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UGA chapter of Blue Key Honor Society to honor five; including two Georgia Law alumni

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UGA chapter of Blue Key Honor Society to honor five; including two Georgia Law alumni

Friday, September 19, 2014

Writer: Stephanie Schupska, 706-542-6927, schupska@uga.edu Contact: Kathy Pharr, 706-542-0054, pharr@uga.edu

UGA chapter of Blue Key Honor Society to honor five with service, young alumni awards

Athens, Ga. – The University of Georgia will honor five individuals at its annual Tucker Dorsey Blue Key Alumni Banquet Oct. 3 at the Georgia Center for Continuing Education. A reception will begin at 7:30 p.m. with the dinner and program to follow at 8:15 p.m.

Julie E. Carnes, Loch K. Johnson, John P. Spalding and T. Rogers Wade will receive Blue Key Service Awards; and Holly C. Gooding will be presented with the Young Alumnus Award. Recipients of the AT&T Student Leadership Award, the Richard B. Russell Student Leadership Award and the Tucker Dorsey Memorial Scholarship will be announced at the event.

The Blue Key Honor Society is a national organization with members committed to leadership in student life, high scholastic achievement, service to others, citizenship and an adherence to principles of faith. It was established in 1924 at the University of Florida; the second chapter was established at UGA in 1926.

Banquet tickets are $30 for individuals. Sponsored eight-seat silver tables are $300, and the eight-seat gold tables are $500. To reserve tickets, contact Janet Lance at 706-542-0017 or jholcomb@uga.edu.

Julie E. Carnes

In July, the U.S. Senate voted unanimously to confirm Julie E. Carnes as a judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit in Atlanta. She previously served 22 years on the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Georgia, including five years as chief judge.

Carnes graduated summa cum laude with a bachelor’s degree in English from the University of Georgia in 1972 and was a National Merit Scholar. She attended the UGA School of Law as its first Castellow Scholar, served on the Georgia Law Review and graduated magna cum laude in 1975. She began her legal career as a law clerk to Judge Lewis R. Morgan of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit. She then joined the Criminal Division of the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Atlanta in 1978, where she remained for 12 years.

Toward the end of Carnes’ tenure, Judge William W. Wilkins, chair of the Sentencing Commission, selected her to serve a four-month detail assignment in Washington, D.C. Her work caught the attention of commissioners, who recommended that President George H.W. Bush consider her for an existing commission vacancy. Nominated by Bush and confirmed by the Senate, Carnes served from 1990-1996.

When a vacancy on the Northern District of Georgia district court bench arose, Bush nominated Carnes. She also chaired the national Judicial Conference Criminal Law Committee from 2007-2010.

Loch K. Johnson

The Regents Professor of Public and International Affairs at the University of Georgia as well as a Meigs Distinguished Teaching Professor, Loch K. Johnson is the author of over 200 articles and essays and author or editor of 30 books on national security.

Johnson served as special assistant to the chairman of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence; staff aide on the U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee; first staff director of the Subcommittee on Intelligence Oversight, U.S. House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence; senior staff member on the Subcommittee on Trade and International Economic Policy, Committee on Foreign Affairs, U.S. House; and special assistant to Chairman Les Aspin of the Aspin-Brown Commission on the Roles and Missions of Intelligence.

Johnson is senior editor of Intelligence and National Security, on the Phi Beta Kappa National Board for the Visiting Scholar Program and was a Distinguished Visiting Scholar at Yale and Oxford universities. In 2012, he was selected as the inaugural SEC Professor of the Year; in 2014, he was named the International Studies Association’s Intelligence Studies Section’s Distinguished Scholar. He was influential in the founding of the School of Public and International Affairs in 2001.

Born in Auckland, New Zealand, Johnson received his bachelor’s in political science from the University of California, Davis and his Ph.D. in political science from the University of California, Riverside.

John Phinizy Spalding

As the vice president for government affairs and chief privacy officer at Cox Communications, John Phinizy Spalding oversees the organization’s government relations efforts at the federal, state and local levels as well as the company’s privacy policies and practices.

Spalding graduated magna cum laude with general honors from UGA in 1982 with a bachelor’s degree in history and received his juris doctor from UGA in 1985. While in Athens, he was a member of Phi Beta Kappa, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, the Gridiron Secret Society and Phi Delta Phi and was on the editorial board of the Georgia Journal of International and Comparative Law. He continues to serve his alma mater, currently as the chair of the University of Georgia Foundation. His past involvement includes chair of the Arch Foundation from 2005-2007, the Honors Program Advisory Board and the Presidents Club. He is currently vice-chair of the Atlanta Historical Society’s board of trustees and a past trustee of the Georgia Trust for Historic Preservation.

Prior to his current role, Spalding served as vice president of government affairs, vice president and assistant general counsel and as senior counsel at Cox Communications. Spalding joined the company in 1992 as an attorney and was previously a partner with the Atlanta-based law firm Swift, Currie, McGhee and Hiers.

T. Rogers Wade

For more than 40 years, T. Rogers Wade has been an active member of Georgia’s business and political community. He served as the Georgia Public Policy Foundation’s president and CEO from 1997-2009 and is now chairman of the organization’s board of trustees and a senior partner of Capitolink, Inc.

Wade attended the University of Georgia and was a member of the Demosthenian Literary Society and Alpha Tau Omega. He served as chief of staff to Sen. Herman E. Talmadge in Washington, D.C., from 1973-1980. Upon returning to Georgia, he was named vice president of Watkins Associated Industries. In 1985, he opened the Atlanta offices of Edington, Wade and Associates, representing over half of the Fortune 100 companies throughout the U.S. and Europe.

In 1972, Wade was a founding member of Leadership Georgia. In 2010, he was asked to serve as chairman of Gov. Nathan Deal’s transition team. He presently serves as a member of the University System of Georgia Board of Regents. He also is on the boards of the Georgia Research Alliance, Georgia Trucking Association, U.S.O., Georgia Chamber of Commerce and MILRA and is a Richard B. Russell Foundation trustee. He has been active on the boards of the Gordon College Foundation, P.A.G.E. Foundation, UGA Fanning Leadership Institute and served on the advisory board that led to the establishment of the UGA College of Engineering. He received the Public Policy Foundation’s Freedom Award in 2011 and was recently appointed executive director of the Governor’s Defense Initiative.

Holly C. Gooding

As an adolescent medicine and internal medicine clinician, medical educator and clinical investigator, Holly C. Gooding is dedicated to improving the lives of young people through patient care, teaching and scholarship.

Gooding graduated summa cum laude from the University of Georgia in 2000 with a bachelor’s degree in genetics. In 2004, she received her master’s in health and medical sciences from the University of California, Berkley, and in 2006, she earned her M.D. from the University of California, San Francisco. Currently, she is a specialist in adolescent medicine and an instructor in pediatrics at Harvard Medical School.

While at UGA, Gooding was a member of the Blue Key Honor Society, the Sphinx Society and Phi Beta Kappa and was a Foundation Fellow. Among being involved in numerous professional societies, Gooding currently serves as the Curtis Prout Fellow of the Harvard Medical School Academy of Medical Educators. Gooding’s primary research investigates risk and resiliency factors in adolescents and young adults that lead to cardiovascular disease and health in adulthood.

For more information on the UGA chapter of the Blue Key Honor Society, see http://bluekey.uga.edu/.

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