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Newsletter Volume 8 Issue 10 - February 16, 2022
PLEASE NOTE:
An Invitation to be a Pre-retirement Mentor

The Emory University Emeritus College has been offering pre-retirement mentoring since spring 2016 and so far, our peer-to-peer mentoring program has assisted 58 faculty members make the transition from full time faculty to active and engaged retirees. As with any volunteer activity we have experienced some attrition among our trained mentors. Currently we have three men and six women still available to serve as mentors. Before we schedule information sessions about the program for current faculty, we need to increase the number of mentors, especially males.
 
Training for mentors is done in collaboration with the Faculty and Staff Assistance Program. It is about two hours long in a single in-person session. The purpose of the training is to provide guidelines, explain the role of a mentor, and clarify the boundaries of mentoring. We would like to schedule mentor training later in the spring, but we need at least six volunteers to hold a successful training session.
 
We prefer mentors who have been retired for at least two to three years and who are leading active and satisfying lives. It is not a lifetime commitment, and mentors can choose whether or not to accept an invitation to mentor any particular mentee. Generally, mentors meet with their mentees three times and the meetings rarely exceed an hour.
 
If you want more information, please contact Helen O’Shea, who is the chair of the pre-retirement mentoring committee. Her email address is hoshea@emory.edu .
An Invitation to be Part of a Study in Healthy Older Adults

During last week's Lunch Colloquium, our speaker, Annabelle Singer, mentioned the opportunity to be part of a study in the Coulter Department of Biomedical Engineering at Georgia Tech and Emory University.

"The Neural and Cognitive Effects of Sensory Stimulation on Older Adults"

The lead researcher for this study is Qiliang He.

The purpose of this study is to examine how light and sounds of different patterns and frequencies affect neural and cognitive activity in the healthy aging population (65 – 80 years old). Your results will be combined with those of other healthy volunteers. Your results will also help us understand how different sensory patterns affect the brain and behaviors. Volunteers will be monetarily compensated.  If you are interested, please contactmaplab@gatech.edu
Lunch Colloquium - Monday, February 21, 2022
Lunch Colloquium - Monday, February 21, 2022
“2036: The Future Starts with You”

Jagdish Sheth
Charles H. Kellstadt Professor of Marketing,
Goizueta Business School

Marla Vickers
Associate Vice President of Advancement,
Office of Advancement & Alumni Engagement

Zoom Lunch Colloquium
11:30 am - 1:00 pm

Jag Sheth, Charles H. Kellstadt Professor of Marketing, is serving on the University’s Faculty and Staff Campaign Council for Emory’s campaign, entitled “2036,” which launched publicly last October. As 2022 begins, Jag and his fellow Campaign Council members are presenting to colleagues across campus in various forums, sharing information about 2036, discussing campaign priorities, and engaging in conversations about ways to support the campaign philanthropically and more broadly.   
 
2036 inspires investment in people for the benefit of people, bringing the Emory community together to build on our mission to serve humanity through knowledge. We know that Emory will transform the world to come—contributing to boundary-pushing advancements that will spark change, inspire wonder, and catalyze action. As a community, we have a duty to prepare students for careers with the potential to change hearts, minds, and the world. The highest achievement of 2036 would be making accessible transformative and experiential learning environments with world-renowned faculty and groundbreaking research opportunities that would lead to global improvements. With an eye on Emory’s bicentennial, 2036 will spearhead a movement to radically rethink and reshape the future. 
 
Jag and Marla Vickers, Associate Vice President of Advancement, will co-present more on the 2036 campaign to the Emeritus College on February 22nd. They both look forward to their time with us. 
 
About Jag Sheth:

Much can be said about Jag Sheth, but he is certainly among our best known members and among the most respected and best beloved members of the Emory faculty, as evidenced in the spring of 2019 when he was selected for the Thomas Jefferson Award that "honors a member of the faculty or staff for significant service to Emory University through personal activities, influence, and leadership, usually over the course of many years." Jag is a long-time member of our Executive Committee, and he and his wife, Madhu, endowed the Sheth Distinguished Lecture that we enjoy each year.
 
Here is more information about this remarkable man.
 
Jagdish N. Sheth is Charles H. Kellstadt Professor of Business in the Goizueta Business School at Emory University. He is globally known for his scholarly contributions in consumer behavior, relationship marketing, competitive strategy, and geopolitical analysis. He has over 50 years of combined experience in teaching and research at the University of Southern California, the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Columbia University, MIT, and Emory University.
 
Professor Sheth is the recipient of all four top awards given by the American Marketing Association: the Richard D. Irwin Distinguished Marketing Educator Award, the Charles Coolidge Parlin Award for market research, the P.D. Converse Award for outstanding contributions to theory in marketing, and the William Wilkie Award for marketing for a better society. 
 
Professor Sheth has authored or coauthored many hundreds of articles and chapters of books and many books. The last seven years alone have seen the publication of Firms of Endearment (2014), Breakout Strategies for Emerging Markets (2016), The Sustainability Edge (2016), Genes, Climate and Consumption Culture: Connecting the Dots (2017), Consumer Behavior (with Varsha Jain and Don Schultz, 2019, with a Chinese edition in 2020), The Howard-Sheth Theory of Buyer Behavior (2020), The Seven Bad Habits of Good Companies (an updated edition of an earlier book, 2020), and The Global Rule of Three: Competing with Conscious Strategy (2020). His autobiography, The Accidental Scholar (2014), has inspired others in the areas of education and academic entrepreneurship.  
 
Professor Sheth has been on the Boards of several listed companies both in India and the US: WIPRO Limited (1991-2015), Shasun Drugs and Chemicals, Safari Industries, Norstan, and Cryo-Cell International. He has been advisor to over a hundred companies including Aditya Birla Group, Tata & Sons, and WIPRO Consumer Care, as well as Whirlpool, General Motors, AT&T, and Bellsouth.  
 
Professor Sheth is the Founder of the Center for Telecommunications Management (CTM) at the University of Southern California, which has now become an Institute. He is also Founder and Chairman of the India, China, and America Institute, which analyzes the trilateral relationship and its impact globally on geopolitics, security, trade, and investment.  
 
Professor Sheth and his wife, Madhu, have established the Sheth Family Foundation to promote India and its culture in the US. They have also established the Madhu and Jagdish Sheth Foundation to support scholars and scholarship in the field of marketing.  
 
Finally, he is the Founder and Chairman of the Academy of Indian Marketing, which supports research and scholarship among Indian scholars in marketing and management.

About Marla Vickers:

The Emory University Division of Advancement and Alumni Engagement (AAE) appointed Marla Vickers as Assistant Vice President for Advancement, colleges, schools, and units, in 2019, with her appointment effective June 3, 2019. She was to provide (and has ably provided) leadership and strategic direction for fundraising, alumni and constituent engagement efforts for Oxford College, Emory College of Arts and Sciences, Goizueta Business School, Nell Hodgson Woodruff School of Nursing, Campus Life and Athletics, Parent Philanthropy, Libraries, and the Michael C. Carlos Museum. She is now serving as Associate Vice President of Advancement, playing a key role in “2036,” Emory’s new comprehensive fund-raising campaign.

Ms. Vickers joined Emory with 19 years of development experience, most recently as Assistant Vice President for Development at Yale University. While at Yale, she oversaw seven units in the university’s development office, including major gifts, planned giving, annual giving, reunion giving, leadership giving, prospect research, and prospect management. She established a university-wide West Coast Strategy Team for all frontline fundraisers and served as a key thought partner in the preparation for the university’s next multi-billion-dollar comprehensive campaign. She built strong internal relationships within complex university environments and implemented campaign strategies while finding more efficient and tactical ways to close gifts and drive fundraising priorities.

Prior to her tenure at Yale, she served in multiple development roles at various institutions, including The University of Chicago, George Washington University, Duke University, and Georgetown University.

She holds a bachelor of arts from the University of Georgia, a master of arts from Florida State University, a master of business administration from George Washington University, and a fundraising professional certificate from Northwestern University.
Lunch Colloquium - Monday, March 7, 2022
“The Eye as a Window to the Brain: From Candlelight
to Artificial Intelligence” 
 
Nancy J. Newman
LeoDelle Jolley Chair of Ophthalmology

Valérie Biousse
Reunette Harris Chair of Ophthalmology


Zoom Lunch Colloquium
PLEASE NOTE TIME CHANGE - 12:45 am - 2:15 pm

For more than a hundred and fifty years in earlier times, physicians knew that the appearance of the ocular fundus (the back of the eye) is a window into the neurologic and systemic health of human beings, as poets and writers also knew that the eye is the window to the soul. Through innovative technology and most recently via artificial intelligence tools, Dr. Newman and Dr. Biousse have championed and re-introduced the examination of the ocular fundus into mainstream medical practice.

About Nancy Newman:

Dr. Newman was appointed LeoDelle Jolley Chair of Ophthalmology by Emory University School of Medicine in February 2002. She also holds the positions of professor of Ophthalmology and Neurology, and instructor in Neurological Surgery at Emory University School of Medicine. She also is director, Section of Neuro-Ophthalmology, Emory Eye Center. Dr. Newman has more than 500 publications, including scientific articles, book chapters, and books, including the primary textbook in neuro-ophthalmology, Walsh and Hoyt’s Clinical Neuro-Ophthalmology, 5th and 6th editions. She is co-author, with Valérie Biousse, of the textbook Neuro-Ophthalmology Illustrated (Thieme), the 1st edition published in 2009, the 2nd edition in 2016, and the 3rd edition in 2020. She has served on the editorial boards of the American Journal of Ophthalmology, the Journal of the Neurological Sciences, Seminars in Neurology, and the Journal of Neuro-Ophthalmology.
 
Dr. Newman has lectured widely throughout the world and is known for her innovative teaching style. She sees both adults and children with neuro-ophthalmologic problems, such as optic nerve disorders, visual field defects, and disorders of ocular motility. Her main research interests include disorders of the optic nerve and mitochondrial diseases.
 
Dr. Newman is a fellow of the American Academy of Neurology, the North American Neuro-Ophthalmology Society, and the American Neurological Association. She was named Teacher of the Year by the Emory Medical School First Year Class in 1992, and by the Eye Center residents in 1994. She was awarded the American Neurological Association’s (ANA) Distinguished Teacher of the Year Award in 2003 and the Emory University School of Medicine’s Dean’s Teaching Award in 2004. She was elected President of the North American Neuro-Ophthalmology Society on July 1, 2014. She was a recipient of the Research to Prevent Blindness Lew R. Wasserman Merit Award. Among her many named lectureships are the prestigious William F. Hoyt Lecture for the American Academy of Ophthalmology (2013) and the H. Houston Merritt Lecture for the American Academy of Neurology (2017). 
 
She is consistently named in Atlanta magazine as a “Top Doctor" and in the “Top Doctors” in the neurology and neuro-ophthalmology categories in U.S. News & World Report, where she ranks in the top 1% of doctors so listed.
 
Dr. Newman served on the Board of Trustees of Princeton University for 14 years and is currently a trustee emerita. She also served as President of the Princeton Alumni Association and Chair of the Alumni Council.
 
Her areas of clinical interest include
• Neurology (board certified since 1989)
• Neuro-Ophthalmology

About Valérie Biousse:

Dr. Biousse, the Reunette Harris Chair of Opthalmology, is a professor in neuro-ophthalmology at Emory Eye Center and in the department of neurology, Emory University School of Medicine.
 
She is a fellow of the North American Neuro-Ophthalmology Society and of the French Society of Neurology and an elected member of the American Neurological Association and multiple other national and international societies, including the American Academies of Ophthalmology and Neurology and the French Society of Ophthalmology. She serves on the editorial board of the Journal of Neuro-Ophthalmology. She currently also serves on the board of directors as President of the North American Neuro-Ophthalmology Society. She has more than 500 publications, including scientific articles, book chapters, and books, including the primary textbook Neuro-Ophthalmology and Walsh and Hoyt’s Clinical Neuro-Ophthalmology, 6th Edition, 2005, and the practical textbook Neuro-Ophthalmology Illustrated (Thieme 2009, 2016 and 2019), a valuable resource for practitioners who have patients with disorders of vision and the brain. Neuro-Ophthalmology Illustrated received the British Medical Association best book of the year award in 2016 (category Neurology) and the “PROSE award” from the American Association of Publishers in 2017.
 
Dr. Biousse regularly lectures throughout the world. Her current research focuses on four primary areas: (1) idiopathic intracranial hypertension, (2) the use of non-mydriatic fundus photography for the diagnosis of neuro-ophthalmic disease in various clinical settings, (3) diagnostic errors and referral patterns in neuro-ophthalmology, and (4) ocular manifestations of cerebrovascular diseases.
 
She is named into the “Top Doctors” category within the U.S. News & World Report rankings in the category neuro-ophthalmology. As such, she is rated in the top 1% of doctors ranked in the United States. She is also listed in Atlanta magazine’s “Top Doctors.”
 
Her areas of clinical interest include:
• Adult Neuro-Ophthalmology
• Optic nerve disorders
• Visual field defects
• Disorders of ocular motility
In Memoriam
Stewart R. Roberts, Jr., MD
Professor Emeritus of Radiology

Stewart Roberts, Jr., age 90 of Stone Mountain passed away on January 7, 2022.

To view his obituary, please click here.
Emeritus Member Activities
Jagdish Sheth
Charles H. Kellstadt Professor of Marketing,
Goizueta Business School
Walter J. Curran Jr., MD
Professor Emeritus, Department of Radiation Oncology
Emory University School of Medicine
Jag Sheth and Walter Curran were recently featured in the 2022 Atlanta Magazine in the article about "Atlanta's Most Powerful Leaders in Education and Healthcare."

Please click this link for more information.
Walking the Campus with Dianne
The banners from our last walk can be found in the not-so-traditional-looking Woodruff Health Sciences Center Administration Building, better known simply as WHSCAB. The "Emory Healthcare" banners can be found in the street level lobby of the building and flank a tremendous mosaic mural depicting the history of medicine (highlighted during a walk a couple of years ago).

WHSCAB is located at 1440 Clifton Road and has been described as concrete brutalist architecture. The building contains offices, meeting spaces, and a large auditorium as well as the banner-filled lobby.
Let's go outside for our next walk. The item pictured below has been repurposed and not quite used in the way it was originally intended.
Where will you find this on the Emory campus?
Emory University Emeritus College
The Luce Center
825 Houston Mill Road NE #206
Atlanta, GA 30329