governance ensures our participation in formulation of policies that safeguard our professional welfare and enhance the academic vitality of our institution. I am especially indebted to this system that greatly facilitated my return to faculty life when my administrative position was eliminated in 1996. Since then, I have once again been a productive and professionally fulfilled faculty member who, in addition to his academic accomplishments, has contributed to departmental, college and universitywide curricula development, faculty development, program evaluation and assessment, student academic affairs, and advancement of our institutional core values of diversity and sustainability. I view the opportunity to be considered for the position of secretary-elect as a logical next Russell Muntifering step in a longer-term process of reciprocation with our system of shared governance that I believe has served us well and to which we are all indebted. In a recent article in The Journal of Higher Education, Kezar and Eckel identified the following as the most significant challenges to university governance in the near term: (1) responsiveness to externally driven issues such as public funding, accountability and competition; (2) retirement of nearly half of extant faculty over the next decade, with a more diverse faculty entering the professoriate; and (3) the need for responsiveness based on shorter decision time frames. In addition to having the organizational skills required to effectively attend to the clerical duties of the position, I believe it is critical that your new secretaryelect be able to work with you and our central administration, competently and aggressively, in addressing these aforementioned as well as increasingly unforeseen challenges. I believe that my nearly 30 years of experience and accomplishment as a faculty member and administrator at three different universities has prepared me well to represent you in the joint faculty-administrative work of responding wisely to future problems and challenges, many of which will continue to be of unprecedented proportion. I appreciate the opportunity to be considered for this important position, and pledge to serve and represent you to the best of my ability if elected. Being nominated for secretary-elect is a great honor and I appreciate the support of colleagues that played a role in this nomination. To be honest, I wasn t sure about this at first. I remember times when the relationship between faculty (and University Senate) and the administration (and Board of Trustees) was quite contentious, making shared governance nearly impossible. After talking it over with colleagues, I began to think of this as a very opportune time. While we (Auburn University) continue to face many challenges, the lines of communication have opened up. President Gogue began his tenure here by visiting every academic department and conducting focus groups of faculty to prioritize issues for strategic planning. I know we have been down the strategic planning road many David Shannon times before, but as we face very uncertain economic times it is imperative that faculty are involved in the process. We also just welcomed a new provost to campus, Dr. Mazey, and now is the time to establish productive working relationships to address the issues and challenges that lie ahead. If elected, I will work closely with members of the Executive and Steering Committees in discussing and addressing the critical issues faced at Auburn. I also pledge to solicit input from faculty representing different perspectives regarding these issues and present these viewpoints in committee discussions. I have held leadership positions with other professional organizations that were charged with the creation and implementation of policies and procedures and welcome the opportunity to do so as an officer of the Senate. See page 1 for biographical information about the candidates and details of the election Auburn Research Park adds tenant from financial sector Auburn Research Park officials have announced that financial advisement firm Johnson Sterling Inc. will open a financial research and consulting office in the park in early April. Johnson Sterling has a long-standing relationship with Auburn University, having served the Auburn retirement plans and its participants since 1984, Auburn Research Park Executive Director John Weete said. The firm uses a research-driven, risk-managed financial and investment management discipline to serve its clients. We expect that to continue and even broaden in the research park. The Birmingham-based firm is an independent, feeonly company and is a registered investment advisor and pension consultancy with the Securities and Exchange Commission. It provides an array of financial services, investment advisory services and retirement plan fiduciary consulting services throughout the United States. Clients include colleges and universities, medical schools, individuals, families, estates and corporations. Johnson Sterling selected the Auburn Research Park because of its proximity to Auburn University, according to Sam Johnson, CEO of Johnson Sterling. Plans call for a financial learning center to instruct people on how to use financial research and tools. The company also plans a student internship for Auburn students, who would earn income while working part-time to gain real life experience. Student interns would participate in developing systems and techniques to help people meet financial goals and deal with financial challenges. The Auburn Research Park is located on 156 acres of university property and is being developed and operated by the Auburn Research and Technology Foundation, an Alabama non-profit corporation. The first building in the emerging Auburn Research Park was completed in September. The research park is being designed to attract companies from within and outside the state to be near the intellectual resources at Auburn. Current tenants include Northrop Grumman, Roanoke Electronic Controls, the Auburn Research and Technology Foundation and the university s Office of Technology Transfer.

6 Aub u r n Re p o r t Fe b r u a r y 27, 2009 Auburn Abroad With new programs, more students take advantage of opportunities to study abroad Despite and in some cases aided by a worldwide economic recession, Auburn students are signing up at a record rate for international study. If projections hold through the summer, approximately 885 Auburn students will study beyond the borders of the United States this year, compared to 712 in 2007-08. This year s expected increase is part of a larger pattern. The number of Auburn students participating in international activities has tripled over the past decade as the university has stepped up its programs to encourage students to develop skills necessary for success in a global economy. Deborah Weiss, assistant director for Auburn Abroad programs in the Office of International Education, said the worldwide economic recession seems to have had little impact on fall and spring enrollment in study abroad programs. With summer enrollment under way, Weiss said it appears that most of the facultyled programs abroad will meet or exceed last year s enrollment numbers. More than 80 percent of Auburn students who study abroad do so in faculty-led programs. Noting that students and their parents are carefully considering their family budgets, Weiss said some have found good deals in international travel and travelers are finding that the buying power of the dollar against the euro and other major currencies has improved. Changing economic conditions do affect students decisions, yet A lot of parents recognize the importance of studying abroad with faculty, and they consider it a necessary part of the total educational package. Deborah Weiss most who participate in study abroad programs look beyond the immediate future, as do their parents, Weiss said. At one time, students made the decision to spend a summer or a semester studying abroad after they got to college, but now they are coming in as freshmen with international study as part of their educational plans, she said. In many cases, the students parents are pushing them to participate in Auburn s faculty-led studies abroad. A lot of parents recognize the importance of studying abroad with faculty, and they consider it a necessary part of the total educational package, Weiss said. This academic year, more than 260 students have been studying in other countries during fall and spring semesters. With registration in the early stage for most summer programs, Auburn s colleges and schools are preparing for more than 600 students in faculty-led study abroad programs this summer. In addition, more than 150 Auburn students are expected to participate in study-abroad programs sponsored by other universities and private organizations, which offer niche opportunities beyond those in Auburn s faculty-led programs. The Office of International Education works closely with the colleges and schools to implement their study abroad programs and assist students in preparing to go abroad. After wide-spread input from faculty, students, staff, alumni and others, the university last year included study abroad and developing students international skills as part of Auburn s new strategic plan. Approximately 3 percent of students participate in study abroad programs at least once during their time at Auburn; the strategic plan seeks to increase the rate to 25 percent. The inclusion of study abroad in Auburn s strategic plan was bolstered by a recent University of Minnesota study, which was reported in the Chronicle of Higher Education. That study of 6,400 study abroad participants from 22 colleges and universities over five decades found that 83 percent rated the experience as having a strong impact on their lives. As a step toward increasing student participation, each college and school at Auburn now has facultyled academic programs abroad for its students. Although many academic programs offer an international perspective on the educational needs of their majors, more than half the university s colleges and schools offer some or all of their programs to students in other colleges and schools. The Department of Foreign Languages and Literatures with summer programs in Austria, France, Italy, Spain and Mexico and fall and spring programs in several countries has the largest mix of Auburn Abroad programs and the largest number of participants. Based in the College of Liberal Arts, the department makes the programs available to all Auburn students and does not require students to have previous knowledge of the host country s language. Language instruction is in the host country and ranges from basic to advanced, depending on individual needs. The programs, meanwhile, focus heavily on the history and culture of the host countries, as does the Londonbased Regents College program led by faculty in the English Department. The Human Odyssey program in the Honors College also draws students from throughout the university. Students do not have to be in the Honors College to participate, but they do have to sign up as entering freshmen during Camp War Eagle for the following summer. The program, which limits enrollment to 20 Say Formaggio Students with the Human Odyssey study abroad program pose with program leader Jim Bradley, wearing orange, in front of Florence s historic main cathedral last summer in Italy. Each college and school at Auburn now offers faculty-led programs for students to study outside the United States. students, will extend its study of Western Culture to five countries this summer. The College of Human Sciences has one of Auburn s larger individual programs, with up to 50 students during the year at its campus in Ariccia, Italy. The college also has a summer program in Nutrition and Food Sciences that reaches across several European countries. The College of Business, which has the largest number of exchange programs for undergraduate students, will expand its London summer internship program to include Dublin in 2010. Also, following the success of the study abroad phase of the Executive M.B.A. program, the college has begun requiring M.B.A. students to study abroad; M.B.A. options include China, Argentina-Chile and Eastern Europe. The College of Architecture, Design and Construction also has a wide range of Auburn Abroad programs for its majors and has the university s See Auburn Abroad, next page

Feb r u a r y 27, 2009 Au b u r n Re p o r t 7 Three organizations recognize Auburn for its communications, marketing, alumni activities Auburn received seven awards for its communications, marketing and alumni programs at the 2009 southeastern regional meeting of the Council for the Advancement and Support of Higher Education, or CASE, on Feb. 11 in Atlanta. The university also recently received awards from two other professional organizations for its activities in these areas. The Office of Communications and Marketing won a Grand Award, the highest honor, in the crisis management plans category for its Message Dissemination in a Crisis entry, an outline of Auburn s new emergency communications plan and publications created in cooperation with the Office of Risk Safety and Management and the Department of Public Safety. The office, meanwhile, was a Grand Award finalist in the institutional relations projects category for The Uganda FISH Project, a series of media projects about the work of Auburn aquaculture researcher Karen Veverica in Uganda. The effort was a collaborative venture with the College of Agriculture and Department of Fisheries and Allied Aquacultures. This year s awards are the result of many partnerships with colleges and departments across campus, said Camille Barkley, Auburn s director of marketing and creative services. Being recognized for creatively telling the stories of Auburn s strengths and service is gratifying. Auburn Magazine, the Auburn Alumni Association s quarterly publication, was a Grand Award finalist in the alumni magazines category. Auburn Magazine was also a Grand Award finalist in the excellence in feature writing category for The Nose Knows article written by Suzanne Johnson. The Auburn Report newsletter won an Award of Excellence in the tabloid and newsletter publishing improvement category, while an anti-hazing campaign brochure created for the Office of the Dean of Students picked up an Award of Excellence in the low budget publications category. The Office of Communications and Marketing also won a Special Merit Award for its work with the Office of Diversity and Multicultural Affairs on a faculty recruitment advertisement. This year s CASE competition had 869 entries from across the Southeast. CASE, with 3,200 member institutions nationwide, is the primary association for education professionals in communications and advancement fields. Auburn is in District III, which represents most colleges and universities and other educational institutions in eight southeastern states. The Office of Communications and Marketing also recently won nine honors in the Service Industry Advertising Awards competition, which had 1,200 entries. Honors include Gold Awards for an anti-hazing campaign advertising insert; Student Counseling Services public relations campaign; Pretty Face magazine advertisement series for recruiting students; and the AU Alert and emergency communications plan. Bronze Awards were received for the War Eagle Moment: Alaska television advertisement; The FISH Project video production; Office of Diversity and Multicultural Affairs newspaper ad series; International Quality of Life Award advertisement; and the antihazing campaign. In this year s Annual Admissions Advertising Awards competition, sponsored by the Admissions Marketing Report, Auburn picked up five honors. These include a Gold Award for the Pretty Face Auburn Abroad continued from previous page second-largest participation rate, behind Liberal Arts. Expanding activities in COSAM this year include a Building Science study abroad program with several locations in China, and an Industrial and Graphic Design program in Hong Kong. Among new programs, the College of Education has an Eco-Adventure program in Costa Rica open to all Auburn students this summer and programs in Australia and South Korea for students in certain fields, while Engineering will offer a Global Perspectives in Engineering program in Pamplona, Spain. student-recruitment newspaper advertisement; Bronze Award for The Auburn Abroad Experience brochure; Merit Award for the Counselor Chronicle newsletter; Merit Award for the Events and Visits brochure; and Merit Award for the Honors College brochure. The Admissions Advertising Awards is the largest educational advertising awards competition in the country. This year, more than 2,000 entries were received from more than 1,000 colleges, universities and secondary schools from all 50 states and several foreign countries. Charles Martin Summit set for this weekend as Auburn hosts scholars, students in fight against world hunger Acting on behalf of Universities Fighting World Hunger, Auburn will host the fourth annual University Hunger Summit this weekend at The Hotel at Auburn University and Dixon Conference Center. In partnership with the United Nations World Food Programme, Universities Fighting World Hunger is a worldwide coalition of more than 80 higher education institutions committed to implementing short-term grassroots approaches and long-term academic solutions to ending hunger. The theme for the Feb. 27-March 1 conference is Ending Hunger...Yes We Can! Among the attendees will be university students, faculty and administrators, as well as hunger activists from across the country. Summit highlights include keynote addresses by Congressman Spencer Bachus of Alabama; Jonathan Blum, vice chairman and president of Yum! Brands; and Alan Jury, director of United States relations for the United Nations World Food Programme. The summit will also feature award-winning student initiatives focused on developing high-impact solutions to ending hunger and poverty; a panel of domestic and international humanitarian aid professionals; models for implementing and maintaining a grassroots student hunger initiative; disciplinary approaches to ending hunger; and journalistic techniques for conveying a hunger message. Lead sponsor for the summit is Yum! Brands, the parent organization of Taco Bell, Pizza Hut and Kentucky Fried Chicken. The company recently pledged to raise $80 million over the next five years to help the World Food Programme and other agencies provide 200 million meals for hungry school children in the developing world. Other sponsors include the Alliance to End Hunger, the World Food Programme and Auburn University. Several other colleges and schools have new or expanding programs in Central or South America. These include Agriculture, with a new program in Chile; Forestry and Wildlife Sciences, with a new program in Brazil; and Nursing, which has 24 students in Ecuador. Meanwhile, Sciences and Mathematics teams with Duke University to send students to Costa Rica and South Africa on the Organization for Tropical Studies programs. Roy Summerford

8 Au b u r n Re p o r t Fe b r u a r y 27, 2009 Achievements Buskist to receive lifetime achievement award as pyschology educator Bill Buskist, Distinguished Professor in the Psychology Department in the College of Liberal Arts, is the recipient of the 2009 Charles L. Brewer Distinguished Teaching of Psychology Award, an award given annually by the American Psychological Foundation. The award is widely regarded as a lifetime achievement award and is the most prestigious award given to teachers of psychology in the United States. This award recognizes the significant career of contributions of a psychologist who has a proven track record as an exceptional teacher of psychology. As part of the recognition, Buskist will give a special address at the American Psychological Association s annual convention in Toronto, Canada, in August. Three in Education receive honors at region kinesiology meeting Two faculty members and one graduate student from the College of Education s Department of Kinesiology were honored at the annual meeting of the Southeast Chapter of the American College of Sports Medicine Feb. 12-14 in Birmingham. Peter Grandjean, an associate professor of health promotion and director of the TigerFit program, was elected president of the Southeast chapter, and Bruce Gladden, a Humana-Germany-Sherman distinguished professor in exercise physiology, received the organization s Service Award. Meanwhile, Lindsey Schreiber received an award in the SEACSM Master s Student Presentation Competition. The organization provides support at the regional level for the goals of the American College of Sports Medicine, including professional development, mentorship of student members, and collaborative efforts between member institutions, organizations and special interest groups. Auburn Pharmacy professor receives national educator award in his field Bruce Berger, head of the Department of Pharmacy Care Systems, Harrison School of Pharmacy has been named the 2009 recipient of the American Association of Colleges of Pharmacy s Robert K. Chalmers Distinguished Pharmacy Educator Award. Named for the late Robert K. Chalmers, a former AACP president and leading pharmacy educator, the award recognizes excellence in pharmacy education. The 2009 award cites Berger for excellence as an instructor, outstanding achievements as a researcher and scholar and overall impact on pharmacy education and the profession. USDA recognizes Liu for leadership on aquaculture genome project The USDA s Cooperative State Research, Education and Extension Service has recognized John Liu for his contributions to the National Animal Genome Research Program and for his service as coordinator of the program s Aquaculture Genome Committee. Liu, who has served as the associate dean of research for Auburn s College of Agriculture and assistant director of the Alabama Agricultural Experiment Station since January 2008, is also alumni professor in the Department of Fisheries and Allied Aquacultures and director of Auburn s Aquatic Genomics Unit. When the Aquaculture Genome Project became an official part of the National Animal Genome Project in 2003, Liu was appointed as the project s first coordinator, and he was reappointed in 2008. AuburnReport Index February 27, 2009 1 Voting starts March 5 in election of new officers by faculty Meeting to examine ways to help disabled youths reach potential Guthrie named to Hall of Honor for Alabama agriculture 4 Statement by chair-elect candidate for University Faculty and Senate Statements by candidates for secretaryelect of candidates for Faculty, Senate New programs this year add to numbers of Auburn students studying abroad 2 5 3 6 One group of students spent a recent class day just hanging out around campus. See pages 1 and 4. www.ocm.auburn.edu/au_report/aureport.html The AuburnReport is an official publication of Auburn University. Each university office mailing copies of this document to off-campus addresses must include its return address. The Office of Communica tions and Marketing will not ac cept billing for copies mailed by other units.