caes.ucdavis.edu · 2020-06-17 · 1 . university of california davis volume xlvi . annual report ....
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UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA DAVIS VOLUME XLVI
ANNUAL REPORT
OF THE FACULTY OF THE COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURAL & ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
TABLE OF CONTENTS
I. MINUTES OF THE MEETING OF MAY 16, 2020 (Appendix A)______________________24
II. ANNOUNCEMENTS ________________________________________________________ 2
III. ANNUAL REPORT BY ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICER _________________________________ 2
A. Summary of Executive Committee activities 2019-20—Russ Hovey, Chair __________________ 2
B. Summary of 2020-21 standing committee nominees ___________________________________ 5
C. Summary of the 2019-20 master adviser appointments _________________________________ 6
D. Proposed changes to the college bylaws and regulations: #10, #10A, #23(A) and 26(A) ________ 7
E. CA&ES membership (Appendix B)___________________________________________________37
Academic Senate_______________________________________________________________38
Academic Federation ___________________________________________________________50
IV. REPORTS OF STANDING COMMITTEES _______________________________________ 12
Graduate Education Committee—Dietmar Kueltz, Chair __________________________________ 12
Rules and Jurisdiction Committee—Gregory Pasternack, Chair _____________________________ 13
Student Actions and Commencement Awards Committee—Terrence Nathan, Chair ___________ 14
Undergraduate Majors and Courses Committee—Ken Shackel, Chair _______________________ 18
Undergraduate Program Review Committee—Tom Buckley, Chair __________________________ 19
V. SUMMARY REPORT _______________________________________________________ 20
Helene Dillard, Dean _______________________________________________________________ 20 Sanjai Parikh, Secretary Academic Senate and Academic Federation of the College of Agricultural & Environmental Sciences
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II. ANNOUNCEMENTS Commencement ceremonies: Because of the coronavirus pandemic, no in-person commencement ceremonies will be held in Spring 2020. 2020-21 Election results: There was no election held to fill six Academic Senate vacancies and one Academic Federation vacancy on the 2020-21 Faculty Executive Committee. The college received nominations from well-qualified candidates. All were placed on the committee with uncontested nominations. Two members who finished their 3-year term agreed to continue for an extra year.
Executive Committee membership (2020-21) Charles Brummer Plant Sciences Russ Hovey Animal Science Sahap Kaan Kurtural Viticulture and Enology
Mark Lubell Environmental Science and Policy Sanjai Parikh Land, Air and Water Resources Jorge Rodrigues Land, Air and Water Resources Sam Sandoval Land, Air and Water Resources
Incoming members: Bernadette Austin, Academic Federation, Human Sciences Daniela Barile, Academic Senate, Human Sciences Eduardo Blumwald, Academic Senate, Agricultural Sciences Georgia Drakakaki, Academic Senate, Agricultural Sciences Tina Saitone, Academic Federation, Human Sciences 2019-20 outgoing members: Kassim Al-Khatib, Academic Senate/Federation, Agricultural Sciences Jay Belsky, Academic Senate, Human Sciences Neil McRoberts, Academic Senate, Agricultural Sciences Greg Pasternack, Academic Senate, Environmental Sciences Kali Trzesniewski, Academic Federation, Human Sciences
III. ANNUAL REPORT BY ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICER
A. Summary of Executive Committee Activities 2019-20—Russ Hovey, Chair The report starts on the following page.
3 EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE:
FACULTY OF THE COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES ACADEMIC STAFF OF THE DIVISION OF AGRICULTURE AND NATURAL RESOURCES OFFICE OF THE DEAN AND DIRECTOR OF PROGRAMS
26 May 2020 Dear CA&ES Senate and Federation colleagues At the end of its 18/19 term, the College Faculty Executive Committee (FEC) membership was actively arm-twisting each other to identify a new Chair – as I mulled the need for someone to step up, I recall thinking to myself “there has to be zero likelihood that the incoming Chair will ever have to work through a situation comparable to the tragic and disruptive fall fires, and all the associated Senate dealings, in the coming year”. So much for that forecast.…. Quips aside, what has unfolded in the past few months has been beyond imaginable. From the outset, the FEC would like to convey, as has been shared across our campus many times already – sincere thanks to each and every one of you for your unwavering service to our College, your Departments and majors/minors, each other, our staff, our students and our stakeholders during these difficult times. Everyone has faced unique and repeated challenges, both personally and professionally, and many of these are still ongoing. Thank you for your perseverance and patience, alongside your commitment to doing the very best we can. For sure, these are among some of the many fine attributes shared by our College faculty. At this point I would also like to recognize and thank Brenda Nakamoto for her ongoing administrative support to the FEC during the year. Thank you, Brenda – your shared patience and institutional knowledge is remarkable, and sincerely appreciated! I would like to bring to the fore the many accomplishments among our faculty colleagues during the past year – including recipients of the 2020 Academic Senate and Federation awards. The James H. Meyer Distinguished Achievement award goes to CE Specialist Linda Harris (Food Science and Technology), while Associate Professor Jonathon London (Human Ecology) has been awarded the Distinguished Scholarly Public Service award. The Federation Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching award goes to CE Specialist Jeffrey Mitchell (Plant Sciences), and the Distinguished Service award was awarded to CE Specialist Ken Tate (Plant Sciences). Also, congratulations to Kyaw Tha Paw U (LAWR) for receiving the big 2019/20 Campus teaching prize! Professor Jim Fadel (Animal Science) was recognized as the Eleanor and Harry Walker Outstanding Faculty Advisor, and Assistant Professor Tina Horback (Animal Science) received the Chancellor’s award for excellence in mentoring undergraduate research. Associate Professor Christopher Simmons (Food Science and Technology) and Associate Professor Anne Todgham (Animal Science) are both 2020 Chancellor’s Fellows. Please accept our heartiest virtual congratulations as we all await being able congratulate you in person at one of many postponed ceremonies. Of course, these accolades are in addition to the many other prestigious awards received by many of you in other settings throughout the year – there are simply too many to specify here – congratulations to each and every one of you for the recognition you have received! As the Dean outlines in her attached update, the College is in the process of revising its strategic plan. The FEC will continue to play an important part of this equation, building on and extending faculty input that helped craft the original version. In fact, the FEC had proposed for this year’s Annual Meeting to serve as a key venue for gathering your feedback and input as part of that process. We are now working to hold a postponed annual meeting in the Fall, with the goal of having Departments contribute to the process through delegates. Please keep an eye out for developments on this front so important faculty input and feedback can be gathered. An ongoing and prioritized FEC effort in recent months has been work with the College leadership to input on budget considerations amidst an increasingly challenging fiscal backdrop. As faculty we are fortunate
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that the Senate affords each FEC with the opportunity to review and comment on College budgeting matters. As the COVID-19 pandemic unfolded, the FEC formed a budget subcommittee to allow for ongoing conversations about responses, and impacts, that will inevitably face us all. These discussions will contribute to the annual budget meeting with the Provost in the coming week, and will guide future feedback to the College leadership and its faculty as we go forward. During the past year the FEC has opined on a wide range of issues through the Academic Senate, at both the Executive Council level as well as through requests for consultation. Senate matters ranged from changes to the Inclusive access textbook policy, recruitment of the new Provost, standardized testing changes, and of course, urgent changes to instructional delivery and grading options necessitated by the pandemic. At the College level the FEC provided feedback on several undergraduate program reviews, proposed new and revised majors, and a review of the Agricultural Sustainability Institute. Details for many of these items are available through the Senate ASIS system. In addition, the FEC has shared feedback to campus leadership on several matters ranging from diversity/inclusion searches, changes to the format of graduation, and communication strategies during the COVID-19 outbreak. A consistent theme of this feedback has been the ongoing need for consultation and communication with faculty, which is critical if we are to capitalize on the virtues of faculty governance. One last thing I would like to bring your attention to is the recently-released TurnItIn plagiarism software that is now in place for your use, especially with remote teaching. This outcome is something the FEC was active in pursuing in the previous year, and hence it is important we all utilize this resource as much as possible. Accompanying the various committee reports herein is a call to vote on a few items that would normally be addressed at the in-person annual spring meeting. We will be handling this virtually by sending a Qualtrics survey link for a vote by Thursday June 4th, 2020, 5pm. The link to the Qualtrics survey for voting to address the items above was provided in the email accompanying these reports. Items on which you are being asked to vote include:
1. Approval of College 2020-21 standing committee rosters 2. Change to by-laws Part IV, 10 – term of FEC membership 3. Change to by-laws Part IV, 10 A6 – role of FEC in consultation 4. Changes to regulations Part I, 23A and 26A that address Pass/No Pass grading in College majors
and minors during Spring 2020 in response to the COVID-19 pandemic 5. Approval of the College Senate and Federation membership lists 6. Approval of the minutes of the 2019 Annual Spring CA&ES Faculty meeting on 5/16/19
Please join me in acknowledging all the hard work by members of the College standing committees whose reports are attached to this update. Likewise, please join me in thanking the support staff who keep all these committees on their toes! Finally, a big thanks also to all members of the 2019/20 FEC, whether you are staying on or stepping down. Your service and collegiality has been greatly appreciated! As we approach the end of the academic year, please take a chance to reflect (and take a breath!) on the many positives around us that make this an outstanding College. Please be sure to congratulate our graduates too, even if it is at a virtual graduation! Submitted respectfully
Russ Hovey Chair, CAES Faculty Executive Committee
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B. Summary of 2020-21 standing committee nominees The following college standing committee appointments to begin service in the 2019-20 academic year (starting in September) have been submitted to the CA&ES Executive Committee. Acceptance of these recommendations by the Academic Senate and Academic Federation will constitute formal appointment for service. It is expected that members will serve for three years.
COMMITTEE NAME DEPARTMENT Graduate Education (2020-21) Diane Beckles Plant Sciences Chris Calvert Animal Science Kris Godfrey CA&ES Dean’s Office Ben Montpetit Viticulture and Enology Elina Niño Entomology and Nematology Sanjai Parikh Land, Air and Water Resources Rules and Jurisdiction (2020-21) Christian Nansen Entomology and Nematology Zhongli Pan Biological and Agricultural Engineering Greg Pasternack (chair) Land, Air and Water Resources Student Actions and Individual Majors (2020-21) Alina Bara CA&ES Dean’s Office Xia Zhu Barker Land, Air and Water Resources Johan Leveau Plant Pathology Elizabeth Prado Nutrition Tina Saitone Agricultural and Resource Economics Dan Sumner Agricultural and Resource Economics Johnna Swartz Human Ecology Stavros Vougioukas Biological and Agricultural Engineering Undergraduate Majors and Courses (2020-21) Tom Buckley Plant Sciences Georgia Drakakaki Plant Sciences Bulat Gafarov Agricultural and Resource Economics Amélie Gaudin Plant Sciences Honora Knopp CA&ES Dean’s Office Tyler Scott Environmental Science and Policy Ken Shackel (chair) Plant Sciences Luxin Wang Food Science and Technology Bruce Watkins Nutrition Jeffrey Williams Agricultural and Resource Economics Undergraduate Program Review (2020-21) Charles Brummer (chair) Plant Sciences Joe Anistranski Human Ecology Tom Buckley Plant Sciences
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C. Summary of the 2019-20 master adviser appointments Major Program Master Adviser Animal Biology Robert Kimsey Agricultural and Environmental Education Deanne Meyer Animal Science and Management Jim Fadel Animal Science Ed DePeters Atmospheric Science Kyaw Tha Paw U Biotechnology John Yoder Clinical Nutrition Francene Steinberg Community and Regional Development Ryan Galt Environmental Horticulture and Urban Forestry Dan Potter Ecological Management and Restoration Ken Tate Entomology and Nematology Sharon Lawler and Steven Nadler Environmental Policy Analysis and Planning Gwen Arnold Environmental Science and Management Marissa Baskett and Terry Nathan Environmental Toxicology Matt Wood Food Science Alyson Mitchell Global Disease Biology Johan Leveau Human Development Leah Hibel Hydrology Mark Grismer International Agricultural Development Patrick Brown Pre-Landscape and Landscape Architecture David De La Pena Managerial Economics Jeffrey Williams Marine and Coastal Science Anne Todgham, CAES; Tessa Hill; John Largier; Brian Gaylord Nutrition Science Gerardo Mackenzie Plant Sciences Dan Potter Sustainable Agriculture and Food Systems Will Horwath Sustainable Environmental Design David De La Pena Viticulture and Enology Hildegarde Heymann Wildlife, Fish and Conservation Biology Brian Todd Undeclared/Exploratory Program Sue Ebeler Science and Society Program Dave Rizzo
Affiliated Major Biological and Agricultural Engineering Tina Jeoh
Majors closed, discontinued or suspended Agricultural Management and Rangeland Resources Kevin Rice Avian Sciences Annie King Crop Science and Management Environmental and Resource Sciences Environmental Biology and Management Marcel Holyoak Fiber and Polymer Science You-Lo Hsieh Individual Major Tom Gordon Pre-Managerial Economics Textiles and Clothing You-Lo Hsieh Soil and Water Science Will Horwath
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D. Proposed changes to the college bylaws and regulations
PROPROSED REVISION OF COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
BYLAWS AND REGULATIONS Part 4, #10 January 23, 2020
Submitted by the CA&ES Faculty Executive Committee (FEC) A Statement of the Rationale: The proposed wording changes to CA&ES bylaw Part 4, #10 is to provide guidelines in filling membership terms on the Faculty Executive Committee so that the numbers of vacancies each year stay in relative equal balance. The Proposed Language: Deletions are indicated by strikeout; additions are in bold type. 10. Executive Committee The Executive Committee shall consist of eight elected members of the Academic Senate
and four elected representatives of the Academic Federation, as defined in Part II, one nonvoting undergraduate student and one nonvoting graduate student representative, and the following as nonvoting ex officio members: the dean of the college and an associate dean selected by the dean of the college. The eight members of the Academic Senate and four representatives of the Academic Federation serve three-year terms. Term start dates should be staggered to ideally elect four new Academic Senate and one to two new Academic Federation members each year. If the terms of more than four Academic Senate members end at the same time, terms may be extended one year to re-balance start dates, at the discretion of the CA&ES Faculty Executive Committee. The divisions of Human and Environmental Sciences are each represented by two of the eight Academic Senate members and by one of the four Academic Federation representatives. The division of Agricultural Sciences is represented by four of the eight Academic Senate members and by two of the four Academic Federation representatives. A designated Executive Committee member shall serve as liaison for the college with campus libraries on matters of education.
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PROPROSED REVISION OF COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
BYLAWS AND REGULATIONS Part 4, #10, (A), #6 January 27, 2020
Submitted by the CA&ES Faculty Executive Committee (FEC) A Statement of the Rationale: The proposed wording changes to bylaw Part 4, #10, (A), #6 is to clarify the former broad, unclear verbiage to (a) state the role of the Faculty Executive Committee as the primary (though non-exclusive) Academic Senate consultative body given its status as the elected representative democratic entity for the Academic Senate and (b) clearly identify matters the Academic Senate of CA&ES deem worthy of consultation, specifically policy and procedures about academic affairs, including faculty hiring. These bylaws do not govern administrator behavior, but aids them in understanding what topics the College deems worth of consultation, which is otherwise unknown and arbitrarily discretionary. CA&ES faculty seek to codify the expectations of what matters they will have the opportunity to participate in two-way communication about with the administration of their College. The Proposed Language: Deletions are indicated by strikeout; additions are in bold type. 10. Executive Committee
(A) It shall be the duty of the Executive Committee:
(6) To serve as the primary (but non-exclusive) Academic Senate consultative body for the administration of the College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences on all policy and procedural changes to academic affairs, including faculty hiring. To consider administrative matters referred to it by the dean of the college (Renum. 2-22-94);
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PROPROSED REVISION OF COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
BYLAWS AND REGULATIONS Part 1, Regulations of the College, #23 (A) and #26 (A)
April 20, 2020
Submitted by the CA&ES Faculty Executive Committee (FEC) A Statement of the Rationale: In an effort to address the challenges and complexities faced by our students during the COVID-19 outbreak, the Faculty Executive Committee (FEC) of the College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences (CA&ES) has reviewed the College major and minor requirements related to Pass/No Pass grading (CA&ES Bylaws, Section 23A and 26A). As detailed below, for Spring quarter 2020, the FEC has approved to waive the requirements. The Proposed Language: Deletions are indicated by strikeout; additions are in bold type.
23. College Requirements (Renum. 3-16-76; 5-23-18)
(A) Each candidate must complete a program of study as prescribed in a major approved by the Undergraduate Majors and Courses Committee and published in the UC Davis General Catalog. The program of study constituting a major, as published in the General Catalog, shall include a specification of depth subject matter courses. The candidate must attain a grade point average of at least 2.000 for these courses. The candidate must complete all required courses for the major on a letter-graded basis, unless courses are only offered on a Passed/Not Passed basis (Am. 3-16-76; 5-13-83; 11-28-83; 2-14-84; 5-21-91; 6-10-98; Renum. 2-22-94; Am. 6-9-05; 5-23-18; 5-16-19).
For Spring 2020, the requirement that courses within the majors of the CA&ES to be
taken for a letter grade shall be waived for students in good academic standing. Courses taken for P/NP in satisfaction of major requirements will not be factored into a student’s GPA calculation. (Am. 5-20-20)
26. Minors (En. 5-21-91; Renum 2-22-94; 5-23-18)
(A) A minor will normally consist of a minimum of 18 to 24 units of upper division work. A grade point average of at least 2,000 is required for courses taken to fulfill the minor. The Passed/Not Passed option cannot be used for courses taken to fulfill minor requirements, unless the required course is only offered passed/not passed (En. 5-21-91; Am. 5-16-19).
For Spring 2020, the requirement that courses within the majors of the CA&ES to be taken for a letter grade shall be waived for students in good academic standing. Courses taken for P/NP in satisfaction of major requirements will not be factored into a student’s GPA calculation. (Am. 5-20-20)
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PROPROSED REVISION OF COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
BYLAWS AND REGULATIONS Part 1, Regulations of the College, #23 (A) and #26 (A)
May 29, 2020
Submitted by the CA&ES Faculty Executive Committee (FEC) A Statement of the Rationale: In addition to the previous bylaw revision proposal (Am. 5-20-20) currently being considered to allow the Pass/No Pass option grading for Spring 2020 quarter students, the Faculty Executive Committee (FEC) suggests additional bylaws revision, extending Pass/No Pass grading opportunity to students who are not in good academic standing. Wording for this suggested change is highlighted below in bold green type and dated (Am.5-29-20) The Proposed Language: Deletions are indicated by strikeout; additions are in bold type.
23. College Requirements (Renum. 3-16-76; 5-23-18)
(B) Each candidate must complete a program of study as prescribed in a major approved by the Undergraduate Majors and Courses Committee and published in the UC Davis General Catalog. The program of study constituting a major, as published in the General Catalog, shall include a specification of depth subject matter courses. The candidate must attain a grade point average of at least 2.000 for these courses. The candidate must complete all required courses for the major on a letter-graded basis, unless courses are only offered on a Passed/Not Passed basis (Am. 3-16-76; 5-13-83; 11-28-83; 2-14-84; 5-21-91; 6-10-98; Renum. 2-22-94; Am. 6-9-05; 5-23-18; 5-16-19).
For Spring 2020, the requirement that courses within the majors of the CA&ES to be
taken for a letter grade shall be waived for students in good academic standing. Courses taken for P/NP in satisfaction of major requirements will not be factored into a student’s GPA calculation. (Am. 5-20-20)
For Spring quarter 2020, an undergraduate student in the CA&ES who is not in good academic standing may opt to take specific major requirements on a Passed (P) or Not Passed (NP) basis up to the limits specified in the Davis Division Regulation A545(B) via petition and approval by the CA&ES Dean’s office. Courses taken for P/NP in satisfaction of major requirements will not be factored into a student’s GPA calculation. (Am. 5-29-20)
26. Minors (En. 5-21-91; Renum 2-22-94; 5-23-18)
(B) A minor will normally consist of a minimum of 18 to 24 units of upper division work. A grade point average of at least 2.000 is required for courses taken to fulfill the minor. The Passed/Not Passed option cannot be used for courses taken to fulfill minor requirements, unless the required course is only offered passed/not passed (En. 5-21-91; Am. 5-16-19).
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For Spring 2020, the requirement that courses within the minors of the CA&ES to be
taken for a letter grade shall be waived for students in good academic standing. Courses taken for P/NP in satisfaction of minor requirements will not be factored into a student’s GPA calculation. (Am. 5-20-20)
For Spring quarter 2020, an undergraduate student in the CA&ES who is not in good academic standing may opt to take specific minor requirements on a Passed (P) or Not Passed (NP) basis up to the limits specified in the Davis Division Regulation A545(B) via petition and approval by the CA&ES Dean’s office. Courses taken for P/NP in satisfaction of minor requirements will not be factored into a student’s GPA calculation. (Am. 5-29-20)
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IV. REPORTS OF STANDING COMMITTEES
Graduate Education Committee—Dietmar Kueltz, Chair 2019-20 Annual Report
May 2020 The committee ranked five applicants for the John E. Kinsella Memorial Prize and seventeen applicants for the Neal Van Alfen and James MacDonald Graduate Student Support Fund. Jennifer Schmidt emerged at the top of the committee’s ranking for the John E. Kinsella Memorial Prize. Her application provided the best evidence of meeting the college’s mission to serve agriculture, the environment, and human health and development. She stands out from an impressive pool of applicants as a well-rounded candidate with exceptional scholarship and academic achievements and with a documented strong drive for teamwork and leadership. The scholarly productivity of Jennifer from her dissertation is extraordinary. Jennifer has been tremendously productive during her PhD (twelve peer-reviewed papers in 4.5 yrs, eight of them as first author) working on aspects of agriculture that are critical to serving California and the world population, which was combined with academic successes (scholarships and GPA). Her PhD thesis represents novel and impactful research to promote sustainable agriculture by examining the microbial communities in the rhizosphere, demonstrating promising potential for soil management to address the need for increased and sustainable food production. Quantifying the implications of human impacts on the genetics of crop plants during her PhD project provides valuable strategies for future plant breeding that will enhance productivity and decrease negative environmental impacts of crop plants. In addition to her research, Jennifer’s outreach component during her thesis work was also very strong. She distinguished herself by contributing to the education and success of others through her leadership as a founding member of the UC Davis chapter of GOALS, peer mentoring incoming graduate students, and participation in graduate admissions. All recommendation letters were extremely enthusiastic and detailed and fully supportive of awarding the Kinsella Memorial Award to Jennifer Schmidt. Gwen Chodur from the Graduate Group in Nutritional Biology was recommended for the Neal Van Alfen and James MacDonald Graduate Student Support Fund. GEC members commented that Gwen Chodur is a 4th year PhD trainee and a first-generation student. Her research effort was deemed of very high quality and consistent with the mission of the CAES, with clear evidence of service and leadership. She is advancing a very challenging thesis project on diet and chronic disease, which has involved publications and collaborations across campus. Despite her challenging thesis research, Ms. Chodur has a flawless GPA of 4.0 and very elaborate record of extracurricular and outreach activities, including being External Vice-President for the UC Davis Graduate Student Association, and the President of the GGNB Student Advisory Committee. She is also a Professors of the Future program trainee and has engaged in and served her graduate group and the UC Davis campus community at a level well beyond what is expected of a graduate student. Gwen has further distinguished herself by serving at higher levels in the UC system and in bettering her community through the Graduate Student Pantry. Her mentor’s (Prof. Steinberg’s) statement can’t be topped: “She is the top doctoral student that I have mentored in my 20+ years as a UC Davis faculty member”. Overall, the quality and scientific merit of Gwen’s
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work as well as her extensive involvement in college, campus, and system-wide graduate student leadership activities are truly outstanding. These outstanding contributions to research, service, and supporting her community make it evident why she is deserving of this recognition. The committee has also been monitoring how new regulations precipitated by the virus pandemic are impacting graduate student education. In light of these changes, most notably online class delivery, the committee recommends that the workload on graduate students TA-ing laboratory courses that have to be re-designed to accommodate the online format be monitored closely and, if necessary, appropriate adjustments be made if this format of delivering lab courses is extended in the future due to the pandemic. Another noted point of impact on graduate student education was that thesis projects, internships, and coursework could be delayed, which may lead to longer completion times. Since this may affect eligibility for funding, the committee recommends that graduate student funding eligibility based on an expected 5-year (PhD) or 2-year (MS) completion time be revisited. Respectfully submitted, Dietmar Kueltz (chair), Chris Calvert, Ben Montpetit, Elina Lastro Niño, Sanjai J Parikh, Carlyn Bree Peterson, Tatiana Roubtsova, and Anne Visser
Rules and Jurisdiction Committee—Gregory Pasternack, Chair 2019-20 Annual Report
May 2020 The Rules and Jurisdiction (R&J) Committee met and proposed changes to the college bylaws and regulations: Proposed wording changes to Bylaw Part IV.10 provide additional guidelines in filling membership terms on the Faculty Executive Committee so that vacancies each year can stay in relative equal balance. Wording changes proposed to Regulations Part I. 23.A, and Part I. 26.A were written in an effort to address the challenges and complexities faced by our students during the COVID-19 outbreak. College major and minor requirements related to Pass/No Pass grading were reviewed, with revisions suggested for Spring Quarter 2020. These changes were approved by the Faculty Executive Committee (FEC) and sent for review to the Academic Senate Committee on Elections, Rules and Jurisdiction (CERJ). The revisions were approved and may now be presented to the college faculty for a vote. Revised wording changes to Bylaw Part IV.10.A.6 add clarity to unclear verbiage. Respectfully submitted, Greg Pasternack (chair), Zhongli Pan and Astrid Volder
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Student Actions and Commencement Awards Committee—Terrence Nathan, Chair 2019-20 Annual Report
May 14, 2020 Awards Application Online
This year the committee continued to provide access to the awards application online on the CA&ES website. The SACA Committee members are charged with reviewing, ranking, and making recommendations for the following campus and college specific prizes and awards:
• Undergraduate Travel Awards • The Provost’s Undergraduate Fellowship • Undergraduate college/university medals and various other college awards
Review of Candidate Applications for the Undergraduate Travel Awards
Each quarter the Undergraduate Research Center accepts applications for undergraduate travel to undergraduate research conferences and meetings of nationally and internationally recognized professional societies, or discipline specific events such as performance at nationally recognized festivals. The awards, which support the presentation of the students’ research, are for travel—planned or already completed— during the current academic year and during the preceding and following summers. The maximum award for out-of-state travel is $500, and the maximum award for in-state travel is $250.
The committee reviewed 12 applications for the Undergraduate Travel Awards. The committee ranked the applications and selected the top students, whose names were then sent forward for further review. The names listed below are this year’s Travel Award winners for CA&ES:
Kyle Johnson, Environmental Science and Management, Behavior 2019: A joint meeting of the 56th Annual Conf. of the Animal Behavior Society
Madhuri Narayan, Human Development Western Psychological Association
Emily Nguyen, Global Disease Biology UNC Water Microbiology Conference 2019
Kelly Neal, Environmental Science and Management 2019 Society for Freshwater Science (SFS) Annual Meeting
Zhuosheng Liu, Food Science Int. Assoc. for Food Protection, 2019 Annual Meeting National Conference on Undergraduate Research
Raven Barbera, Animal Science Western Regional Honors Council
Natalie McElroy, Environmental Science & Mgmt Soil Science Society of America
Madhuri Narayan, Human Development Society for Research in Child Development
Niharika Rane, Biotechnology National Conference on Undergraduate Research
Xingyue Zhang, Environmental Science & Mgmt World Bank Land & Poverty Conference
Anika Agrawal, Enviromental Toxicology Effects of Microplastic Ingestion on the Mole Crab (Emerita analoga)
Zhousheng Liu, Food Science and Technology Evaluation of Behavior of Food Pathogens on Dry Fruits
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Annalise Gushue, Plant Science, Building a Novel FRET Sensor for G Protein Signaling in Chemotaxis
Avalon Miller, Global Disease Biology Characterizing Structure-Function of Plant Organ Growth Regulating Complex
Samuel Deck, Biotechnology From Cancer Biology to Tomato Physiology: Mechanistic Characterization of DDA1-DDB1 Complex
Gautam Mathur, Environmental Science & Management Effects of Changing Precipitation on Plant Traits in the Southwestern US
Jonas Grove, Biotechnology Effect of CBF1 Silencing on Postharvest Chilling Injury in tomato (Solanum lycopersicum)
Maria Gonzalez, Animal Biology Evaluation of Three In-Vitro Platforms to Study Animal Gastrointestinal Function
Review of Candidate Applications for The Provost’s Undergraduate Fellowship
The Provost’s Undergraduate Fellowship (PUF) supports undergraduate students doing research or creative projects under the guidance of UC Davis faculty members. Students from all disciplines are eligible to apply in Fall and Spring. The maximum award is $1,800 toward approved costs directly related to the project. The applicants were ranked based on:
• Learning impact. What impact on the student’s future career will be made by this project? • Qualifications. Based on transcript, recommendation letter, and clarity and quality of the proposal. • Feasibility. Proposed approach is reasonable and well designed. • Budget. Requested materials and costs are reasonable and well justified
In Spring 2019, the SACA Chair, Terry Nathan, reviewed and ranked 6 applications for The Provost’s Undergraduate Fellowship (PUF). The following are the Spring 2019 CA&ES PUF Award winners.
Review of Applications for Undergraduate College/University medals and other College Awards
The committee reviewed 8 applications for the University/College Medal, and 32 applications for the Hess/Mary Regan awards. The committee met on three occasions to review and rank the candidates for all of the awards and selected the following four students who were interviewed for the University/College Medal: Amanda Burns, Chloe Celniker, Amanda Nguyen, and Sara Shin. At this time, the University Medalist has not been announced, which may change the awards for committee’s top two applicants: Amanda Nguyen and Amanda Burns.
The committee made the following Award Selections:
College Medal/ Possible University Medal: ($2,000/2500 and Medal) Amanda Nguyen Global Disease Biology
The Charles Hess Community Service Awards Confirmed Recipients ($2,500 each and plaque) Haley Adel Clinical Nutrition Timothy Crowell Sustainable Environmental Design
The Mary Regan Meyer Confirmed Recipient ($1,000 and plaque) Hana Minsky Global Disease Biology Julia Nguyen Global Disease Biology
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Dean’s Circle Award Confirmed Recipient ($1,000 and plaque) Amanda Burns* Environmental Toxicology Sara Shin Animal Science Chloe Celniker Environmental Science and Management * possible College Medalist
CA&ES Dean’s Office Advising Team Workload for the May 2019- May 2020 Academic Year
Number of General Student Petitions Reviewed by the CAES Dean’s Office Advising Team
Excess Units
Extension of an “I”
GE Second
Repeat Senior
residence
Change of
Majors
Minors Academic
Plans
Readmission Late
Drops Degree Checks
GRAND TOTAL
348 34 304 250 33 1965 905 444 393 591 ~1500 ~6767
Note 1: The above numbers above do not include the 2,431 graduation certifications that were reviewed and processed by the CA&ES Academic Counselors (Summer 2019=292 students; Fall 2019=265 students; Winter 2020=299 students; Spring 2020=1575 students). Note 2: The above numbers do not include the approximately 6,650 pre-scheduled and drop-in student appointments.
Action Items Pending in 2020
May • After the University Medalist is announced, congratulatory notifications will be sent to the
College Medalist, Dean’s Circle, and Meyer and Hess awardees via a letter from Dean Helene Dillard.
• Alina Bara (CA&ES Dean’s Office Staff Consultant) will send regret emails to the other applicants. • Alina Bara will coordinate with the CA&ES Commencement Team to order plaques and
certificates.
June • Virtual celebration and congratulation message from Dean Dillard. • “Meet your College Awardees and their UCD stories” will be posted on CA&ES website by the
college Communication Team
Late August • Alina will process the awardees’ payments in collaboration with CA&ES Financial Team. This
will be completed after the Spring 2020 degrees are awarded.
September • Payment checks will be mailed to the awardees by the CA&ES Financial Team.
Additional Information
The Committee thanks the members of the faculty who provided letters in support of the medal and awards nominees.
17 The Chairperson also thanks the Committee members for their efforts and dedication in providing thorough and effective review of the student award applications (Travel, PUF, College and University Medal, Hess and Mary Regan Meyer and newly approved Dean’s Circle Awards).
Respectfully submitted,
TERRY NATHAN, Chair and the committee members listed below: ALINA BARA, Academic Counselor, CA&ES Dean’s Office SUE EBELER, Ex Officio, Associate Dean, CA&ES Dean’s Office KRIS GODFREY, Project Scientist, CA&ES Dean’s Office JOHAN LEVEAU, Professor, Plant Pathology TERRY NATHAN, Professor, Land, Air, and Water Resources KEVIN NOVAN, Associate Professor, Agricultural and Resource Economics ELIZABETH PRADO, Assistant Professor, Nutrition PETER ROBINSON, Specialist in Cooperative Extension, Animal Science DAN SUMNER, Professor, Agricultural and Resource Economics ELENA TORRES‐SMALL, Undergraduate Student, Human Development STAVROS VOUGIOUKAS, Associate Professor, Biological & Agricultural Engineering LILIANA WILF, Undergraduate Student, Human Development
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Undergraduate Majors and Courses Committee—Ken Shackel, Chair 2019-20 Annual Report
May 24, 2020
UMAC met for 6 in-person and 2 on-line meetings from October 2019 – May 2020,. The committee reviewed about 60 courses, including full review, prerequisites only, and cancellations. The committee also reviewed changes to the following majors and minors:. Geographic Information Systems minor, Precision Agriculture minor, Human Development major, and Applied Computing and Information Systems (discontinue), as well as a proposal to establish an Agricultural and Environmental Technology major. Respectfully submitted, Ken Shackel, chair, Georgia Drakakaki, Luxin Wang, Bruce Watkins, Tom Buckley, Amy Mclean, Alyson Mitchell, Tyler Scott, Bulat Gafarov, Amy Mclean, Katherine Brafford, Simiao Wang; Honora Knopp, Greg Anderson (staff assistants); Sue Ebeler (ex-officio).
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Undergraduate Program Review Committee—Tom Buckley, Chair Interim UPRC Report for CAES Faculty Executive Committee Author: Tom Buckley (Chair, CAES Undergraduate Program Review Committee [UPRC], and Member, Senate Undergraduate Instruction Program Review Committee [UIPRC]) Date: 07 May 2020 Preface The UIPRC manages periodic review of all undergraduate instruction programs on campus. Every program is reviewed once every seven years, or after three years for new programs. For each program reviewed, a UIPRC committee member hosts a visit by a Review Team, consisting of one external and one internal reviewer. The team meets with faculty, administrators and students associated with the program under review. They then prepare a report summarizing the state of the program, including strengths and weaknesses, and making recommendations for future actions. The UIPRC host then prepares a secondary report based on the review team's report, and the UIPRC collectively revises that report before sending a final version to UGC. The function of the CAES UPRC is to summarize and report to the CAES FEC on CAES-related actions by UIPRC. Thus, the work of the CAES UPRC begins when the first CAES-related UIPRC report is finalized. Typically the UPRC chair in a given year reports to FEC the following fall, after all actions have been finalized through UGC. Current status of 2019-2020 UIPRC actions on CAES programs Three CAES programs are under review in the current cycle:
• Nutrition Science • Food Science and Technology • Viticulture and Enology
The UIPRC report for Nutrition Science was finalized by UIPRC last week and submitted to UGC on 01 May 20. I served as host for this program review, for which the campus visit took place in late January. Our report found that the Nutrition Science program is excellent, but could benefit from restructuring the degree requirements to reduce prescriptiveness and total unit requirements. We also noted the exceptionally high student-to-faculty ratio in the hosting Department (Dept of Nutrition), which exceeds CAES and campus averages by 70% and 126%, respectively. The UIPRC reports for the other two CAES programs under review in this cycle are still under revision by the committee. I can tentatively report, based on the draft UIPRC reports that reviews for both programs were generally positive.
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V. SUMMARY REPORT
Helene Dillard, Dean The report starts on the following page.
College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences Office of the Dean 150 Mrak Hall One Shields Avenue Davis, CA 95616 (530) 752-1605
Faculty College of Agricultural & Environmental Sciences Dear Faculty, It’s hard to imagine now that the start of this academic year in fall 2019 seemed very “normal.” Our enrollment was close to target, our new faculty hires were on campus, College Celebration was an outstanding event, and the usual hustle bustle of the fall quarter was in full swing. As winter quarter started, we began to hear about an illness that spread quickly and had a high mortality rate. Before the quarter ended, we found ourselves in a pandemic, and headlines in every news broadcast started with reports of death from COVID-19. Our academic environment faced major changes in a crisis that progressed so rapidly, pandemic related emails released in the morning became obsolete by the evening. Before winter quarter ended, we found ourselves “sheltering in place.” Our students left the dorms and moved home and final exams were completed online. Our faculty closed their laboratories, and graduate students and post docs put research on hold. We scrambled to adjust to state and county orders, and we worked closely with UC Davis leadership to find ways to continue critical research. As of May 19, 2020, we are still “sheltering in place,” but we’ve settled into this new reality despite the challenges we face. We continue to teach remotely as we approach the end of the spring quarter, and we now have direction on how to gradually re-open some labs with guidance from the Office of Research. Faculty committees have been appointed to help guide us through teaching and research scenarios for fall quarter 2020, and we have plans for managing summer sessions. One of the biggest adjustments we will face within the college and across campus pertains to budgets. Our college budget has enabled us to engage in a robust hiring plan for the last five years and invest in critical infrastructure to support research and teaching. Unfortunately, prior to COVID-19, we observed a steep decline in our purchasing power as expenses soared and the university passed down major budget cuts to the colleges, schools and service units. The pandemic brought high fixed expenditures and drastically reduced our revenue environment, and we are experiencing additional budget cuts from the state via the Governor’s amended budget. Last year, our presentation at the annual faculty meeting stated that we were on track to close the fiscal year with a small positive margin. In contrast, this year we will close with a large, negative margin. Despite our budget challenges, we must continue to move forward with our research, teaching, outreach and extension efforts as we inspire and foster discovery, innovation and impact. We will do our best to hire a modest number of critically needed faculty and look for ways to upgrade our facilities. And we will move forward with our efforts to close the achievement gap and increase the four-year graduation rates of our undergraduates. Our development team is doing an outstanding job of identifying new donors and securing high impact gifts from alumni and friends of the college. The chairs have provided us with departmental fundraising priorities, which are critical in guiding our discussions with donors.
May 20, 2020
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Also, we are in the process of refreshing our strategic plan. We have appointed faculty to a 2020 CA&ES Academic and Strategic Planning Committee to review the 2015 Academic and Strategic Plan, the Dean’s Report of Accomplishments and the Campus Strategic Plan. The committee will prepare an updated draft plan for faculty review, which:
• Affirms the elements that are still relevant • Updates those that need to be refreshed • Incorporates input from a variety of constituents • Includes student needs • Aligns with the Campus Strategic Plan
Collectively, our college, departments, units and individual efforts strengthen our resolve to be the best at research, teaching, outreach and extension. We are grateful for our partnerships and collaborations on and off campus that provide much needed support and stability during this turbulent time. Thank you. You have done an extraordinary job of adjusting your research, teaching and outreach to provide a safe environment while sheltering during this pandemic. I am grateful for your perseverance through this difficult time of uncertainty and unprecedented change. You all have risen to the occasion, taught your classes remotely, helped your graduate students and postdocs, assisted staff and mentored anxious and worried students and colleagues. Pandemics eventually end, and this one will as well. On a positive note, we will have new insights on how students learn and have developed successful approaches for online teaching. We are becoming more resilient in the face of rapid change and uncertainty, and I expect many of us are eager to interact in person. I look forward to the next phase and “the new normal.”
Sincerely, Helene R. Dillard, Ph.D. Dean and Professor
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--- REAPPOINTED DEPARTMENT CHAIRS: Bob Rice completed 5 years of service as chair of Environmental Toxicology and was recommended to the Chancellor for a new term. Bob was reappointed for a second term effective 7/1/19. Francene Steinberg completed 5 years of service as chair of Nutrition and was recommended to the Chancellor for a new term. Francene was appointed for her third term effective 7/1/19. Bryan Jenkins completed 5 years of service as chair of Biological and Agricultural Engineering and was recommended to the Chancellor for a new term. Bryan was reappointed for a two-year term effective 7/1/19. CA&ES RECRUITMENTS UNDERWAY: April 29, 2020 Tentative Offers Accepted 1. ANIMAL SCIENCE: CE Specialist, Feedlot Management (8/1/20) 2. ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & POLICY: Asst. Professor, Environmental Justice (7/1/20) 3. ENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY: Asst. Professor, Environmental Chemistry (7/1/20) 4. NUTRITION: Asst. Professor, Nutrition and Behavior Change (7/1/20) 5. PLANT PATHOLOGY: Asst. Professor of Teaching, Global Disease Biology (7/1/20) 6. PLANT SCIENCES: Assoc. Professor, Grassland Ecology (7/1/20) 7. PLANT SCIENCES: Asst. Professor, Climate Change and Plant Genomics (7/1/20) 8. WFCB: Asst. Professor of Teaching, Wildlife Ecology and Conservation (7/1/20)
Currently Interviewing Candidates 1. ANIMAL SCIENCE: Asst. Professor of Teaching, Science Communication 2. BIOLOGICAL & AGRICULTURAL ENGINEERING: Asst. Professor, Controlled Environment
Engineering 3. BIOLOGICAL & AGRICULTURAL ENGINEERING: Asst. Professor of Teaching, Remote
Sensing 4. FOOD SCIENCE &TECHNOLOGY: Asst. Professor, Food Physical Chemistry 5. PLANT SCIENCES: Asst. Professor, Plant Reproductive Biology
Currently Evaluating Candidates 1. ANIMAL SCIENCE: Asst. Professor, Animal Welfare Epidemiology 2. LAND, AIR & WATER RESOURCES: Asst. Professor, Soil-Plant Interactions 3. LAND, AIR & WATER RESOURCES: Asst. Professor, Soil and Landscape Processes
UNDERGRADATE ENROLLMENT AND ADMISSIONS as of 5/19/2020 Target for Fall 2020 is 2,052 Number of admitted freshmen: 4,519 Number of admitted transfer: 1,768 Total: 6,287 Statements of Intent to Register (SIR) are running slightly below normal as of 5/19/2020. The university has gone to the waitlist and will continue to assess the targets and make additional waitlist offers to those remaining in the pool as appropriate.
24 Minutes of the May 16, 2019 CA&ES Annual Spring Meeting Appendix A
APPROVAL OF MINUTES OF THE 2019 ANNUAL MEETING
Minutes
Annual Spring Meeting of the Academic Senate and Academic Federation of the College of Agricultural & Environmental Sciences
Thursday, May 16, 2019
4:00 pm – 6:00 pm Multipurpose Room, Student Community Center
I. MINUTES OF THE MEETING of May 23, 2018
Motion - It was moved and seconded to approve the minutes of the 2018 annual meeting. The motion carried.
II. ANNOUNCEMENTS Chair Greg Pasternack reminded faculty of the upcoming commencement ceremonies to be held on Sunday, June 16, 2019 at 9:00 am and 2:00 pm in the ARC Pavilion. He encouraged faculty to attend. He announced the names of two new members on the 2019-20 Faculty Executive Committee: Charlie Brummer (Department of Plant Sciences) and Sam Sandoval (Department of Land, Air and Water Resources). III. CA&ES FACULTY EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE PURPOSE Chair Pasternack gave an overview of the purpose and function of the Faculty Executive Committee. His presentation, based on the college bylaws, stressed the three main duties of the committee: leadership, committee management and the maintaining of a faculty membership list. In its leadership role, the FEC coordinates faculty actions of the college Academic Senate and Federation. It also considers matters referred to it by the dean and receives requests for committee actions from standing committees. The FEC maintains the faculty membership list by doing periodic reviews and updates. IV. ANNUAL REPORT BY ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICER
A. Summary of Executive Committee activities 2018-19 – Greg Pasternack, Chair Chair Pasternack reported on FEC areas of action this year –
• California Center for Urban Horticulture (CCUH) Review - The FEC listened and responded to the review of the CCUH.
• World Food Center - The FEC stayed involved with the progress of the Implementation Committee of the World Food Center.
• Collaborative on Academic Careers in Higher Education (COACHE) Survey - At the request of the dean, the FEC formed an ad hoc committee that responded to a review of the data gathered in the college faculty satisfaction survey conducted by COACHE. The COACHE survey data—administered by the Harvard Graduate School of Education to participating institutions as a tool to investigate satisfaction of faculty in areas of their work—was provided to campus for response and feedback by colleges/units. The ad hoc CA&ES committee in which Greg chaired, reviewed and analyzed survey results and came up with recommendations and suggestions for the dean to consider in her response to the campus request for COACHE survey responses related to our college. One of the committee
25 Minutes of the May 16, 2019 CA&ES Annual Spring Meeting Appendix A
findings was the determination that CA&ES faculty had a generally higher level of job satisfaction than UC Davis faculty and professors nationally.
• Student Teaching - The FEC advocated for a review and overhaul of student teaching. With encouragement from the CA&ES FEC this year, the Davis Division Academic Senate established a committee to further investigate teaching. A CA&ES faculty member is assigned to this Academic Senate committee.
• Plagiarism - The FEC strongly recommended the campus acquire a plagiarism detection service for use by campus faculty to enhance faculty teaching. UCSD and UCLA are already using a plagiarism detection service to facilitate with combating plagiarism. No immediate responses have yet occurred, but the FEC is fully supportive of obtaining this service.
• The Scheduling of Finals - The FEC is in the process of investigating inconsistencies in the scheduling of final exams, partly due to concern that some college students could have as many as 4 final exams scheduled in one day, and that this could be affecting student education and faculty success. Meetings with Vice Chair Russ Hovey and the Academic Senate and the Registrar’s Office have offered a better understanding of the scheduling process and has initiated an investigation by the Registrar’s Office into its policies and practices on finals scheduling. Discussion is ongoing.
• Requests for Consultation (RFCs) – The FEC responded to 19 RFCs posted from the Davis Division Academic Senate this year. RFC comments are posted on the Academic Senate website.
• Chair Pasternack’s PowerPoint slide presentation can be found in the agenda of the May 23, 2019 Annual Faculty Meeting.
Executive Committee membership (2019-20) Kassim Al-Khatib Plant Sciences Jay Belsky Human Ecology Russ Hovey Animal Science Sahap Kaan Kurtural Viticulture and Enology
Mark Lubell Environmental Science and Policy Neil McRoberts Plant Pathology Sanjai Parikh Land, Air and Water Resources Greg Pasternack Land, Air and Water Resources Jorge Rodrigues Land, Air and Water Resources Kali Trzesniewski Human Ecology
Incoming members: Charles Brummer, Academic Senate, Agricultural Division Samuel Sandoval, Academic Federation and Academic Senate,
Environmental Division 2018-19 outgoing members: Martin Kenney, Academic Senate, Human Sciences Division Christian Nansen, Academic Senate, Agricultural Division Leslie Roche, Academic Federation, Agricultural Division
26 Minutes of the May 16, 2019 CA&ES Annual Spring Meeting Appendix A
B. Summary of 2019-20 standing committee nominees
B. Summary of 2019-20 standing committee nominees Motion: It was moved and seconded to approve the 2019-20 standing committees. The motion carried.
COMMITTEE NAME DEPARTMENT Graduate Education (2019-20) Chris Calvert Animal Science Dietmar Kueltz (chair) Animal Science Ben Montpetit Viticulture and Enology Elina Niño Entomology and Nematology Sanjai Parikh Land, Air and Water Resources Tatiana Roubtsova Plant Pathology Anne Visser Human Ecology Rules and Jurisdiction (2019-20) Zhongli Pan Biological and Agricultural Engineering Greg Pasternack (chair) Land, Air and Water Resources Astrid Volder Plant Sciences Student Actions and Individual Majors (2019-20) Alina Bara CA&ES Dean’s Office Kris Godfrey CA&ES Dean’s Office Johan Leveau Plant Pathology Terry Nathan Land, Air and Water Resources Elizabeth Prado Nutrition Peter Robinson Animal Science Stavros Vougioukas Biological and Agricultural Engineering Florence Zakharov (chair) Plant Sciences Undergraduate Majors and Courses (2019-20) Tom Buckley Plant Sciences Georgia Drakakaki Plant Sciences Bulat Gafarov Agricultural and Resource Economics Honora Knopp CA&ES Dean’s Office Amy McLean Animal Science Alyson Mitchell Food Science and Technology Tyler Scott Environmental Science and Policy Ken Shackel (chair) Plant Sciences Luxin Wang Food Science and Technology Bruce Watkins Nutrition Undergraduate Program Review (2019-20) Joe Anistranski Human Ecology Tom Buckley Plant Sciences Ning Pan (chair) Textiles and Clothing
27 Minutes of the May 16, 2019 CA&ES Annual Spring Meeting Appendix A
Approval of the CA&ES membership list: Per the college bylaws, each year the membership list of college faculty is updated and made available for review.
Motion: A motion was moved and seconded to approve the revised college membership list of Academic Senate and Academic Federation faculty. The motion carried.
College Bylaws and Regulations:
Chair Pasternack summarized the proposed revisions of the bylaws that were submitted in the meeting agenda packet. These changes added clarification for course Passed/Not Passed options and for courses taken for a letter grade.
Motion: A motion was moved and seconded to approve the amendments to the bylaws. The motion passed unanimously.
V. REPORTS OF CA&ES STANDING COMMITTEES The reports of the standing committees were printed in the meeting call and oral presentations were not made. VI. INTRODUCTION & RECOGNITION OF NEW & PREVIOUS CA&ES CHAIRS Dean Helene Dillard came to the podium and welcomed the new chair of Human Ecology, Leigh Ann Simmons, who began her position on April 1, 2019. Bill Lacy (who was not present) was thanked for his service as the interim chair. The dean thanked Bob Rice for completing a 5-year term as chair of Environmental Toxicology and said he has been recommended to the chancellor for a second consecutive term. Francine Steinberg completed a 5-year term as chair of Nutrition and is being recommended to the Chancellor for a third term. Introduction of New Faculty The dean asked that new faculty in the room stand and introduce themselves to the group. Each introduction was followed by a round of applause. VII. DEPARTMENT ACCOMPLISHMENTS Department chairs or representatives gave brief reports on a few of their most important accomplishments and any department concerns from this past year. Following is a summary of these oral presentations. Agricultural and Resource Economics – report from the chair, Rachael Goodhue. The department expanded its website that now posts continual updates. The department publishes a weekly newsletter. Faculty are proud this year to have increased by 40% the number of women hired in the department. Animal Science – report from the chair, Jim Murray Chair Murray announced highlights of faculty awards. Anita Oberbauer received the Undergraduate Teaching Award and Research Prize, Alison Van Eenennaam received the James H. Meyer Award. Frank Mitloehner received the Distinguished Teaching Award and
28 Minutes of the May 16, 2019 CA&ES Annual Spring Meeting Appendix A
Council for Agricultural Science and Technology (CAST) Borlaug Communication Award. Animal Science had a very successful year obtaining extramural funding. This included two $5 million dollar awards: a US Agency for International Development (USAID) Food Innovation Laboratory award renewal received by Huaijun Zhou for the Genetic Improvement of Poultry in Africa, and an award from the National Feed Industry Foundation (iFeeder Foundation), supporting the establishment of an animal agriculture communication center under the direction of Frank Mitloehner. Of concern to the faculty is the lack of adequate teaching facilities and classroom space amidst their teaching in a successful and large Animal Science Department major. Biological and Agricultural Engineering—report from the chair, Bryan Jenkins Chair Jenkins gave an overview of new faculty hires, retirements, departures and awards.
• New Faculty: A recruitment for a joint position with the Department of Viticulture and Enology is underway. The department is fortunate to have several positions allocated for recruitment over the next two years.
• Faculty retirements and departures: Prof. Ken Giles retired as of 1 January 2019 after 32 years with the University. Prof. Jean VanderGheynst left last September after 22 years with the department to become Dean of Engineering at the University of Massachusetts-Dartmouth. Dr. Mir Shafii who teaches in the ABT program announced he will retire near the end of fall quarter.
• Faculty Awards: Prof. David Slaughter will be presented with the ASABE Cyrus Hall McCormick-Jerome Increase Case Gold Medal in July at the Annual International Meeting in Boston. The award, one of the top honors that the American Society of Agricultural and Biological Engineers (ASABE) bestows, “honors exceptional and meritorious engineering achievement in agriculture that has resulted in new concepts, products, processes or methods that advanced the development of agriculture.” Prof. D. Ken Giles, was elected Fellow of the National Academy of Inventors (NAI). This honors him as a highly creative inventor who has made a significant and tangible impact on "quality of life, economic development and the welfare of society." Prof. Zhongli Pan won an AE50 Award for development of the SAUNA Food Waste Nutrition Conversion System that is now in production by Treasure8 Company of San Francisco. Sponsored by ASABE, the AE50 awards are given to top innovative products commercialized in the previous year. Prof. Zhongli Pan and his Innovative Infrared Research and Development team were the recipients of the 2018 Institute of Food Technologists (IFT) Research and Development Award for their research, development and commercial implementation of sustainable infrared heating technologies for “improved food healthfulness, quality, and safety while saving energy and water during food processing.” The Almond Board of California presented the ASABE Student Branch Robotics Team with a check to help support their participation in the robotics competition at the ASABE Annual International Meeting this summer in Boston. The Graduate Student Association (GSA) was successful in obtaining an award of $30,000 from ASABE to initiate a regional student rally to bring biological and agricultural engineering students together from across the state.
29 Minutes of the May 16, 2019 CA&ES Annual Spring Meeting Appendix A
Environmental Science and Policy – report from the chair, Marcel Holyok Environmental Science and Policy had one new faculty hire, Xiaoli Dong, an Applied Ecosystem Modeler, who uses three-dimensional models to integrate biological and physico-chemical processes in modeling aquatic ecosystems. The department will have two retiring faculty: Eliska Rejmankova, a wetland ecologist, and Alan Hastings, a theoretical ecologist who is a National Academy of Sciences member. Alan just received two major grants and will be staying to conduct research. The majors are thriving. Next year the department will celebrate its 50th anniversary, and it is organizing a large event and working on fundraising, inviting emeriti and alumni. Environmental Toxicology – report from the chair, Bob Rice Chair Rice reported that the Department of Environmental Toxicology welcomed two new faculty to UC Davis. Sascha Nicklish started officially last November, and Allison Ehrlich will arrive this September. Sascha studies how pollutants accumulate in animals, and Allison studies how pollutants affect our immune system. Faculty member, Andrew Whitehead published a paper in Science that reported a finding germane to potential loss of species worldwide due to their changing environment, including pollution. In a collaborative effort, Andrew’s lab found that a small fish species (killifish) living in the polluted Houston Ship Channel (Texas) survived using genes donated by a close relative that, before migrating to Texas, became resistant to a similarly polluted environment in the East Coast. Food Science and Technology – report from Selina Wang On behalf of the department chair, Selina Wang reported on new faculty, retirements and department awards. New Faculty:
• Selina Wang, Specialist in Cooperative Extension (July 1, 2018) o parameters that occur during fruit and vegetable post-harvesting, processing
and storage. Retirements: Gary Smith (June 30, 2018) and Charlie Bamforth Faculty and Academic Awards:
• Ned Spang, Spring 2019 Excellence in Advising, Faculty Advisor, National Academic Advising Assoc. (NACADA Region 9)
• Maria Marco, Spring 2019 Appointed to International Scientific Association for Probiotics and Prebiotics Board of Directors
• Charlie Bamforth - 2018 Horace Brown Medal, Institute of Brewing & Distilling, 2018 Recognition Award, Brewer’s Association and 2018 Award of Honor, Master Brewers Association of the Americas
Student Awards:
• Nick Jensen (Mills Lab), 7th annual Danone North America Gut Microbiome, Yogurt, and Probiotics Fellowship Grant - $25,000 (April 2019)
30 Minutes of the May 16, 2019 CA&ES Annual Spring Meeting Appendix A
• Xiaochen (Ellie) Yin 2018 John E. Kinsella Memorial Prize (Marco Laboratory) • Randall Robinson 2019 John E. Kinsella Memorial Prize (Barile Laboratory)
Human Ecology – report from the chair, Leigh Ann Simmons Chair Simmons reported that the department is embarking on a new strategic direction to integrate research, scholarship, outreach and instruction across their three programs: Human Development, Community Development, and Landscape Architecture and Environmental Design. The faculty are integrating and updating their leadership structure, creating shared courses across their majors, initiating departmental faculty hires that are going to be faculty wide, and identifying a department wide project on an issue in which they can work together to take advantage of their expertise in power and place. New Faculty: Meng Huo conducts innovative studies that explore aging and is an international expert on social integration. Land Air and Water Resources – report from the chair, Will Horwath Chair Horwath reported on department retirements and new faculty for the year. Retirements: Randy Southard, Randy Dahlgren and Susan Ustin will retire this year. New Faculty: The department hired five new faculty the past year. Two of the positions were Specialists in CE in the areas of soil, plant, water and irrigation.
• Erwan Monier - climate change and the impacts on society. • Cristina Lazcano - soil/plant nutrition • Kosana Suvocarev (CE) – biometeorology • Majdi Abou Najm – soil plant water relations/deficit irrigation
Peter Hernes in the hydrology program was made a Fellow in the Association of Science of Oceanography. Ben Houlton received a large center grant from the state working with the California Innovation Center. He wrote one of the Big Ideas on climate, One Climate, approved by the Provost. The challenge the department is experiencing this year is in funding startups. Plant Pathology – report from the chair, Dave Rizzo Chair Rizzo announced the department has taken the lead as part of the Plant Diagnostic Network. It has established a lab and formalized their diagnostics to help plant scientists, farm advisors and faculty work on plant diseases. Pam Ronald was elected this year to the National Academy of Sciences.
31 Minutes of the May 16, 2019 CA&ES Annual Spring Meeting Appendix A
Plant Sciences – report from the chair, Gail Taylor Chair Taylor gave an overview of new faculty to the department and announced some of the awards and accomplishments of the year. Plant Sciences has a new and more functional website New Faculty:
• Christine Diepenbrock (assistant professor). Improving the nutritional quality of food staple crops, such as maize, sorghum, and specialty crops
• Amanda Crump (lecturer with potential for security of employment). International agricultural development is her expertise area;
The department has 4 ongoing recruitments and has secured their first choices in each of these. Faculty / Staff Awards:
• Allen Van Deynze won the Lifetime Achievement Award from the International Pepper Conference. He also won the Federation Award for Outstanding Research Achievement.
• Eduardo Blumwald and Jorge Dubcovsky reached the Global List of Most-Cited Researchers this year.
• Beth Mitcham, Michael Reid (emeritus) received the “UC Davis Innovators of the Year: DryCard Team.”
• Kent Bradford and Francois Korn received the “UC Davis Innovation Community Partner Award” for their work with Seed Central
Faculty Accomplishments:
• Tom Buckley was made Chief Editor of AoB Plants; May 2018. Research:
• Steve Knapp and Michigan State University sequenced the Genome of the Cultivated Strawberry;
• Allen Van Deynze, Howard Shapiro, Alan Bennett, et al. published a paper on their study, Indigenous Mexican Corn Variety Captures Nitrogen from Air
Other:
• Kassim Al-Khatib (Principal Investigator), Jim Hill (emeritus Plant Sciences), Ermias Kebreab (Animal Science); are working together on a USAID Egypt Project;
• The department is beginning research to breed hemp on campus and cannabis off campus. John Yoder is running a Cannabis Seminar for Graduate Students about the scientific overview of biology, genetics, biochemistry, and the pharmacological potential of Cannabis.
• UC Davis Remains No. 1 Nationally in Plant and Animal Science; U.S. News and World Report; Nov. 2018;
Funding: • Patrick H. Brown won $450,000 from Foundation for Food and Agriculture Research
(FFAR) and the Almond Board of California to do research to enhance soil practices and soil health in almond orchards.
32 Minutes of the May 16, 2019 CA&ES Annual Spring Meeting Appendix A
• Richard Michelmore was awarded $5 million from FFAR and Crops of the Future for his research on lettuce.
Textiles and Clothing – report from Bryan Jenkins Bryan reported that Academic Senate systemwide approved the closure of Textiles and Clothing majors and minors. The disestablishment of the Division of Textiles and Clothing was proposed and transfer of faculty to the department of Biological and Agricultural Engineering is pending. Viticulture and Enology – report by Andrew Waterhouse Andrew reported on news from the department. Retirements:
• Larry Williams, 36 years of service. Viticulture and Enology hosted a symposium on April 18, 2019 to honor Larry and his work on irrigation.
Hires:
• The department hired Megan Bartlett, PhD UCLA, a postdoc at Princeton, who will study how grapevine traits respond to climate change. Elisabeth Forrestel, PhD Yale, and a postdoc at Harvard, will study the ecophysiology of climate adaptation
Awards: • Prof. Sue Ebeler is the 2019 Honorary Research Lecturer for the American Society for
Enology and Viticulture • Prof. Ben Montpetit received a prestigious $1M Keck Award.
Extension Events:
• The department held around 14 one-day industry focused symposia and workshops on and off campus this year.
Staff Hire:
• The department’s new winemaker is Leticia Chacon-Rodriguez, a UCD alum. Wildlife, Fish, and Conservation Biology – report from the chair, Nann Fangue Chair Fangue reported on highlights and accomplishments from the WFCB department this year.
• The department has 300+ majors, 53 graduate students, 18 postdocs and 11 faculty. The museum is thriving.
Awards:
• Prof. Eric Post was elected an American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) 2018 Fellow.
• Prof. John Eadie won the Faculty and Staff Stewardship Award,
33 Minutes of the May 16, 2019 CA&ES Annual Spring Meeting Appendix A
Retirement: • Prof Tim Caro retired.
New Faculty:
• Kiva Oken, Quantitative Fisheries Ecologist • Justine Smith, habitat ecologist
Funding Award:
• The Horodas Family Foundation for Conservation Research funded WFCB graduate student research projects focused on the conservation of biodiversity or ecosystem services.
Presentation – Hopland Research and Extension Center John Bailey, the superintendent of Hopland Research and Extension Center (REC), invited by Ron Tjeerdema and Deanne Meyer who recently visited the Hopland REC, gave a Zoom presentation to the group. He informed them of the recent reorganization of ANR RECs and how faculty could benefit. The Hopland REC is in Mendocino County, a 2 ½ drive from Davis. Purchased by UC in 1951, it comprises 5,400 acres of a rich diversity of vegetation, landscape and wildlife. A team of staff are available to assist faculty with their research needs, and there is available lab space and equipment for use by researchers. A recent wildfire burned two-thirds of the Hopland site, and with data that Hopland has collected on their site from the last 50 years, provides an opportunity for research. Faculty interested in work on RECs may submit project proposals. Each of the RECs have their own unique ecosystems and resources to offer researchers. VIII. STATE OF THE COLLEGE ADDRESS Dean Helene Dillard came to the podium. Report on Undergraduate and Graduate Students: Dean Dillard updated the group on current undergraduate and graduate student enrollment in the college. She said the college majors have experienced a trend of increasing enrollment over the past ten years. After the implementation of the 2020 Initiative, the campus was on a trajectory for 40,000 students enrolled by the year 2025. However, per a recent report given by the Provost, the campus is now leveling enrollment with the current number of students, based partly on challenges faced by a lack of student dorm and classroom space, among other constraints. The enrollment target for Fall 2019 for CA&ES freshmen and transfer students is 1,982. This is from a total of 11,179 CA&ES applications received. The dean anticipates the college enrollment to level out, consistent with the trend of campus. The college programs with the highest enrollments, from years 2014-2018, included - Managerial Economics, Animal Science, Human Development, Environmental Science and Management, Clinical Nutrition, Animal Biology, Global Disease Biology, Undeclared Exploratory Program, Wildlife, Fish and Conservation Biology, and Nutrition Science. The GPA for incoming freshmen and transfer students to the college stayed consistent with numbers
34 Minutes of the May 16, 2019 CA&ES Annual Spring Meeting Appendix A
reported in the last six years. The GPA of the incoming Fall 2018 Freshmen Class was 4.02 and for the incoming Transfer Class was 3.36. The CA&ES UC cumulative Fall 2018 GPA was 3.05. The dean provided maps based on longitude and latitude generated data for Fall 2018 enrolled students. The maps showed enrollments by counties in California, by states nationally, and by countries internationally. She said some of the challenges students have in rural areas in the state is with lack of access to AP courses or to courses that would prepare them for UC Davis. She noted that higher numbers of enrollments in the state were clustered in the Bay and Los Angeles areas. The dean continues to focus attention on recruitments from the less represented central and northern parts of the state. She is also interested in increasing recruitment from areas across the country and internationally that are also not as represented. There are higher numbers of international students from the Asian countries, and, per the numbers reported on the map, no enrolled students in the college from Africa, Australia or Latin America. The dean also reported on the number of graduate students enrolled in the graduate groups/ programs under the CA&ES Lead Dean designation. Currently, there are 1,126 graduate students in the college. The college works to attract top graduate students with support packages but faces challenges from other institutions with competitive support packages. UC Davis has been designated a Hispanic-Serving Institution (HIS). The dean said that CA&ES student enrollment statistics also reflect closely the numbers targeted in the HSI demographics. The college is doing well with enrollment numbers of first generation students, as well as with low-income students. There was a suggestion from the audience to initiate mentoring for underrepresented undergraduate students, as has been successfully done for graduate students to help them transition academically. Faculty Recruitment The dean reported the college has 40 active faculty recruitments underway. New faculty FTE recruitments have numbered 20 each year for the two previous years. Current recruitments in the ongoing year were reduced to 10. This decision was made to slow the pace to keep within the college budget and to allow for increased start up and renovation costs. The dean said the college budget is doing well. It is on track to closing with a narrow margin in the positive for fiscal year 2018-19. The dean acknowledged Executive Assistant Dean Penny Herbert for her efforts in overseeing the college budget. The college is participating in an open search for an assistant professor in the CA&ES, the result of a grant funded by the UC Office of the President for the purpose of increasing the diversity of ladder rank faculty. The dean reported that 177 applications in the college were reviewed and a search committee narrowed down the pool to 4 candidates. The candidates, all potentially for different college departments, were ranked by the Search Committee using a department vote based on rubrics. Associate Dean Ron Tjeerdema, also a co-chair on the Search Committee, reported on the results of this search that was nearing the final stages.
35 Minutes of the May 16, 2019 CA&ES Annual Spring Meeting Appendix A
Research Challenges Recent changes initiated in the Farm Bill passed in December 2018 added required 100% USDA matching funds. This change has caused concerns in the college, in particular to proposals for specialty crops where the 100% match is now required. Improving Infrastructure Challenges The dean continues to work on improving infrastructure in the college to support the large number of faculty startups and to respond to college facility needs. She showed a slide with a breakdown of the percentage of university costs to build on campus, compared to the baseline of off campus commercial costs. The items named in the list totaled an additional 156% cost for each campus project, relative to off campus. The dean reported on the projected amounts of campus costs models for campus to build. Examples of such projections included a classroom facility at $955 per sq. ft., a greenhouse at $323 per sq. ft. and student housing at $549 per sq. ft. Facility Upgrades: The dean reported on college facilities currently in the works for renovation/upgrades: Center for Aquatic Biology and Aquaculture (CABA), Precision Irrigation Project, Greenhouses, Vertical Container Farm, Environmental Science and Policy, Environmental Toxicology, Computing FARM, Goat/Dairy Creamery and Controlled Environment Facility (CEF). Development Update: The dean reported the college development year total currently at $8.9 with an additional $1 million secured recently. The college goal is $12.3 million. Development faced a tough year with position vacancies and a team not running at 100%. However, the dean is preparing the unit for the campus campaign with two searches currently underway for an Assistant Dean and an Assistant Director of Development. A new Assistant Director of Development began her position in April. The dean reported that the college has secured $146.2 million, or 20% of the expected $500 million goal of the campus campaign. College fundraising has come from 5,138 donors, including 1,328 new donors, a very positive sign. The dean reported on a recent gift of $2.7 million bequest to create the Charles Rick Endowed Fellowship in Plant Sciences and another gift of $2.5 million to create endowed funds in Pomology and Conservation Biology. College Goals: Below is a list of some of the college goals the dean wishes to address.
• Infrastructure - The dean wants to work on improving infrastructure: installing modern equipment and getting state of the art facilities in the college.
• 4-year Graduation Rate and Achievement Gap – The dean intends to increase the college 4-year graduation rate and close the achievement gap with underrepresented students. These are concerns not just for the college, but also voiced on campus and with the campuses systemwide.
• Communication – The dean will work on increased communication on a local, regional, national and international level. A new videographer is being hired in the communications unit to work on increasing visibility on the college website.
36 Minutes of the May 16, 2019 CA&ES Annual Spring Meeting Appendix A
• Philanthropy – The dean is excited to support the chairs and faculty in securing funding for gifts, such as endowed chairs or endowed research funds. She has created a successful new experiential learning fund that is supporting teaching for students.
Vision for a Pathway Forward: Dean Dillard is interested in activities that inspire and foster discovery, innovation and impact. She wants to support faculty in their endeavors. She will ask the departments to think about how they envision their futures, and how she and the dean’s office can be asked to help. She hopes to work on philanthropy and secure funding for activities that will be transformational for the faculty, i.e. large single gifts with wide impacts. The college is due to complete a new comprehensive strategic plan, and the dean is interested in hearing what the Dean’s Office can do to help make the college stronger. She will be reaching out to departments to ask them to work on their strategic plans. IX. OPEN DISCUSSION Question and Answer Period: What is the status of the associate dean vacancies? Ron Tjeerdema answered that the dean’s office is continuing to receive nominations for the positions. How can the college become number 1? Where will the future faculty FTE come from? The dean said the new faculty FTE were following in alignment with retirements, and she anticipated there will still be future new position, but perhaps at a slower rate. The dean closed by saying a thank you to Dean Mary Delany who finished her term as Executive Associate Dean and who will return to her department, and to Dave Campbell, finishing his term as Associate Dean and who will retire and move closer to family. Both individuals were not in attendance at this annual faculty meeting. The dean lead the group with a round of thank you applause. She acknowledged Ron Tjeerdema who is stepping up and in training for the duties of Executive Associate Dean that he will begin on July 1. The dean showed her appreciation for the group and members present and she adjourned the meeting. The meeting adjourned.
37 CA&ES membership – Academic Senate and Academic Federation Appendix B
CA&ES membership Starts on next page
CAES Membership List 4/29/20 Academic Senate 38
Senate of Federation
Name
Emeritus?
Home Department 1 S DILLARD,HELENE R AGR & ENV SCI DEANS OFFICE
2 S AGERTON,MARK JOSEPH AGR & RESOURCE ECON
3 S ALSTON,JULIAN M AGR & RESOURCE ECON 4 S BEATTY,TIMOTHY KM AGR & RESOURCE ECON
5 S BOUCHER,STEPHEN RICHARD AGR & RESOURCE ECON
6 S CARMAN,HOY YES AGR & RESOURCE ECON
7 S CARTER,COLIN A AGR & RESOURCE ECON
8 S CARTER,MICHAEL ROSS AGR & RESOURCE ECON
9 S CHALFANT,JAMES A AGR & RESOURCE ECON
10 S FARZIN,YEGANEH HOSSEIN YES AGR & RESOURCE ECON 11 S GAFAROV,BULAT AGR & RESOURCE ECON
12 S GARDNER,B D YES AGR & RESOURCE ECON 13 S GHANEM,DALIA ADEL AGR & RESOURCE ECON
14 S GOODHUE,RACHAEL E AGR & RESOURCE ECON
15 S GREEN,RICHARD D YES AGR & RESOURCE ECON
16 S HANSEN-LEWIS,JAMIE NICOLE AGR & RESOURCE ECON 17 S HAVENNER,ARTHUR M YES AGR & RESOURCE ECON
18 S HILSCHER,JENS D AGR & RESOURCE ECON 19 S HOWITT,RICHARD E YES AGR & RESOURCE ECON
20 S JARVIS,LOVELL S YES AGR & RESOURCE ECON
21 S JESSOE,KATRINA KOHAJDA AGR & RESOURCE ECON
22 S JOHNSTON,WARREN E YES AGR & RESOURCE ECON
23 S KIESEL,KRISTIN AGR & RESOURCE ECON 24 S LARSON,DOUGLAS M AGR & RESOURCE ECON
25 S LOGAN,SAMUEL H YES AGR & RESOURCE ECON 26 S LYBBERT,TRAVIS JAMES AGR & RESOURCE ECON
27 S MARTIN,PHILIP L YES AGR & RESOURCE ECON
28 S MCCALLA,ALEX F YES AGR & RESOURCE ECON
29 S MCCORKLE,C O YES AGR & RESOURCE ECON
30 S MEREL,PIERRE ROMAIN AGR & RESOURCE ECON
31 S NOVAN,KEVIN AGR & RESOURCE ECON 32 S PARIS,QUIRINO YES AGR & RESOURCE ECON
33 S REIMER,MATTHEW N AGR & RESOURCE ECON
34 S ROCHIN,REFUGIO I YES AGR & RESOURCE ECON 35 S SEXTON,RICHARD J AGR & RESOURCE ECON
36 S SHENOY,ASHISH AGR & RESOURCE ECON
37 S SHEPARD,LAWRENCE E YES AGR & RESOURCE ECON
38 S SMITH,AARON DAVID AGR & RESOURCE ECON 39 S SUMNER,DANIEL A AGR & RESOURCE ECON
40 S TAYLOR,J EDWARD AGR & RESOURCE ECON
41 S WILEN,JAMES E YES AGR & RESOURCE ECON
42 S WILLIAMS,JEFFREY AGR & RESOURCE ECON 43 S ADAMS,THOMAS E YES ANIMAL SCIENCE
44 S ANDERSON,GARY B YES ANIMAL SCIENCE
45 S ASHMORE,ROBERT C YES ANIMAL SCIENCE
46 S BERGER,TRISH J ANIMAL SCIENCE
47 S CALVERT,C C YES ANIMAL SCIENCE
CAES Membership List 4/29/20 Academic Senate 39
Senate of Federation
Name
Emeritus?
Home Department 48 S CHANG,ERNEST S YES ANIMAL SCIENCE
49 S CHENG,HAO ANIMAL SCIENCE
50 S CONKLIN,DOUGLAS E YES ANIMAL SCIENCE 51 S DELANY,MARY E ANIMAL SCIENCE
52 S DENICOL,ANNA CAROLINA ANIMAL SCIENCE
53 S DEPETERS,E J ANIMAL SCIENCE
54 S DOROSHOV,S I YES ANIMAL SCIENCE
55 S FADEL,JAMES G ANIMAL SCIENCE
56 S FAMULA,THOMAS R YES ANIMAL SCIENCE
57 S GALL,G A YES ANIMAL SCIENCE 58 S HACKMANN,TIMOTHY JOHN ANIMAL SCIENCE
59 S HESS,MATTHIAS ANIMAL SCIENCE 60 S HORBACK,KRISTINA MARIE ANIMAL SCIENCE
61 S HOVEY,RUSSELL C ANIMAL SCIENCE
62 S HUNG,SILAS S YES ANIMAL SCIENCE
63 S KEBREAB,ERMIAS ANIMAL SCIENCE 64 S KING,ANNIE J ANIMAL SCIENCE
65 S KLASING,KIRK C ANIMAL SCIENCE 66 S KUELTZ,DIETMAR ANIMAL SCIENCE
67 S LEE,YU-BANG YES ANIMAL SCIENCE
68 S LIU,YANHONG ANIMAL SCIENCE
69 S MAGA,ELIZABETH A ANIMAL SCIENCE
70 S MAKAGON-STUART,MAJA MALGORZATA ANIMAL SCIENCE 71 S MCLEAN,AMY ANIMAL SCIENCE
72 S MEDRANO,JUAN F YES ANIMAL SCIENCE 73 S MENCH,JOY A YES ANIMAL SCIENCE
74 S MIENALTOWSKI,MICHAEL JOHN ANIMAL SCIENCE
75 S MILLAM,JAMES R YES ANIMAL SCIENCE
76 S MILLER,MICHAEL RYAN ANIMAL SCIENCE
77 S/F MITLOEHNER,FRANK M ANIMAL SCIENCE
78 S MURRAY,JAMES D ANIMAL SCIENCE 79 S OBERBAUER,ANITA M ANIMAL SCIENCE
80 S PETTEY,LEE ALLEN ANIMAL SCIENCE
81 S PRICE,E O YES ANIMAL SCIENCE 82 S RADKE,KATHRYN L YES ANIMAL SCIENCE
83 S ROSER,JANET F YES ANIMAL SCIENCE
84 S ROSS,PABLO JUAN ANIMAL SCIENCE
85 S SAINZ,ROBERTO D YES ANIMAL SCIENCE 86 S TODGHAM,ANNE ELIZABETH ANIMAL SCIENCE
87 S TUCKER,CASSANDRA BLAINE ANIMAL SCIENCE
88 S VAHMANI,PAYAM ANIMAL SCIENCE
89 S WEATHERS,W W YES ANIMAL SCIENCE 90 S YANG,XIANG ANIMAL SCIENCE
91 S ZHOU,HUAIJUN ANIMAL SCIENCE
92 S ZINN,RICHARD A ANIMAL SCIENCE
93 S BORNHORST,GAIL MICHELLE BIO & AG ENGINEERING
94 S CHEN,PICTIAW YES BIO & AG ENGINEERING
CAES Membership List 4/29/20 Academic Senate 40
Senate of Federation
Name
Emeritus?
Home Department 95 S DACCACHE,ANDRE BIO & AG ENGINEERING
96 S DELWICHE,MICHAEL J YES BIO & AG ENGINEERING
97 S FAN,ZHILIANG BIO & AG ENGINEERING 98 S FATHALLAH,FADI A BIO & AG ENGINEERING
99 S GARRETT,ROGER E YES BIO & AG ENGINEERING
100 S GILES,DURHAM K YES BIO & AG ENGINEERING
101 S GOSS,JOHN R YES BIO & AG ENGINEERING
102 S HARTSOUGH,BRUCE R YES BIO & AG ENGINEERING
103 S HILLS,DAVID J YES BIO & AG ENGINEERING
104 S HSIEH,YOU-LO BIO & AG ENGINEERING 105 S JENKINS,BRYAN M BIO & AG ENGINEERING
106 S MILES,JOHN A YES BIO & AG ENGINEERING 107 S PAN,NING BIO & AG ENGINEERING
108 S PIEDRAHITA,RAUL H YES BIO & AG ENGINEERING
109 S RUMSEY,JAMES W YES BIO & AG ENGINEERING
110 S RUMSEY,T R YES BIO & AG ENGINEERING 111 S SINGH,RAJINDER P YES BIO & AG ENGINEERING
112 S SLAUGHTER,DAVID C BIO & AG ENGINEERING 113 S SUN,GANG BIO & AG ENGINEERING
114 S UPADHYAYA,SHRINIVASA K BIO & AG ENGINEERING
115 S VOUGIOUKAS,STAVROS GEORGE BIO & AG ENGINEERING
116 S YATES,WESLEY E YES BIO & AG ENGINEERING
117 S ZHANG,RUIHONG BIO & AG ENGINEERING 118 S ZICARI,TINA JEOH BIO & AG ENGINEERING
119 S ATTARDO,GEOFFREY MICHAEL ENTOMOLOGY & NEMATOLOGY 120 S BOND,JASON ENTOMOLOGY & NEMATOLOGY
121 S CAREY,JAMES R ENTOMOLOGY & NEMATOLOGY
122 S CASWELL-CHEN,EDWARD P YES ENTOMOLOGY & NEMATOLOGY
123 S CHIU,JOANNA C ENTOMOLOGY & NEMATOLOGY
124 S CRANSTON,PETER S YES ENTOMOLOGY & NEMATOLOGY
125 S DINGLE,HUGH YES ENTOMOLOGY & NEMATOLOGY 126 S EDMAN,JOHN D YES ENTOMOLOGY & NEMATOLOGY
127 S ELDRIDGE,BRUCE F YES ENTOMOLOGY & NEMATOLOGY
128 S FERRIS,HOWARD YES ENTOMOLOGY & NEMATOLOGY 129 S GARY,NORMAN E YES ENTOMOLOGY & NEMATOLOGY
130 S GRANETT,JEFFREY YES ENTOMOLOGY & NEMATOLOGY
131 S GRIGARICK,A A YES ENTOMOLOGY & NEMATOLOGY
132 S GULLAN,PENELOPE JEAN YES ENTOMOLOGY & NEMATOLOGY 133 S HAMMOCK,BRUCE D ENTOMOLOGY & NEMATOLOGY
134 S JAFFEE,BRUCE A YES ENTOMOLOGY & NEMATOLOGY
135 S JOHNSON,BRIAN R ENTOMOLOGY & NEMATOLOGY
136 S KARBAN,RICHARD ENTOMOLOGY & NEMATOLOGY 137 S KAYA,HARRY YES ENTOMOLOGY & NEMATOLOGY
138 S KIMSEY,LYNN S ENTOMOLOGY & NEMATOLOGY
139 S LAWLER,SHARON P ENTOMOLOGY & NEMATOLOGY
140 S LEWIS,EDWIN E YES ENTOMOLOGY & NEMATOLOGY
141 S LUCKHART,SHIRLEY YES ENTOMOLOGY & NEMATOLOGY
CAES Membership List 4/29/20 Academic Senate 41
Senate of Federation
Name
Emeritus?
Home Department 142 S MEINEKE,EMILY KATHRYN ENTOMOLOGY & NEMATOLOGY
143 S NADLER,STEVEN A ENTOMOLOGY & NEMATOLOGY
144 S NANSEN,CHRISTIAN ENTOMOLOGY & NEMATOLOGY 145 S PAGE JR.,ROBERT E YES ENTOMOLOGY & NEMATOLOGY
146 S PARRELLA,MICHAEL P YES ENTOMOLOGY & NEMATOLOGY
147 S PENG,YING-SHIN C YES ENTOMOLOGY & NEMATOLOGY
148 S ROSENHEIM,JAY A ENTOMOLOGY & NEMATOLOGY
149 S SCOTT,THOMAS W YES ENTOMOLOGY & NEMATOLOGY
150 S SIDDIQUE,SHAHID MASOOD ENTOMOLOGY & NEMATOLOGY
151 S ULLMAN,DIANE ELLA ENTOMOLOGY & NEMATOLOGY 152 S VANNETTE,RACHEL ENTOMOLOGY & NEMATOLOGY
153 S WARD,PHILIP S ENTOMOLOGY & NEMATOLOGY 154 S WASHINO,ROBERT K YES ENTOMOLOGY & NEMATOLOGY
155 S/F WESTERDAHL,BECKY B ENTOMOLOGY & NEMATOLOGY
156 S WILLIAMS,NEAL M ENTOMOLOGY & NEMATOLOGY
157 S YANG,LOUIE HAO-YIH ENTOMOLOGY & NEMATOLOGY 158 S/F ZALOM,FRANK G YES ENTOMOLOGY & NEMATOLOGY
159 S ARNOLD,GWENDOLYN B ENVIRON SCI & POLICY 160 S BASKETT,MARISSA L ENVIRON SCI & POLICY
161 S CORNELL,HOWARD V YES ENVIRON SCI & POLICY
162 S DONG,XIAOLI ENVIRON SCI & POLICY
163 S GOLDMAN,CHARLES R YES ENVIRON SCI & POLICY
164 S/F GROSHOLZ,EDWIN D ENVIRON SCI & POLICY 165 S HANDY,SUSAN L ENVIRON SCI & POLICY
166 S HARRISON,SUSAN P ENVIRON SCI & POLICY 167 S HASTINGS,ALAN M YES ENVIRON SCI & POLICY
168 S HIJMANS,ROBERT J ENVIRON SCI & POLICY
169 S HOLYOAK,MARCEL ENVIRON SCI & POLICY
170 S JOHNSTON,ROBERT A YES ENVIRON SCI & POLICY
171 S LARGIER,JOHN L ENVIRON SCI & POLICY
172 S LUBELL,MARK N ENVIRON SCI & POLICY 173 S MOORE,FRANCES C ENVIRON SCI & POLICY
174 S MORGAN,STEVEN G ENVIRON SCI & POLICY
175 S OGDEN,JOAN M YES ENVIRON SCI & POLICY 176 S ORLOVE,BENJAMIN S YES ENVIRON SCI & POLICY
177 S QUINN,JAMES F YES ENVIRON SCI & POLICY
178 S REJMANKOVA,ELISKA YES ENVIRON SCI & POLICY
179 S RICHERSON,PETER J YES ENVIRON SCI & POLICY 180 S SADRO,STEVEN ENVIRON SCI & POLICY
181 S SANCHIRICO,JAMES N ENVIRON SCI & POLICY
182 S SCHWARTZ,MARK W ENVIRON SCI & POLICY
183 S SCHWARTZ,SEYMOUR I YES ENVIRON SCI & POLICY 184 S SCOTT,TYLER A ENVIRON SCI & POLICY
185 S SIH,ANDREW ENVIRON SCI & POLICY
186 S SPERLING,DANIEL ENVIRON SCI & POLICY
187 S SPRINGBORN,MICHAEL R ENVIRON SCI & POLICY
188 S CHERR,GARY N YES ENVIRONMENTAL TOX
CAES Membership List 4/29/20 Academic Senate 42
Senate of Federation
Name
Emeritus?
Home Department 189 S CROSBY,D G YES ENVIRONMENTAL TOX
190 S DENISON,MICHAEL S YES ENVIRONMENTAL TOX
191 S HULLAR,THEODORE L YES ENVIRONMENTAL TOX 192 S LA MERRILL,MICHELE A ENVIRONMENTAL TOX
193 S NGUYEN,TRAN BAO ENVIRONMENTAL TOX
194 S NICKLISCH,SASCHA CT ENVIRONMENTAL TOX
195 S RICE,ROBERT H ENVIRONMENTAL TOX
196 S RIVELES,KAREN ENVIRONMENTAL TOX
197 S SEIBER,JAMES N YES ENVIRONMENTAL TOX
198 S SHIBAMOTO,T YES ENVIRONMENTAL TOX 199 S TJEERDEMA,RONALD S ENVIRONMENTAL TOX
200 S WHITEHEAD,JOHN ANDREW ENVIRONMENTAL TOX 201 S WOOD,MATTHEW JAMES ENVIRONMENTAL TOX
202 S WOOLLEY,DOROTHY E YES ENVIRONMENTAL TOX
203 S ZHANG,QI ENVIRONMENTAL TOX
204 S EHRLICH,ALLISON K ENVIRONMENTAL TOXI 205 S BAMFORTH,CHARLES W YES FOOD SCI & TECHNOLOGY
206 S BANDMAN,EVERETT YES FOOD SCI & TECHNOLOGY 207 S BARILE,DANIELA FOOD SCI & TECHNOLOGY
208 S BILTEKOFF,CHARLOTTE FOOD SCI & TECHNOLOGY
209 S DELARUE,JULIEN PIERRE FOOD SCI & TECHNOLOGY
210 S DUNGAN,STEPHANIE R FOOD SCI & TECHNOLOGY
211 S FOX,GLEN PATRICK FOOD SCI & TECHNOLOGY 212 S GERMAN,J B FOOD SCI & TECHNOLOGY
213 S GUINARD,JEAN-XAVIER FOOD SCI & TECHNOLOGY 214 S KROCHTA,JOHN M YES FOOD SCI & TECHNOLOGY
215 S MARIA FOOD SCI & TECHNOLOGY
216 S LEWIS,MICHAEL J YES FOOD SCI & TECHNOLOGY
217 S LUNGU,BWALYA FOOD SCI & TECHNOLOGY
218 S MARCO,MARIA LOUISE FOOD SCI & TECHNOLOGY
219 S MCCARTHY,KATHRYN L YES FOOD SCI & TECHNOLOGY 220 S MCCARTHY,MICHAEL J YES FOOD SCI & TECHNOLOGY
221 S MERSON,RICHARD L YES FOOD SCI & TECHNOLOGY
222 S MILLS,DAVID A FOOD SCI & TECHNOLOGY 223 S MITCHELL,ALYSON E FOOD SCI & TECHNOLOGY
224 S NITIN,NITIN FOOD SCI & TECHNOLOGY
225 S OGRYDZIAK,D M YES FOOD SCI & TECHNOLOGY
226 S OMAHONY,MICHAEL A YES FOOD SCI & TECHNOLOGY 227 S POWELL,ROBERT L FOOD SCI & TECHNOLOGY
228 S PRICE,CHESTER W YES FOOD SCI & TECHNOLOGY
229 S/F ROSENBERG,MOSHE FOOD SCI & TECHNOLOGY
230 S RUSSELL,GERALD F YES FOOD SCI & TECHNOLOGY 231 S SHOEMAKER III,CHARLES F YES FOOD SCI & TECHNOLOGY
232 S SIMMONS,CHRISTOPHER W FOOD SCI & TECHNOLOGY
233 S SMITH,GARY M YES FOOD SCI & TECHNOLOGY
234 S SPANG,EDWARD STEPHEN FOOD SCI & TECHNOLOGY
235 S TAHA,AMEER FOOD SCI & TECHNOLOGY
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Senate of Federation
Name
Emeritus?
Home Department 236 S WANG,LUXIN FOOD SCI & TECHNOLOGY
237 S YOUNG,GLENN M FOOD SCI & TECHNOLOGY
238 S ANISTRANSKI,JOSEPH ANTHONY HUMAN ECOLOGY 239 S BARTON,KEITH YES HUMAN ECOLOGY
240 S BELSKY,JAY HUMAN ECOLOGY
241 S BRAZIL,NOLI HUMAN ECOLOGY 242 S BRINKLEY,CATHERINE HUMAN ECOLOGY
243 S BRUSH,STEPHEN B YES HUMAN ECOLOGY
244 S CANNON,CLARE HUMAN ECOLOGY
245 S CHEN,ZHE HUMAN ECOLOGY 246 S CHOE,DANIEL EWON HUMAN ECOLOGY
247 S CHU,ERIC KWOK-WAI HUMAN ECOLOGY 248 S CONGER,KATHERINE J YES HUMAN ECOLOGY
249 S CONGER,RAND D YES HUMAN ECOLOGY
250 S COOPER,MARK H HUMAN ECOLOGY
251 S DE LA PENA,DAVID SCOTT HUMAN ECOLOGY 252 S FALBE,JENNIFER L HUMAN ECOLOGY
253 S FRANCIS,MARK O YES HUMAN ECOLOGY 254 S FUJIMOTO,ISAO YES HUMAN ECOLOGY
255 S GALT,RYAN E HUMAN ECOLOGY
256 S GRECO,STEVEN E HUMAN ECOLOGY
257 S GUARNIZO,LUIS E HUMAN ECOLOGY
258 S GUYER,AMANDA E HUMAN ECOLOGY 259 S HARPER,L V YES HUMAN ECOLOGY
260 S HERNANDEZ,MACIEL M HUMAN ECOLOGY 261 S HIBEL,LEAH CORINNE HUMAN ECOLOGY
262 S HIRTZ,FRANK YES HUMAN ECOLOGY
263 S HUO,MENG HUMAN ECOLOGY
264 S KENNEY,MARTIN F HUMAN ECOLOGY
265 S KIERS,ANNA HAVEN HUMAN ECOLOGY
266 S KRAFT,ROSEMARIE H YES HUMAN ECOLOGY 267 S LACY,WILLIAM BARKSDALE HUMAN ECOLOGY
268 S LIU,SIWEI HUMAN ECOLOGY
269 S LONDON,JONATHAN K HUMAN ECOLOGY 270 S MACCANNELL,E DEAN YES HUMAN ECOLOGY
271 S MASSEY,HEATH YES HUMAN ECOLOGY
272 S MCNIEL,EDWARD S YES HUMAN ECOLOGY
273 S MILLER,LISA S HUMAN ECOLOGY 274 S MILLIGAN,BRETT K HUMAN ECOLOGY
275 S MOMSEN,JANET YES HUMAN ECOLOGY
276 S NAPAWAN,NINA CLAIRE HUMAN ECOLOGY
277 S NISHINA,ADRIENNE R HUMAN ECOLOGY 278 S OBER,BETH A HUMAN ECOLOGY
279 S OWENS,PATSY E HUMAN ECOLOGY
280 S PILISUK,MARC YES HUMAN ECOLOGY
281 S RIOS,MICHAEL HUMAN ECOLOGY
282 S ROSSBACH,KATHERINE YES HUMAN ECOLOGY
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Senate of Federation
Name
Emeritus?
Home Department 283 S SCHLICKMAN,EMILY ELIZABETH HUMAN ECOLOGY
284 S SIMMONS,LEIGH ANN HUMAN ECOLOGY
285 S SMITH,MICHAEL P YES HUMAN ECOLOGY 286 S SWARTZ,JOHNNA R HUMAN ECOLOGY
287 S THAYER,R L YES HUMAN ECOLOGY
288 S TOMICH,THOMAS P HUMAN ECOLOGY
289 S VISSER,MARJORIE ANNE HUMAN ECOLOGY
290 S WELLS,MIRIAM J YES HUMAN ECOLOGY
291 S WHEELER,STEPHEN M HUMAN ECOLOGY
292 S BERTEAUX,RICHARD YES HUMAN ECOLOGY (ENVIRONMENTAL DESIGN) 293 S BUTLER,FRANCES C YES HUMAN ECOLOGY (ENVIRONMENTAL DESIGN)
294 S OLSEN,HELGE B YES HUMAN ECOLOGY (ENVIRONMENTAL DESIGN) 295 S STABB,JOANN C YES HUMAN ECOLOGY (ENVIRONMENTAL DESIGN)
296 S ABOU NAJM,MAJDI LAWR
297 S ANASTASIO,CORT LAWR
298 S BLEDSOE,CAROLINE S YES LAWR 299 S CARROLL,J J YES LAWR
300 S CHEN,SHU-HUA LAWR 301 S DAHLGREN,RANDY A YES LAWR
302 S DAHLKE,HELEN LAWR
303 S EPSTEIN,E YES LAWR
304 S FALOONA,IAN C LAWR
305 S FLOCCHINI,ROBERT G YES LAWR 306 S FOGG,GRAHAM E LAWR
307 S GRISMER,MARK E LAWR 308 S GROTJAHN,RICHARD LAWR
309 S/F HARTER,THOMAS LAWR
310 S HERNANDEZ,REBECCA R LAWR
311 S HERNES,PETER J LAWR
312 S HOPMANS,JAN W YES LAWR
313 S HORWATH,WILLIAM R LAWR 314 S HOULTON,BENJAMIN Z LAWR
315 S HSIAO,T C YES LAWR
316 S IGEL,ADELE M LAWR 317 S JACKSON,LOUISE E YES LAWR
318 S JIN,YUFANG LAWR
319 S KISEKKA,ISAYA LAWR
320 S KNIGHT,ALLEN YES LAWR 321 S LAZCANO LARKIN,MARIA CRISTINA LAWR
322 S MONIER,ERWAN LAWR
323 S NATHAN,TERRENCE R LAWR
324 S NIELSEN,D R YES LAWR 325 S/F O'GEEN,ANTHONY T LAWR
326 S PARIKH,SANJAI J LAWR
327 S PASTERNACK,GREGORY B LAWR
328 S PAW U,KYAW T LAWR
329 S PUENTE,CARLOS LAWR
CAES Membership List 4/29/20 Academic Senate 45
Senate of Federation
Name
Emeritus?
Home Department 330 S RECK,RUTH A YES LAWR
331 S RICHARDS,JAMES H YES LAWR
332 S ROBINSON,FRANK YES LAWR 333 S RODRIGUES,JORGE LAWR
334 S ROLSTON,D E YES LAWR
335 S/F SANDOVAL SOLIS,SAMUEL LAWR
336 S SCOTT,VERNE H YES LAWR
337 S SCOW,KATE M LAWR
338 S SHAW,ROGER H YES LAWR
339 S SHELTON,M L YES LAWR 340 S SILK,M W YES LAWR
341 S SINGER,M J YES LAWR 342 S SOONG,SU-TZAI YES LAWR
343 S SOUTHARD,RANDAL J YES LAWR
344 S ULLRICH,PAUL A LAWR
345 S USTIN,SUSAN L YES LAWR 346 S WALLENDER,WESLEY W YES LAWR
347 S WEARE,B C YES LAWR 348 S WEXLER,ANTHONY STEIN LAWR
349 S YANG,DA LAWR 350 S ZASOSKI,ROBERT J YES LAWR
351 S ALLEN,LINDSAY H YES NUTRITION
352 S APPLEGATE,ELIZABETH A YES NUTRITION 353 S BROWN,KENNETH HOWARD YES NUTRITION
354 S CHONDRONIKOLA,MARIA NUTRITION 355 S CLIFFORD,ANDREW J YES NUTRITION
356 S DEWEY,KATHRYN G YES NUTRITION
357 S ENGLE-STONE,REINA NUTRITION
358 S FETTER,DEBBIE NUTRITION
359 S GREENWOOD,MRC YES NUTRITION
360 S GRIVETTI,LOUIS E YES NUTRITION 361 S HAJ,FAWAZ GEORGE NUTRITION
362 S HAVEL,PETER J NUTRITION
363 S JI,PENG NUTRITION 364 S KEEN,CARL L NUTRITION
365 S LONNERDAL,BO L YES NUTRITION
366 S MACKENZIE,GERARDO GUILLERMO NUTRITION
367 S MCDONALD,ROGER B YES NUTRITION 368 S OTEIZA DE FRAGA,PATRICIA I NUTRITION
369 S PRADO,ELIZABETH LEAH NUTRITION
370 S RUCKER,ROBERT B YES NUTRITION
371 S SCHNEEMAN,BARBARA O YES NUTRITION 372 S SLUPSKY,CAROLYN MARIE NUTRITION
373 S STEINBERG,FRANCENE M NUTRITION
374 S STEWART,CHRISTINE PATRICIA NUTRITION
375 S ZIVKOVIC,ANGELA M NUTRITION
376 S BOSTOCK,RICHARD M PLANT PATHOLOGY
CAES Membership List 4/29/20 Academic Senate 46
Senate of Federation
Name
Emeritus?
Home Department 377 S BRUENING,GEORGE E YES PLANT PATHOLOGY
378 S COAKER,GITTA L PLANT PATHOLOGY
379 S COOK,DOUGLAS RANDAL PLANT PATHOLOGY 380 S DAVIS,RICHARD M YES PLANT PATHOLOGY
381 S DUNIWAY,J M YES PLANT PATHOLOGY
382 S EMERSON,JOANNE B PLANT PATHOLOGY
383 S EPSTEIN,LYNN YES PLANT PATHOLOGY
384 S FALK,BRYCE W PLANT PATHOLOGY
385 S GILBERTSON III,ROBERT L PLANT PATHOLOGY
386 S GILCHRIST,DAVID G YES PLANT PATHOLOGY 387 S GORDON,THOMAS R YES PLANT PATHOLOGY
388 S KADO,CLARENCE I YES PLANT PATHOLOGY 389 S LEVEAU,JOHAN HJ PLANT PATHOLOGY
390 S LOWE-POWER,TIFFANY PLANT PATHOLOGY
391 S MACDONALD,JAMES D YES PLANT PATHOLOGY
392 S MCROBERTS,DOUGLAS NEIL PLANT PATHOLOGY 393 S RIZZO,DAVID M PLANT PATHOLOGY
394 S RONALD,PAMELA C PLANT PATHOLOGY 395 S STERGIOPOULOS,IOANNIS PLANT PATHOLOGY
396 S VAN ALFEN,NEAL YES PLANT PATHOLOGY
397 S WEBSTER,ROBERT K YES PLANT PATHOLOGY
398 S WILLIAMSON,VALERIE M YES PLANT PATHOLOGY
399 S ABEL,STEFFEN YES PLANT SCIENCES 400 S/F AL-KHATIB,KASSIM PLANT SCIENCES
401 S BAILEY,BRIAN N PLANT SCIENCES 402 S BARBOUR,MICHAEL G YES PLANT SCIENCES
403 S BECKLES,DIANE M PLANT SCIENCES
404 S BENNETT,ALAN B PLANT SCIENCES
405 S BERRY,ALISON M YES PLANT SCIENCES
406 S BLANCO-ULATE,BARBARA PLANT SCIENCES
407 S BLISS,FREDRICK A YES PLANT SCIENCES 408 S BLOOM,ARNOLD J PLANT SCIENCES
409 S BLUMWALD,EDUARDO PLANT SCIENCES
410 S BRADFORD,KENT J YES PLANT SCIENCES
411 S BROWN,PATRICK H PLANT SCIENCES
412 S BROWN,PATRICK JAMES PLANT SCIENCES 413 S BRUMMER,EDWARD CHARLES PLANT SCIENCES
414 S BUCKLEY,THOMAS NORMAN PLANT SCIENCES
415 S BUDDENHAGEN,IVAN W YES PLANT SCIENCES
416 S BURGER,DAVID W YES PLANT SCIENCES
417 S CADENASSO,MARY L PLANT SCIENCES
418 S CRUMP,AMANDA PLANT SCIENCES 419 S DANDEKAR,ABHAYA M PLANT SCIENCES
420 S DEJONG,THEODORE M YES PLANT SCIENCES
421 S DEMMENT II,MONTAGUE W YES PLANT SCIENCES
422 S DENISON,ROBERT F YES PLANT SCIENCES
423 S DIEPENBROCK,CHRISTINE H PLANT SCIENCES
CAES Membership List 4/29/20 Academic Senate 47
Senate of Federation
Name
Emeritus?
Home Department 424 S DITOMASO,JOSEPH M YES PLANT SCIENCES
425 S DRAKAKAKI,GEORGIA PLANT SCIENCES
426 S DUBCOVSKY,JORGE PLANT SCIENCES 427 S DURZAN,DON J YES PLANT SCIENCES
428 S DVORAK,JAN PLANT SCIENCES
429 S EVINER,VALERIE PLANT SCIENCES
430 S FISCHER,ALBERT J YES PLANT SCIENCES
431 S FOIN,THEODORE C YES PLANT SCIENCES
432 S GAUDIN,AMELIE PLANT SCIENCES
433 S GEPTS,PAUL PLANT SCIENCES 434 S GILBERT,MATTHEW EDMUND PLANT SCIENCES
435 S GRADZIEL,THOMAS M PLANT SCIENCES 436 S HARDING,JAMES A YES PLANT SCIENCES
437 S HUFFAKER,R C YES PLANT SCIENCES
438 S JAIN,S K YES PLANT SCIENCES
439 S JASIENIUK,MARIE A PLANT SCIENCES 440 S JERNSTEDT,JUDY PLANT SCIENCES
441 S KLIEBENSTEIN,DANIEL J PLANT SCIENCES 442 S KNAPP,STEVEN J PLANT SCIENCES
443 S LACA,EMILIO A PLANT SCIENCES
444 S LATIMER,ANDREW MORRIS PLANT SCIENCES
445 S/F LIETH,JOHANN HEINRICH PLANT SCIENCES
446 S MAGNEY,TROY PLANT SCIENCES 447 S MARTIN,GEORGE C YES PLANT SCIENCES
448 S MELOTTO,MAELI PLANT SCIENCES 449 S MESGARAN,MOHSEN B PLANT SCIENCES
450 S MICHELMORE,RICHARD W PLANT SCIENCES
451 S NEALE,DAVID PLANT SCIENCES
452 S NEVINS,DONALD J YES PLANT SCIENCES
453 S NORRIS,ROBERT F YES PLANT SCIENCES
454 S PAUL,J L YES PLANT SCIENCES 455 S PHILLIPS,DONALD A YES PLANT SCIENCES
456 S PITTELKOW,CAMERON MARK PLANT SCIENCES
457 S PLANT,RICHARD E YES PLANT SCIENCES 458 S POLITO,V S YES PLANT SCIENCES
459 S POTTER,DANIEL PLANT SCIENCES
460 S QUALSET,C O YES PLANT SCIENCES
461 S QUIROS,CARLOS F YES PLANT SCIENCES 462 S RAGUSE,CHARLES A YES PLANT SCIENCES
463 S RAINS,D W YES PLANT SCIENCES
464 S RAPPAPORT,LAWRENCE YES PLANT SCIENCES
465 S REID,MICHAEL S YES PLANT SCIENCES 466 S RICE,KEVIN J YES PLANT SCIENCES
467 S ROMANI,R J YES PLANT SCIENCES
468 S RUNCIE,DANIEL E PLANT SCIENCES
469 S SALTVEIT JR.,MIKAL E YES PLANT SCIENCES
470 S SHACKEL,KENNETH A PLANT SCIENCES
CAES Membership List 4/29/20 Academic Senate 48
Senate of Federation
Name
Emeritus?
Home Department 471 S SHAW,DOUGLAS V YES PLANT SCIENCES
472 S ST CLAIR,DINA ANN PLANT SCIENCES
473 S SUNDARESAN,VENKATESAN PLANT SCIENCES 474 S/F TATE,KENNETH W PLANT SCIENCES
475 S TAYLOR,GAIL PLANT SCIENCES 476 S TIAN,LI PLANT SCIENCES
477 S TRAVIS,ROBERT L YES PLANT SCIENCES
478 S VALENTINE,RAYMOND C YES PLANT SCIENCES
479 S VAN KESSEL,CHRIS YES PLANT SCIENCES
480 S VOLDER,ASTRID PLANT SCIENCES 481 S WEINBAUM,STEVEN ALAN YES PLANT SCIENCES
482 S WU,LIN L YES PLANT SCIENCES 483 S YODER,JOHN I PLANT SCIENCES
484 S YOUNG,TRUMAN PLANT SCIENCES
485 S ZAKHAROV,FLORENCE PLANT SCIENCES
486 S ZWIENIECKI,MACIEJ A PLANT SCIENCES 487 S JETT,S C YES TEXTILES & CLOTHING
488 S LAKY,GYONGY YES TEXTILES & CLOTHING 489 S MORRIS,M A YES TEXTILES & CLOTHING
490 S RUCKER,MARGARET H YES TEXTILES & CLOTHING
491 S ZERONIAN,S HAIG YES TEXTILES & CLOTHING
492 S ADAMS,DOUGLAS O YES VIT & ENOLOGY
493 S BARTLETT,MEGAN KATHLEEN VIT & ENOLOGY 494 S BISSON,LINDA F YES VIT & ENOLOGY
495 S BLOCK,DAVID E VIT & ENOLOGY 496 S BOULTON,ROGER BRETT YES VIT & ENOLOGY
497 S CANTU,DARIO VIT & ENOLOGY
498 S EARLES,MASON VIT & ENOLOGY
499 S EBELER,SUSAN E VIT & ENOLOGY
500 S FORRESTEL,ELISABETH JANE VIT & ENOLOGY
501 S HEYMANN,HILDEGARDE VIT & ENOLOGY 502 S KLIEWER,WALTER M YES VIT & ENOLOGY
503 S LIDER,LLOYD YES VIT & ENOLOGY
504 S MATTHEWS,MARK A YES VIT & ENOLOGY 505 S MEREDITH,CAROLE P YES VIT & ENOLOGY
506 S MONTPETIT,BENJAMEN HUBERT WILLIAM VIT & ENOLOGY
507 S NOBLE,ANN C YES VIT & ENOLOGY
508 S RUNNEBAUM,RON C VIT & ENOLOGY 509 S WALKER,MICHAEL ANDREW VIT & ENOLOGY
510 S WATERHOUSE,ANDREW L VIT & ENOLOGY
511 S WILLIAMS,LARRY E YES VIT & ENOLOGY
512 S ANDERSON,D W YES WFCB 513 S BOTSFORD,LOUIS W YES WFCB
514 S CARO,TIMOTHY M YES WFCB
515 S CECH,J J YES WFCB
516 S EADIE,JOHN M WFCB
517 S ELLIOTT-FISK,DEBORAH L YES WFCB
CAES Membership List 4/29/20 Academic Senate 49
Senate of Federation
Name
Emeritus?
Home Department 518 S ERMAN,DON C YES WFCB
519 S FANGUE,NANN A WFCB
520 S KARP,DANIEL S WFCB 521 S KELT,DOUGLAS A WFCB
522 S MOYLE,PETER B YES WFCB
523 S OKEN,KIVA LAREN WFCB
524 S POST,ERIC WFCB
525 S RYPEL,ANDREW L WFCB 526 S SMITH,JUSTINE A WFCB
527 S SOLLMANN,RAHEL WFCB 528 S TODD,BRIAN D WFCB
529 S VAN VUREN,DIRK WFCB
CAES Membership List 4/29/20 Academic Federation 50
Senate of Federation
Name
Emeritus?
CE?
Home Department
1 F GOLDSTEIN,ROBIN S AG ISSUES CENTER
2 F ADAMCHAK,RODNEY W AGR & ENV SCI DEANS OFFICE
3 F ARAUJO,KARLA J AGR & ENV SCI DEANS OFFICE
4 F AUSTIN,BERNADETTE AGR & ENV SCI DEANS OFFICE
5 F BRODT,SONJA AGR & ENV SCI DEANS OFFICE
6 F FEENSTRA,GAIL W AGR & ENV SCI DEANS OFFICE
7 F FRIESNER,JOANNA DENISE AGR & ENV SCI DEANS OFFICE
8 F GODFREY,KRISTINE ELVIN AGR & ENV SCI DEANS OFFICE
9 F HILLHOUSE,CAROL AGR & ENV SCI DEANS OFFICE
10 F JOY,AMY BLOCK YES AGR & ENV SCI DEANS OFFICE
11 F KAISER,SUSAN B AGR & ENV SCI DEANS OFFICE
12 F LI,XUEQI AGR & ENV SCI DEANS OFFICE
13 F LIM,ADRIENNE C AGR & ENV SCI DEANS OFFICE
14 F RIVERS,VICTORIA Z AGR & ENV SCI DEANS OFFICE
15 F RODRIGUEZ,SARINA V AGR & ENV SCI DEANS OFFICE
16 F ROST,THOMAS L AGR & ENV SCI DEANS OFFICE 17 F TAUTGES,NICOLE E AGR & ENV SCI DEANS OFFICE
18 F TREXLER,CARY J AGR & ENV SCI DEANS OFFICE
19 F ULLMANN,KATHARINA S AGR & ENV SCI DEANS OFFICE
20 F VAN HORN,MARK YES AGR & ENV SCI DEANS OFFICE
21 F WALSE,SPENCER S AGR & ENV SCI DEANS OFFICE
22 F BERTONE OEHNINGER,ERNST AGR & RESOURCE ECON
23 F BLANK,STEVEN C YES AGR & RESOURCE ECON
24 F CHIU,TARA LYNN AGR & RESOURCE ECON
25 F CONSTANTINE,JOHN H AGR & RESOURCE ECON
26 F COOK,ROBERTA L YES AGR & RESOURCE ECON
27 F EKANAYAKE,CHANAKA T AGR & RESOURCE ECON
28 F GOODRICH,BRITTNEY YES AGR & RESOURCE ECON
29 F GOODRICH,RYAN JEFFREY AGR & RESOURCE ECON
30 F HARDESTY,SHERMAIN DEUS YES AGR & RESOURCE ECON
31 F JOHNSON,ERIC LEE AGR & RESOURCE ECON
32 F LUNDBLAD,GERALD T AGR & RESOURCE ECON
33 F MAXEY,JOHN D AGR & RESOURCE ECON
34 F MCNAMARA,JULIET R AGR & RESOURCE ECON
35 F TATE,TINA LYNN YES AGR & RESOURCE ECON
36 F VOSTI,STEPHEN A AGR & RESOURCE ECON
37 F ANDERSON,SHARISSA KATHLEEN ANIMAL SCIENCE
38 F AURINGER,GRACE MARIE ANIMAL SCIENCE
39 F BERRY,STEVEN L YES ANIMAL SCIENCE
40 F BILL,HANNAH MARIE ANIMAL SCIENCE
41 F BLATCHFORD,RICHARD A YES ANIMAL SCIENCE
42 F BRADLEY,FRANCINE A YES ANIMAL SCIENCE
43 F CARMICKLE,ALLIE TERESA ANIMAL SCIENCE
44 F CONTE,FRED S YES ANIMAL SCIENCE
45 F COOLEY RIEDERS,CHESSIE CLAIRE ANIMAL SCIENCE
46 F DE LEON SANCHEZ,ERIN E ANIMAL SCIENCE
47 F DUNBAR,JOHN R YES ANIMAL SCIENCE
CAES Membership List 4/29/20 Academic Federation 51
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CE?
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48 F ERNST,RALPH A YES ANIMAL SCIENCE
49 F FINGER,AMANDA J ANIMAL SCIENCE
50 F GOODBLA,ALISHA M ANIMAL SCIENCE
51 F GROSS,JASON ADAM YES ANIMAL SCIENCE
52 F HEDRICK,JERRY L YES ANIMAL SCIENCE
53 F HULL,JOSHUA MICHAEL ANIMAL SCIENCE
54 F JOAQUIN-MORALES,ZAIRA Y ANIMAL SCIENCE
55 F LEE,YEUNSHIN ANIMAL SCIENCE
56 F LIN,JASON C ANIMAL SCIENCE
57 F MACNIVEN,LEAH MARIE ANIMAL SCIENCE
58 F MAY,BERNARD P YES ANIMAL SCIENCE
59 F MEYER,DEANNE YES ANIMAL SCIENCE
60 S/F MITLOEHNER,FRANK M YES ANIMAL SCIENCE
61 F NAGARAJAN,RAMAN PAUL ANIMAL SCIENCE
62 F OLTJEN,JAMES W YES ANIMAL SCIENCE
63 F O'ROURKE,SEAN MICHAEL ANIMAL SCIENCE
64 F PETTEY,ERICA ANN ANIMAL SCIENCE 65 F ROBINSON,PETER H YES ANIMAL SCIENCE
66 F SCHREIER,ANDREA M ANIMAL SCIENCE
67 F TROTT,JOSEPHINE FRANCES ANIMAL SCIENCE
68 F VAN EENENNAAM,ALISON YES ANIMAL SCIENCE
69 F VORIS,JOHN YES ANIMAL SCIENCE
70 F WANG,YING ANIMAL SCIENCE
71 F WANG,ZIGUI ANIMAL SCIENCE
72 F WATTERS,JASON VINCENT ANIMAL SCIENCE
73 F ZEIDLER,GIDEON YES ANIMAL SCIENCE
74 F BRIGHAM,JILL DIANE BIO & AG ENGINEERING
75 F CHASE,SAMANTHA NOEL BIO & AG ENGINEERING
76 F DONIS-GONZALEZ,IRWIN RONALDO YES BIO & AG ENGINEERING
77 F FERNANDEZ BAYO,JESUS DIONISIO BIO & AG ENGINEERING
78 F GEBREIL,RAGAB KHIR ABD EL KADER BIO & AG ENGINEERING
79 F KHORSANDI KOUHANESTANI,FARZANEH YES BIO & AG ENGINEERING
80 F LEE,BRANDON T BIO & AG ENGINEERING
81 F MEYERS,JAMES MILTON YES BIO & AG ENGINEERING
82 F PAN,ZHONGLI BIO & AG ENGINEERING
83 F POURREZA,ALIREZA YES BIO & AG ENGINEERING
84 F SHAFII,MIR SAYEDAHMAD BIO & AG ENGINEERING
85 F STILES,MARTHA C YES BIO & AG ENGINEERING
86 F THOMPSON,JAMES F YES BIO & AG ENGINEERING
87 F VANDERGHEYNST,JEAN S BIO & AG ENGINEERING
88 F BEN MAHMOUD,SULLEY ENTOMOLOGY & NEMATOLOGY
89 F CLUFF,EMMA ENTOMOLOGY & NEMATOLOGY
90 F CORNEL,ANTHONY J ENTOMOLOGY & NEMATOLOGY
91 F FLINT,MARY L YES ENTOMOLOGY & NEMATOLOGY
92 F GRETTENBERGER,IAN M YES ENTOMOLOGY & NEMATOLOGY
93 F HODSON,AMANDA K ENTOMOLOGY & NEMATOLOGY
94 F HWANG,SUNG HEE ENTOMOLOGY & NEMATOLOGY
CAES Membership List 4/29/20 Academic Federation 52
Senate of Federation
Name
Emeritus?
CE?
Home Department
95 F KIMSEY,ROBERT B ENTOMOLOGY & NEMATOLOGY
96 F LI,DONGYANG ENTOMOLOGY & NEMATOLOGY
97 F MORISSEAU,CHRISTOPHE H ENTOMOLOGY & NEMATOLOGY
98 F MUELLER,TOBIAS G ENTOMOLOGY & NEMATOLOGY
99 F MUSSEN,ERIC C YES ENTOMOLOGY & NEMATOLOGY
100 F NINO,ELINA LASTRO YES ENTOMOLOGY & NEMATOLOGY
101 F SCHAEFER,CHARLES H YES ENTOMOLOGY & NEMATOLOGY
102 F STARRETT,JAMES ENTOMOLOGY & NEMATOLOGY
103 F SUMMERS,CHARLES YES ENTOMOLOGY & NEMATOLOGY
104 F VASYLIEVA,NATALIA ENTOMOLOGY & NEMATOLOGY
105 F WAGNER,KAREN M ENTOMOLOGY & NEMATOLOGY
106 S/F WESTERDAHL,BECKY B YES ENTOMOLOGY & NEMATOLOGY
107 F YANG,JUN ENTOMOLOGY & NEMATOLOGY
108 S/F ZALOM,FRANK G YES ENTOMOLOGY & NEMATOLOGY
109 F BUNN,DAVID ALEXANDER ENVIRON SCI & POLICY
110 F FREER-SMITH,PETER ENVIRON SCI & POLICY
111 S/F GROSHOLZ,EDWIN D YES ENVIRON SCI & POLICY 112 F HEINEKE,MARCELLA R ENVIRON SCI & POLICY
113 F HUBER,PATRICK R ENVIRON SCI & POLICY
114 F IVES,JOHN YES ENVIRON SCI & POLICY
115 F JASSBY,ALAN D YES ENVIRON SCI & POLICY
116 F MCCOY,MICHAEL C YES ENVIRON SCI & POLICY
117 F REUTER,JOHN E YES ENVIRON SCI & POLICY
118 F SHILLING,FRASER M ENVIRON SCI & POLICY
119 F THORNE,JAMES H ENVIRON SCI & POLICY
120 F UNDERWOOD,EMMA CLARE ENVIRON SCI & POLICY
121 F WAYMAN,REBECCA B ENVIRON SCI & POLICY
122 F WEIDENFELD,JESSICA A ENVIRON SCI & POLICY
123 F WILLIAMS,JOHN N ENVIRON SCI & POLICY
124 F WINSOR,TRACY L ENVIRON SCI & POLICY
125 F ANDERSON,BRIAN S ENVIRONMENTAL TOX
126 F CALLOWAY,CASSANDRA D ENVIRONMENTAL TOX
127 F GOLUB,MARI S YES ENVIRONMENTAL TOX
128 F HE,GUOCHUN ENVIRONMENTAL TOX
129 F HENGEL,MATT J ENVIRONMENTAL TOX
130 F HESS,PHILIP A ENVIRONMENTAL TOX
131 F HUNT,JOHN W ENVIRONMENTAL TOX
132 F KADO,NORMAN Y ENVIRONMENTAL TOX
133 F LEUNG,MAXWELL CHUN KIT ENVIRONMENTAL TOX
134 F LI,CHARLIE ENVIRONMENTAL TOX
135 F MILLER,BARRY A ENVIRONMENTAL TOX
136 F PARKER,GLENDON J ENVIRONMENTAL TOX
137 f PENA,EVELYN ENVIRONMENTAL TOX
138 F PHILLIPS,BRYN MORGAN ENVIRONMENTAL TOX
139 F PHILLIPS,MARJORIE A ENVIRONMENTAL TOX
140 F RODZEN,JEFFREY A ENVIRONMENTAL TOX
141 F SIEGLER,CATHERINE ENVIRONMENTAL TOX
CAES Membership List 4/29/20 Academic Federation 53
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Name
Emeritus?
CE?
Home Department
142 F STIMMANN,MICHAEL W YES ENVIRONMENTAL TOX
143 F VILFER,DONALD EARL ENVIRONMENTAL TOX
144 F WAYNE,LAWRENCE EDWARD ENVIRONMENTAL TOX
145 F WINTERLIN,WRAY L YES ENVIRONMENTAL TOX
146 F CRAIGMILL,ARTHUR L YES ENVIRONMENTAL TOXI
147 F KAHALEHILI,HEATHER MALIA-ANN ENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY
148 F TONG,JASON HO WEI ENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY
149 F AL-OBOUDI,JASSIM I FOOD SCI & TECHNOLOGY
150 F BARRETT,DIANE M YES FOOD SCI & TECHNOLOGY
151 F BOUNDY-MILLS,KYRIA L FOOD SCI & TECHNOLOGY
152 F BRUHN,CHRISTINE M YES FOOD SCI & TECHNOLOGY
153 F BRUHN,JOHN C YES FOOD SCI & TECHNOLOGY
154 F DICAPRIO,ERIN LEIGH YES FOOD SCI & TECHNOLOGY
155 F FINNEGAN,PETER MICHAEL FOOD SCI & TECHNOLOGY
156 F HARRIS,LINDA JOAN YES FOOD SCI & TECHNOLOGY
157 F HUGHES,JON FOOD SCI & TECHNOLOGY
158 F ITO,KEITH A YES FOOD SCI & TECHNOLOGY 159 F KOCH,ELEXIA D FOOD SCI & TECHNOLOGY
160 F KRISHNAKUMAR,NITHYA FOOD SCI & TECHNOLOGY
161 S/F ROSENBERG,MOSHE YES FOOD SCI & TECHNOLOGY
162 F SHIMEK,LAUREN R FOOD SCI & TECHNOLOGY
163 F SITEPU,IRNAYULI ROSALEIDA FOOD SCI & TECHNOLOGY
164 F SMILOWITZ,JENNIFER T FOOD SCI & TECHNOLOGY
165 F TOM,PAMELA D YES FOOD SCI & TECHNOLOGY
166 F WANG,SELINA CHING-HSUAN YES FOOD SCI & TECHNOLOGY
167 F WINTER,CARL K YES FOOD SCI & TECHNOLOGY
168 F AL RWAHNIH,MAHER ODEH HOMUD FOUNDATION PLANT SERVICES
169 F OSMAN,FATIMA M FOUNDATION PLANT SERVICES
170 F ANDERSON,HANNAH MAY MINTER HUMAN ECOLOGY
171 F BOULTS,ELIZABETH A HUMAN ECOLOGY
172 F BRANSTAD,MEREDITH M HUMAN ECOLOGY
173 F CAMPBELL,DAVID C YES HUMAN ECOLOGY
174 F COX,JONAH A HUMAN ECOLOGY
175 F GAROUPA-WHITE,CATHERINE MICHELLE HUMAN ECOLOGY
176 F GRIESHOP,JAMES I YES HUMAN ECOLOGY
177 F GUPTA,ANJALI C YES HUMAN ECOLOGY
178 F HAYES,KATHERINE FERRELL HUMAN ECOLOGY
179 F HOANG,PHONG T HUMAN ECOLOGY
180 F HOLLIS,NICOLE DOMINIQUE HUMAN ECOLOGY
181 F HUTCHISON,S V YES HUMAN ECOLOGY 182 F KING,NICELMA J YES HUMAN ECOLOGY
183 F KOUNDINYA,VIKRAM SWAROOP CHANDRA YES HUMAN ECOLOGY 184 F LARSEN,ERIC YES HUMAN ECOLOGY
185 F LOUX,JEFF D. HUMAN ECOLOGY
186 F LUCKENBILL,JULIA A HUMAN ECOLOGY
187 F MCCULLEY,EARL B YES HUMAN ECOLOGY
188 F MERILUS,JEAN-YVES REVENEL HUMAN ECOLOGY
CAES Membership List 4/29/20 Academic Federation 54
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Name
Emeritus?
CE?
Home Department
189 F ONTAI,LENNA L YES HUMAN ECOLOGY
190 F PATTON,DONALD F HUMAN ECOLOGY
191 F POLEN-PETIT,NICOLE C HUMAN ECOLOGY
192 F PONZIO,RICHARD C YES HUMAN ECOLOGY
193 F RAPALYEA,LISA L HUMAN ECOLOGY
194 F SHEBLOSKI,BARBARA HUMAN ECOLOGY
195 F SHENAUT,GREGORY K HUMAN ECOLOGY
196 F SMITH,MARTIN H YES HUMAN ECOLOGY
197 F SOKOLOW,ALVIN D YES HUMAN ECOLOGY
198 F TAYLOR,KEITH YES HUMAN ECOLOGY
199 F THOMPSON,JANET E HUMAN ECOLOGY
200 F TRUSCOTT,JOHN MARQ HUMAN ECOLOGY
201 F TRZESNIEWSKI,KALI YES HUMAN ECOLOGY
202 F TWIBELL,KELLY K HUMAN ECOLOGY
203 F WHEDBEE,JENNIFER E HUMAN ECOLOGY
204 F WIENER,ROBERT J HUMAN ECOLOGY
205 F WRIGHT,JOAN YES HUMAN ECOLOGY
206 F YUI,SAHOKO HUMAN ECOLOGY
207 F BARBOUR,ALEXANDER M LAWR
208 F CLAASSEN,VICTOR LAWR 209 F COYOTL JR.,ADOLFO LAWR
210 F FOGLIA,LAURA LAWR
211 F GEISSELER,DANIEL J YES LAWR
212 F GOLDHAMER,DAVID A YES LAWR
213 F GRATTAN,STEPHEN R YES LAWR
214 F GRIENEISEN,MICHAEL L LAWR
215 F GRIMES,DONALD W YES LAWR
216 F HANSON,BLAINE R YES LAWR
217 S/F HARTER,THOMAS YES LAWR
218 F HARTSOUGH,PETER LAWR
219 F HUESCA-MARTINEZ,MARGARITA LAWR
220 F HULLAR,TED LAWR
221 F IGEL,MATTHEW R LAWR
222 F KOLTUNOV,ALEXANDER LAWR
223 F MACKAY,DOUGLAS M YES LAWR
224 F MEYER,ROLAND D YES LAWR
225 F NAVROTSKY,ALEXANDRA LAWR
226 F NOCCO,MALLIKA ARUDI YES LAWR
227 S/F O'GEEN,ANTHONY T YES LAWR
228 F ORDUNG,BRIANNA M LAWR
229 F PETTYGROVE,GEORGE S YES LAWR
230 F PRICHARD,TERRY YES LAWR
231 F QIU,YEXUAN LAWR
232 F RIANO,DAVID LAWR
233 S/F SANDOVAL SOLIS,SAMUEL YES LAWR
234 F SCHMIDT,RADOMIR LAWR
235 F SCHWANKL,LAWRENCE J YES LAWR
CAES Membership List 4/29/20 Academic Federation 55
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236 F SNYDER,RICHARD L YES LAWR
237 F STEENWERTH,KERRI L LAWR
238 F SUVOCAREV,KOSANA YES LAWR
239 F SY,ANDREW V LAWR
240 F TURK,EDWARD MICHAEL LAWR
241 F VAZQUEZ,MONICA LAWR
242 F WALKINSHAW,MICHAEL LAWR
243 F ZACCARIA,DANIELE YES LAWR
244 F ZHANG,MINGHUA LAWR
245 F ZHU BARKER,XIA LAWR
246 F ZUMKELLER,MARIA LAWR
247 F ADAMS,KATHERINE PITTENGER NUTRITION
248 F AGUS,JOANNE K NUTRITION
249 F BENNETT,BRIAN JOSEPH NUTRITION
250 F BONNEL,ELLEN LONG NUTRITION
251 F BOWLUS,CHRISTINE K NUTRITION
252 F CERVANTES,EDUARDO NUTRITION 253 F CREMONINI,ELEONORA NUTRITION
254 F DAVIS,PAUL A YES NUTRITION
255 F FRANK,JOAN STAYBOLDT NUTRITION
256 F FUNG,ELLEN B NUTRITION
257 F HACKMAN,ROBERT M NUTRITION
258 F HAMPEL,DANIELA NUTRITION
259 F HASKELL,MARJORIE NUTRITION
260 F HEINIG,JANE NUTRITION
261 F HEMBROOKE,TARA NUTRITION
262 F HENDRICK HOLT,ROBERTA R NUTRITION
263 F HESS,SONJA Y NUTRITION
264 F HSU,MING-FO NUTRITION
265 F HUANG,LIPING NUTRITION 266 F HUDSON,NANCY R YES NUTRITION
267 F HWANG,DANIEL H NUTRITION
268 F JIANG,RULAN NUTRITION
269 F JONES,ANNA MARIE NUTRITION
270 F KABLE,MARY ELIZABETH NUTRITION
271 F KAISER,LUCIA L YES NUTRITION
272 F KAN,KELSIE CHIA-LI NUTRITION
273 F KEIM,NANCY LYNN NUTRITION
274 F KRISHNAN,SRIDEVI NUTRITION
275 F LANOUE,LOUISE NUTRITION
276 F LAUGERO,KEVIN DOUGLAS NUTRITION
277 F LEE,BRANDON L NUTRITION
278 F LEMAY,DANIELLE GUYANNE NUTRITION
279 F NEWMAN,JOHN NUTRITION
280 F NGUYEN,NGOC NUTRITION
281 F SCHERR,RACHEL E NUTRITION
282 F STEPHENSEN,CHARLES B NUTRITION
CAES Membership List 4/29/20 Academic Federation 56
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283 F TAVENIER,KATRINA E NUTRITION
284 F TOWNSEND,MARILYN S YES NUTRITION
285 F VARONA,NATASCHA-SOPHIE NUTRITION
286 F WESSELLS,KIMBERLY RYAN NUTRITION
287 F ZIDENBERG-CHERR,SHERI A YES NUTRITION
288 F AVENOT,HERVE FABRICE PLANT PATHOLOGY
289 F BEDNARSKA,ALICJA E PLANT PATHOLOGY
290 F BOURQUIN,ANDREA CAROL PLANT PATHOLOGY
291 F CARLSON,CURTIS R PLANT PATHOLOGY
292 F CARRASQUILLA-GARCIA,NOELIA PLANT PATHOLOGY
293 F CHERN,MAWSHENG PLANT PATHOLOGY
294 F MARCELA PLANT PATHOLOGY
295 F DYE,SARA MELISSA PLANT PATHOLOGY
296 F ESKALEN,AKIF YES PLANT PATHOLOGY
297 F GALINDO,SERENA DANIELLE PLANT PATHOLOGY
298 F GOLINO,DEBORAH A YES PLANT PATHOLOGY
299 F HERNANDEZ ROSAS,ALEJANDRO I PLANT PATHOLOGY
300 F HOPKINS,AIMEE ROSE PLANT PATHOLOGY
301 F JAIME,RAMON PLANT PATHOLOGY
302 F JAIN,RASHMI PLANT PATHOLOGY
303 F KUO,YEN-WEN PLANT PATHOLOGY
304 F LAWRENCE,DANIEL PAUL PLANT PATHOLOGY
305 F LINCOLN,JAMES E PLANT PATHOLOGY
306 F LOZANO,EVAN E PLANT PATHOLOGY
307 F LUO,YONG PLANT PATHOLOGY
308 F MICHAILIDES,THEMIS J PLANT PATHOLOGY 309 F PASTRANA LEON,ANA MARIA PLANT PATHOLOGY
310 F PENMETSA,RAMACHANDRA VARMA PLANT PATHOLOGY
311 F PURI,KRISHNA D PLANT PATHOLOGY
312 F ROWHANI,ADIB YES PLANT PATHOLOGY
313 F SUBBARAO,KRISHNA V YES PLANT PATHOLOGY
314 F SWETT,CASSANDRA YES PLANT PATHOLOGY
315 F TEVIOTDALE,BETH L YES PLANT PATHOLOGY
316 F THAPA,SHREE P PLANT PATHOLOGY
317 F TRAN,ERIC PLANT PATHOLOGY
318 F TRAVADON,RENAUD PLANT PATHOLOGY
319 F TROUILLAS,FLORENT P YES PLANT PATHOLOGY
320 F WELLS,SAMUEL ISAIAH PLANT PATHOLOGY
321 F MALONEY,PATRICIA E PLANT PATOLOGY
322 F AJWA,HUSEIN A YES PLANT SCIENCES
323 S/F AL-KHATIB,KASSIM YES PLANT SCIENCES
324 F ALLEN,BRIAN J PLANT SCIENCES
325 F AMARAL,DOUG PLANT SCIENCES
326 F ASSIS,RENATA DE ALMEIDA BARBOSA PLANT SCIENCES
327 F BADGER,MARY E PLANT SCIENCES
328 F BAILEY-BALE,JACK PLANT SCIENCES
329 F BECERRA-ALVAREZ,AARON PLANT SCIENCES
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330 F BECKER,KRISTEN L PLANT SCIENCES
331 F BREIDENBACH,R W YES PLANT SCIENCES
332 F BYRNE,T G YES PLANT SCIENCES
333 F CANTWELL,MARITA YES PLANT SCIENCES
334 F CASEYS,CELINE C PLANT SCIENCES
335 F CHETELAT,ROGER T PLANT SCIENCES
336 F CLAWSON,WILLIAM J YES PLANT SCIENCES
337 F CONTADOR,MARIA L PLANT SCIENCES
338 F COOPER,KATELYN B PLANT SCIENCES
339 F CRISOSTO,CARLOS YES PLANT SCIENCES
340 F CRISOSTO,GAYLE M PLANT SCIENCES
341 F DEL BLANCO,ISABEL ALICIA PLANT SCIENCES
342 F DOUCETT,RICHARD R PLANT SCIENCES
343 F EASTBURN,DANNY PLANT SCIENCES
344 F ELMORE,CLYDE L YES PLANT SCIENCES
345 F EVANS,RICHARD Y YES PLANT SCIENCES
346 F FAMULA,RANDI ALLYN PLANT SCIENCES 347 F FENNIMORE,STEVEN A YES PLANT SCIENCES
348 F FERGUSON,LOUISE YES PLANT SCIENCES
349 F FRANK,DANIEL A PLANT SCIENCES
350 F GARCIA-LLANOS,ARMANDO PLANT SCIENCES
351 F GEORGE,MELVIN R YES PLANT SCIENCES
352 F GETACHEW,GIRMA PLANT SCIENCES
353 F GJURIC,RADISA R PLANT SCIENCES
354 F GOYAL,SHAM S YES PLANT SCIENCES
355 F HACKETT,WESLEY P PLANT SCIENCES
356 F HANSON,BRADLEY YES PLANT SCIENCES
357 F HARTZ,TIMOTHY K YES PLANT SCIENCES
358 F HILL,JAMES E YES PLANT SCIENCES
359 F HILL,THERESA PLANT SCIENCES
360 F HOM,CAROLE L PLANT SCIENCES
361 F HUO,NAXIN PLANT SCIENCES
362 F HUTMACHER,ROBERT BERNARD YES PLANT SCIENCES
363 F JACKSON,LELAND F YES PLANT SCIENCES
364 F JACOBSON,AARON E PLANT SCIENCES
365 F JIANG,CAI-ZHONG PLANT SCIENCES
366 F JOHNSON,R SCOTT YES PLANT SCIENCES
367 F JONES,MILTON B YES PLANT SCIENCES
368 F KAFFKA,STEPHEN R YES PLANT SCIENCES
369 F KHALSA,SAT DARSHAN S PLANT SCIENCES
370 F KHUSH,GURDEV YES PLANT SCIENCES
371 F KRILL BROWN,ALLISON PLANT SCIENCES
372 F KYSER,GUY B PLANT SCIENCES
373 F LADHA,JAGDISH KUMAR PLANT SCIENCES
374 F LAMPINEN,BRUCE DOUGLAS YES PLANT SCIENCES
375 F LANINI,WAYNE T YES PLANT SCIENCES
376 F LESLIE,CHARLES A PLANT SCIENCES
CAES Membership List 4/29/20 Academic Federation 58
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377 S/F LIETH,JOHANN HEINRICH YES PLANT SCIENCES
378 F LINQUIST,BRUCE A YES PLANT SCIENCES
379 F LOPEZ RAMIREZ,CINDY MASSIE PLANT SCIENCES
380 F LUNDY,MARK E YES PLANT SCIENCES
381 F LUO,MINGCHENG PLANT SCIENCES
382 F MACKILL,DAVID JAMES PLANT SCIENCES
383 F MARBLE,VERN L YES PLANT SCIENCES
384 F MARINO,GIULIA YES PLANT SCIENCES
385 F MATTHEWS,JOY ASHLEY PLANT SCIENCES
386 F MCCREERY,KRISTINA PLANT SCIENCES
387 F MCGRANAHAN,GALE YES PLANT SCIENCES
388 F MCGUIRE,PATRICK E PLANT SCIENCES
389 F MICKE,WARREN C YES PLANT SCIENCES
390 F MILLER,GERALD DAVID PLANT SCIENCES
391 F MITCHAM,ELIZABETH J YES PLANT SCIENCES
392 F MITCHELL,JEFFREY P YES PLANT SCIENCES
393 F NELSEN,TAYLOR S PLANT SCIENCES 394 F NGUYEN,TRAN PLANT SCIENCES
395 F OKI,LORENCE R YES PLANT SCIENCES
396 F PALKOVIC,ANTONIA PLANT SCIENCES
397 F PARFITT,DAN E YES PLANT SCIENCES
398 F PIERCE,ALICE V PLANT SCIENCES
399 F PINZON-AVILA,JANNETH PLANT SCIENCES
400 F POORE,JENNIFER M PLANT SCIENCES
401 F POWELL,ANN L YES PLANT SCIENCES
402 F PUTNAM,DANIEL H YES PLANT SCIENCES
403 F QIN,XIAOQIONG PLANT SCIENCES
404 F RAMASAMY,RAMESH PLANT SCIENCES
405 F RAMOS,DAVID E YES PLANT SCIENCES
406 F RIELY,BRENDAN K PLANT SCIENCES
407 F ROCHE,LESLIE M YES PLANT SCIENCES
408 F ROSER,LAURA C PLANT SCIENCES
409 F RUBATZKY,VINCE YES PLANT SCIENCES
410 F RUBIO WILHELMI,MARIA DEL MAR PLANT SCIENCES
411 F SHEPHERD,MARGARET STOTLER PLANT SCIENCES
412 F SINGH,RIPPY PLANT SCIENCES
413 F SKOTS,MARIYA PLANT SCIENCES
414 F STOVER,JULIA K PLANT SCIENCES
415 F STUDENT,ZEKE PLANT SCIENCES
416 F SUSLOW,TREVOR V YES PLANT SCIENCES
417 F TAJIMA,HIROMI PLANT SCIENCES
418 S/F TATE,KENNETH W YES PLANT SCIENCES
419 F TEMPLE,STEVEN R YES PLANT SCIENCES
420 F TOUBIANA,DAVID PLANT SCIENCES
421 F TRAN,THAO D-H PLANT SCIENCES
422 F TYLER,KENT B YES PLANT SCIENCES
423 F VALLE,MATTHEW PLANT SCIENCES
CAES Membership List 4/29/20 Academic Federation 59
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424 F VAN DEYNZE,ALLEN PLANT SCIENCES
425 F VELASQUEZ CARIAS,ANDREA MAGNOLIA PLANT SCIENCES
426 F VOSS,RONALD E YES PLANT SCIENCES
427 F VU,KIEM PLANT SCIENCES
428 F WALAWAGE,SRIEMA LALANI PLANT SCIENCES
429 F YAN,DAWEI PLANT SCIENCES
430 F ZAINI,PAULO PLANT SCIENCES
431 F ZHANG,JUNLI PLANT SCIENCES
432 F ZHANG,WENJUN PLANT SCIENCES
433 F ZHU,TINGTING PLANT SCIENCES
434 F AGUERO DE HERRERO,CECILIA BEATRIZ VIT & ENOLOGY
435 F BAGSHAW,SOPHIA B VIT & ENOLOGY
436 F BHAGAWAT,CHAITI CHINMOY VIT & ENOLOGY
437 F CANTU,ANNEGRET VIT & ENOLOGY
438 F DOMENECH LOPEZ,MIREIA VIT & ENOLOGY
439 F DUONG,FIONA VITHAO VIT & ENOLOGY
440 F FIDELIBUS,MATTHEW W YES VIT & ENOLOGY 441 F FIGUEROA-BALDERAS,MA ROSA ELIA VIT & ENOLOGY
442 F GARCIA NAVARRETE,JADRAN FRANCISCO VIT & ENOLOGY
443 F KNIPFER,THORSTEN M VIT & ENOLOGY
444 F KURTURAL,SAHAP KAAN YES VIT & ENOLOGY
445 F LAMBERT,JEAN-JACQUES VIT & ENOLOGY
446 F LAPSLEY,JAMES T YES VIT & ENOLOGY
447 F LERNO,LARRY A VIT & ENOLOGY
448 F MCELRONE,ANDREW J VIT & ENOLOGY
449 F MILLER,KONRAD VON VIT & ENOLOGY
450 F NELSON,JENNIFER LYNNE VIT & ENOLOGY
451 F NUNEZ,VERONICA CRISTINA VIT & ENOLOGY
452 F OBERHOLSTER,ANITA YES VIT & ENOLOGY
453 F SHAH,ISHITA M VIT & ENOLOGY
454 F WANG,FANYI VIT & ENOLOGY
455 F AGOSTA,AMANDA E WFCB
456 F BACKUS,GREGORY A WFCB
457 F BALDWIN,ROGER A YES WFCB
458 F BELL,HEATHER N WFCB
459 F BOVING,PERNILLE WFCB
460 F COOK,HANIKA R WFCB
461 F COOPER,ALYSSA AKEMI BALDO WFCB
462 F DEWEES,C M YES WFCB
463 F ERMAN,NANCY A YES WFCB
464 F FITZHUGH,E L YES WFCB
465 F HITCH,ALAN T WFCB
466 F HUYNH,ALLEN WFCB
467 F KUNTZ,JONATHON PETER WFCB
468 F LUSARDI,ROBERT A WFCB
469 F MILES,A KEITH WFCB
470 F MINER,MACKENZIE C WFCB
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471 F RICHTER,COLLIN JOSEPH WFCB
472 F SALMON,TERRELL P YES WFCB
473 F SCOTT,ALEXANDER WFCB
474 F XIEU,WILSON T WFCB
475 F XIONG,WILSON N WFCB
476 F ZHAO,FENG WFCB