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Grady Ballenger Series

Undergraduate Invents Time Travel: New Research in the Fourth Dimension

Grady Ballenger Lecture Series

Speaker:
Dr. Graeme Harper
Dean, The Honors College

Topic:
Undergraduate Invents Time Travel: New Research in the Fourth Dimension

Lecture Description

They reported it briefly, but it was quickly hushed up. Time travel. Not the basic kind you find in a movie or a book. Not that kind with a wizened inventor or that happens in a dark alley in Victorian London with a guy who you sometimes confuse with Tom Cruise. Not time travel in a DeLorean, or through a portal you find in an ordinary wooden doorway in Nepal. No, this was the kind of time travel Einstein could only dream about. Movement, not just in space, but across another dimension. We all know the basic dimensional three: breadth, width, and height. Try on new shoes, and you experience a few of those; lose your way in the dark of night and you realize the importance of those. But time – that fourth dimension – it took an open mind to crack that one. No wonder they wanted to hush it up. The fourth dimension is like the fourth estate:
sometimes you need to shut it down or it’ll reveal something. Let’s face it, you can’t go changing the world for the better and expect everyone to be happy about it.

About the Speaker

In 2012, Dr. Graeme Harper became the inaugural Dean of The Honors College at Oakland University in Michigan. Previously, he led academic schools at the University of Wales and the University of Portsmouth before serving as Director of Research and later a research fellow at the University of Texas Medical Branch in Galveston.

Dr. Harper has served as a research panelist for the European Commission’s Education and Culture Directorate in Brussels and spent twelve years as a panelist for Britain’s Arts and Humanities Research Council. He also served on the Research Committee of the Joint Information Systems Committee, supporting the UK’s national academic technology network.

A prolific writer, Dr. Harper has published around fifty books. Reflecting both his passion for writing and his dedication to universities, he holds doctorates from the University of East Anglia in the United Kingdom and the University of Technology Sydney in Australia.

From July 2021 to July 2024, he served as Chair of the At Large Division of the Council on Undergraduate Research.

Categories
Grady Ballenger Series

Human Curiosity: An Unstoppable Force

2024 Grady Ballenger Lecture Series — Judith Bense

Date: April 16

Speaker:
Dr. Judith Bense
President Emeritus and Professor of Anthropology
University of West Florida

Topic:
Human Curiosity: An Unstoppable Force

Lecture Description

Curiosity is the result of human intelligence that has and continues to drive research of all kinds. Our curiosity and problem-solving ability have resulted in remarkable advances in all areas of human endeavor such as technology, science, engineering, art, and music. This illustrated lecture will highlight the development of human intelligence and some remarkable problem-solving episodes that propelled human culture to what it is today and the challenges facing us in the near future.

About the Speaker

Dr. Judith Bense is President Emeritus and Professor of Anthropology/Archaeology at the University of West Florida. She joined UWF in 1980 and built an Anthropology/Archaeology program from the ground up. Today the program is recognized as one of the leading programs in Florida and the United States, known for its active research in Florida archaeology and its public outreach efforts.

Bense has held numerous leadership roles in archaeology and helped guide the program toward historical archaeology and shipwreck research. In 2004, she helped pass legislation and secure funding for the Florida Public Archaeology Network (FPAN), which operates eight regional public archaeology centers throughout Florida.

She served as interim president of UWF in 2008, was appointed president in 2010, and served through 2016. During her presidency, enrollment increased by 30%, six new buildings were constructed, university visibility expanded significantly, athletic teams won four national championships, and the football program was established.

As the first female president of the University of West Florida, she continues to inspire women in leadership and academia.

Bense was inducted into the Florida Women’s Hall of Fame in 2019, becoming the first woman from Northwest Florida to receive the honor. She has received numerous awards including the Evelyn Fortune Bartlett Award, the J.C. Harrington Medal, and the Senator Bob Williams Award for Outstanding Achievement in Public Archaeology. She was also inducted into the Order of Isabella the Catholic by the King of Spain for advancing understanding of Spain’s contribution to the Americas.

Her most recent book, On the Edge of the Spanish Empire: The West Florida Presidio Era 1698–1763 (2021), synthesizes nearly forty years of research on Spanish presidios in West Florida.

She currently serves as Vice Chair of the Florida Historical Commission, Chair of the Board of Directors for the Florida Public Archaeology Network, and a founding board member of the Center for Excellence in Local Government. She is also active in several civic and service organizations and helps manage her family’s hay farm in Bay County.