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The Claudia Nance Rollins Building provides ample and inviting space for students to meet and study.
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Students often gather on the glass bridge that joins the Claudia Nance Rollins and Grace Crum Rollins buildings.
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Gary (left) and Randall Rollins talk with Rollins Professor Viola Vaccarino about her research in cardiovascular epidemiology.
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Aiden Varan, a U.S. citizen from New Zealand, is majoring in global health epidemiology at Rollins.
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The buildings that comprise the RSPH are named to honor the Rollins family. They include Pam Rollins (front row, left), Randall Rollins, Gary Rollins, Amy Rollins Kreisler (back row, right), and Peggy Rollins. Henry Tippie (back row, left) is a trustee of the O. Wayne Rollins Foundation.
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The Lawrence P. and Ann Estes Klamon Room, located in the Claudia Nance Rollins Building, is a popular venue for special events.
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These students are seated in front of a 1990 photo of O. Wayne and Grace Crum Rollins taken at Emory. Following Mr. Rollins' death in 1991, Mrs. Rollins and her sons fulfilled his interest in constructing a building to house the school.
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Four faculty members currently hold Rollins professorships, including Viola Vaccarino, chair of epidemiology (center), and Lance Waller, chair of biostatistics and bioinformatics (right).
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Stacey Mason, a second-year student majoring in health education, uses the Reading Room, a quiet place for study in the Grace Crum Rollins Building.
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During the renovation of the Grace Crum Rollins Building, this classroom was updated with smart technology to enhance teaching for instructors like Paul Weiss, senior associate of biostatistics and bioinformatics.
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Economist Gail Wilensky gives the Michael M.E. Johns MD Lecture on Health Policy in the Rollins Auditorium.
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Jennifer Mullé (right), Rollins assistant professor of epidemiology, and Ann Dodd, research specialist, are studying the genetic variants that contribute to schizophrenia.