Professor Adams to share passion for butterflies, moths at “Lunch & Learn” at Dalton State
Sep 14, 2012 | 1575 views | 0 0 comments | 5 5 recommendations | email to a friend | print
As a child, James Adams collected butterflies and moths instead of baseball cards. The Dalton State biology professor will speak about his passion for lepidopterology in a Lunch & Learn program at Dalton State on Sept. 20.
As a child, James Adams collected butterflies and moths instead of baseball cards. The Dalton State biology professor will speak about his passion for lepidopterology in a Lunch & Learn program at Dalton State on Sept. 20.
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Dr. James Adams, professor of biology, will present “Butterflies and Moths: Not The Wimps They Appear To Be” at a Dalton State Lunch & Learn on Sept. 20 from noon to 1 p.m. the college’s James E. Brown Center.

A world-renowned entomologist, Dr. Adams is the Dalton State Foundation’s 2012 Excellence in Teaching Award honoree.

“I liked bugs from age two,” Adams says, “but I got serious about it at age nine or 10, when I started to take good care of the specimens. My mom started me collecting; it took big time. I didn’t collect baseball cards; I collected butterflies and moths.”

Adams completed his doctorate at the University of Kansas, where he served as curatorial assistant for the university’s Lepidoptera collection, the first person to focus on it in almost a century. He came to Dalton State in 1990.

Reservations and advance payment are required by Sept. 18 and may be made by calling 706-272-4473. Cost is $10 and includes lunch. For more information, contact the Dalton State Foundation by calling 706-272-4473.

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