The Day

Budget cloud doesn’t rain on Avery Point anniversar­y

UConn’s Groton campus celebrates 50 years amid state threat of shutdown

- By MARTHA SHANAHAN Day Staff Writer

Groton — The University of Connecticu­t’s southernmo­st outpost, once the estate of a wealthy philanthro­pist, was bustling Sunday afternoon as visitors celebrated Avery Point’s 50th anniversar­y as a college campus.

Students and faculty were on hand on the piece of land sticking out into the Thames River, showing off the scientific research they do there only weeks after Gov. Dannel P. Malloy had been there to warn that proposed cuts to the UConn budget could put the Avery Point campus “on the chopping block.”

But the atmosphere at Avery Point Sunday was upbeat.

Visitors sat through lectures by Avery Point professors, ate from food trucks, took boat rides guided by the Avery Point Sailing Club, danced to live music and met an impersonat­or of Morton Freeman Plant, the original owner of the Avery Point property and its Branford House mansion, which was added to the National Register of Historic places in 1984.

Steven Deignan-Schmidt, who will soon complete his Ph.D in physical oceanograp­hy, said he wouldn’t have gone to school anywhere else for the degree, though he said he was looking forward to being finished with his thesis on the movement of water around the Norwalk Islands in Long Island Sound.

Deignan-Schmidt, who was introducin­g visitors to a meteorolog­ical tower at the southern tip of the Av-

ery Point campus, said he appreciate­d the weekly soccer games between faculty and students and the camaraderi­e among researcher­s there.

“This is a great community,” he said. “There’s very much an open-door policy.”

Avery Point, once a Coast Guard research and developmen­t center, became a UConn campus in 1967 and underwent a major refurbishm­ent in 2001.

Deignan-Schmidt said he doesn’t take the threats of funding cuts to Avery Point seriously, citing multiple improvemen­ts to the campus the state has made in recent years and revenue that weddings and events on the campus’ Branford House generate.

When a young boy — an aspiring meteorolog­ist, his father said — approached the meteorolog­ical tower, Deignan-Schmidt launched into an explanatio­n of what each of the instrument­s at the top of the tower is for.

Across the campus, the most recent incarnatio­n of Jonathan, UConn’s canine mascot, investigat­ed a shallow pool filled with scallops, crabs and starfish, standing on his hind legs to poke his nose into the water.

Charlie Woods was overseeing the tank, but in his day job manages the Rankin Laboratory, a seawater laboratory that can supply up to 250 gallons per minute of seawater for students and researcher­s in the school’s marine science department.

“We have a bunch of amazing resources right here at our fingertips,” Woods said. “It’s taken for granted a lot of the time.”

Craig Tobias, an associate professor at Avery Point, was in a greenhouse attached to the laboratory, showing off the research on the effects of nutrients flowing into the ocean on marine environmen­ts that he and his students do at Avery Point. Two adjacent tanks — one clear, and one full of algae — demonstrat­ed the effects that oysters can have on the nutrients in water.

“We look at the legacy of hundreds of years of nutrient loading into the Long Island Sound,” he said. “This is where the rubber meets the road.”

 ?? DANA JENSEN THE DAY ?? Members of the Figueroa family of Ledyard and their relatives, the Saladin family of Groton, walk past the Avery Point lighthouse Sunday on their way to the marine sciences docks while attending the UConn Avery Point 50th anniversar­y festival in Groton.
DANA JENSEN THE DAY Members of the Figueroa family of Ledyard and their relatives, the Saladin family of Groton, walk past the Avery Point lighthouse Sunday on their way to the marine sciences docks while attending the UConn Avery Point 50th anniversar­y festival in Groton.

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