Former faculty member to give Founders’ Day Lecture

Former faculty member to give Founders’ Day Lecture

Former faculty member to give Founders’ Day Lecture

In observance of the university’s 225th anniversary, Gary K. Bertsch, a former UGA faculty member and administrator, will present the Founders’ Day Lecture at 3 p.m. Jan. 27 in the Chapel. Open to the public, Bertsch’s lecture is entitled, “UGA and ‘The Rising Hope of our Land’ in a New World Order.” The lecture is open to the public.

The annual lecture recognizes the date UGA was established in 1785, when the Georgia General Assembly adopted a charter creating the university as the nation’s first state-chartered institution of higher education.

Undergraduate Josh McLaurin, an international affairs major, will deliver the student response to Bertsch’s presentation.

“Having Dr. Bertsch deliver our 225th anniversary lecture is a wonderful opportunity for the university,” said Deborah Dietzler, executive director of the UGA Alumni Association. “Given Gary’s broad international affairs experience, the lecture will be a great way to celebrate UGA’s anniversary.”

The Founders’ Day Lecture is sponsored by the Alumni Association and the Emeriti Scholars, a group of retired faculty members especially known for their teaching abilities and who continue to be involved in the university’s academic life.

Bertsch joined the university as a faculty member in 1969 and is the founding director of UGA’s Center for International Trade and Security. He also is co-founder and co-director of the Delta Prize for Global Understanding, an annual university honor whose recipients  have included
Jimmy Carter, Mikhail Gorbachev and Desmond Tutu.