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The following is information
about CoAg international progrmas for students, faculty, alumni and
the public. For more information about CoAg's international
efforts, contact Richard Guthrie, CoAg associate dean (retired), at
334-8944-3211 or guthrrl@auburn.edu
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CoAg
Scientists Win Honors in Chinese Provinces
Two provinces of the People’s Republic of China have recognized
two CoAg scientists for their exceptional international outreach
efforts, naming them their 2003 most outstanding foreign experts.
In
separate ceremonies held in China in fall 2003 as part of a weeklong
national celebration of the People’s Republic of China’s
54th anniversary, Hubei province presented its prestigious 2003
Chime Bell Award to Richard Guthrie, now retired
associate CoAg dean |
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| Richard
Guthrie
receives the Chime
Bell Award. |
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and head of CoAg’s Office
of International Agriculture, while the neighboring Sichuan province
presented its highest honor, the 2003 Golden Summit Award, to John
Liu, a CoAg fisheries and allied aquacultures professor.
The Chime Bell Award in Hubei is given annually to
individuals from other countries who have made exceptional contributions
to and improved the lives of the people of Hubei. While presenting
the award to Guthrie during a ceremony in Wuhan, the province’s
capital city, Hubei Governor Luo Qinquan cited the strong and mutually
beneficial research, education and outreach partnership Guthrie has
established between AU and the Hubei Academy of Agricultural Sciences
over the past 15 years.
That partnership provides a remarkable and productive
exchange of valuable ideas, science and technology between the two
institutions.
In Sichuan province, Liu received the Golden Summit
Award from the province’s governor, Zhang Zhongwei, in a ceremony
in the capital city of Chengdu. The governor praised Liu’s “enthusiastic
support to economic construction and social progress in Sichuan province
and prominent contributions to international exchange and friendly
cooperation between Sichuan and foreign countries.”
Liu, internationally recognized for his groundbreaking
research in catfish genetics, is an adviser and international expert
for Sichuan’s transgenic fish program and an adjunct professor
of molecular biology at Sichuan Agricultural University. He has been
instrumental in helping Sichuan researchers secure grants from the
Chinese government and has presented numerous lectures and seminars
on catfish genomics to scientists in Sichuan and to Sichuan delegations
visiting AU. |
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Spanish Microbiologist
Makes CoAg Home
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| Cova
Aris |
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The holiday break went far too fast for Covadonga
Arias. It seemed she had no more than landed in her hometown of Valencia,
Spain, before she was boarding another plane for the 10-hour flight
back to the States, back to a life 5,000 miles away from her family,
her closest friends, her culture.
The goodbyes are always painful. After five years,
she still sorely misses her native Spain. |
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This life that she has in the U.S., in
Auburn, Ala., at Auburn University—is this really where she
wants to be?
Oh, but yes, Arias says.
“Coming to the United States was one of the
best decisions of my life,” the associate professor of microbial
genomics in CoAg’s Department of Fisheries and Allied Aquacultures
says. “Professionally, right now, I have everything I wanted
but could never have dreamed of having had I not come here.”
Arias received her doctorate in microbiology from the University of
Valencia in 1998, with an emphasis on fish disease—specifically,
a disease outbreak on an eel farm. So impressive was her dissertation
that she earned the university’s Extraordinary Doctorate Award
for the best Ph.D. thesis in microbiology.
Despite her exemplary scholarly work, employment
opportunities in Spain were virtually nonexistent.
“In Europe, before you can be appreciated in
science and find good positions, you must work on your postdoctoral,
preferably abroad, for at least two years,” Arias says.
She chose a position with the University of Florida’s Citrus
Research and Education Center to study microbes that cause citrus
juice to spoil.
As the third year of the Florida contract began winding
down, Arias began looking at two options: to return home, or to stay
in the United States. She chose the latter—in part because more
opportunities would be available, and in part because of a romantic
interest that had developed in Florida.
She began searching for openings for microbiologists,
preferably in the field of fisheries research, and that search brought
her to Auburn University.
She came to Auburn for an interview, and she and the search committee
were mutually impressed.
“I could tell from the interview that this
was obviously a very good department, and I knew it was recognized
worldwide as one of the best,” she says. “To get this
position was all I could have hoped for.”
Arias joined the AU faculty in April 2002 with an
appointment that is 90 percent research and 10 percent teaching. Her
research focuses on identifying disease pathogens of major economic
significance to the catfish industry. The goal: to improve disease
detection methods and produce vaccines.
“It is the work I love,” she says. “And
here, I get financial support for my research until I can obtain grant
funding. In Spain, that would be much more difficult.”
As one bringing a European perspective to the table,
Arias doesn’t take for granted what many American professors
might tend to: the abundance of opportunity to work at a rewarding
job.
“Here, you know that if you try hard, and give
it your best, you can get a good job, and one that you truly enjoy,”
she says. “In Europe, there is so much competition, you either
have to know someone or be lucky.”
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See
the World!
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COAG’S
2004 AGRICULTURAL STUDY TOURS ANNOUNCED
Alabama producers and other agricultural professionals will have
the opportunity to take part in a variety of agricultural tours
in 2004.
The tours, sponsored by the Auburn University College of Agriculture’s
Office of International Agriculture, have already taken a group
to India, Argentina and Brazil and will visit the following sites
later this year: the Peoples Republic of China; Hungary, the Czech
Republic and Germany; and Guatemala. Details and tentative dates
for the remaining tours are listed below. Organizers also are discussing
a possible two-week study tour of Australia and New Zealand.
For more information about these tours, contact George Young, Extension
coordinator of international programs, at 334-844-3513.
People’s Republic
of China
Target dates: two-week tour during June 2004
While the target audience for this two-week tour includes farmers,
agricultural professionals and other interested individuals, it
also has been tailored to schoolteachers, who will be eligible to
receive graduate credit. The Chinese tour will include stopovers
in Beijing, Xian and Yangling, Chengdu and Wuhan as well as a riverboat
ride through the Three Gorges.
Projected cost: $2,800
Hungary, Czech Republic
and Germany
Target dates: July 15-30, 2004
In Hungary, visitors will be greeted at a reception by the agricultural
dean at the University of West Hungary in Mosonmagyarovar, the oldest
agricultural university in the world, followed by a reception given
by the town’s mayor. Other stops will include Babolna, site
of a huge agribusiness and the active but ancient Abbey of Pannonhalma,
one of the oldest sites of Christendom. Stopovers also are planned
for Lake Balaton, Herend, site of a world-famous porcelain factory,
and Sopron, where the first free crossings of the Iron Curtain began
in 1989. During their stay in Budapest, participants will visit
all of the major landmarks of this ancient capital city as well
as St. Stephens University’s agricultural campus near Godollo.
Visits planned for the Czech facet of the tour include Chesky Chumlow,
with streets and a castle dating back to the Middle Ages, and the
capital city of Prague. The pace will slow down considerably during
the tour of Germany. Staying in one country inn throughout the entire
German visit, participants will visit nearby Berlin, Potsdam and
other sites and farms in Brandenburg state.
Projected cost: $2,800
Guatemala
Target dates: Twelve days sometime after mid-September 2004
Visits will include Guatemala City, Antigua, Panajacel and Flores,
the site of Tikal, where the ancient Mayan temples are located.
The agricultural facet of the tour will focus on forestry and reforestation,
large-scale asparagus and avocado production, and coffee, peach
and citrus production. Visits also will include cotton, peanut and
cattle operations. Participants will visit the Guatemalan Ministry
of Agriculture and meet with officials of the Partnership of the
Americas.
Projected cost: comparable to other tours
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HIGHLY DISTNGUISHED LECTURER. Nobel
Laureate Norman Borlaug, left, talks with E.T. York, center, and CoAg
alum and Alfa Farmers Commodity Director Jim Cravey shortly before
Borlaug's lecture to a standing-room-only crowd in |
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Auburn Jan. 22. Borlaug—known
worldwide as the father of the Green Revolution and winner of the
1970 Nobel Peace Prize for his work in developing high-yielding, disease-resistant
wheat plants and then putting those new cereal strains into extensive
production in more than 20 nations in order to feed the world's starving—
was in Auburn as a highly esteemed guest lecturer in AU's E.T. York
Distinguished Lecture Series. In his presentation, "From the
Green Revolution to the Gene Revolution: Our 21st-century Challenge,
"Borlaug stressed the crucial role of biotechnology in keeping
a growing world population fed. The lecture series was established
in 1981 from an endowment set up by York and his wife, Vam. York received
his bachelor's and master's degrees from AU, then Alabama Polytechnic
Institute, in 1942 and 1946, respectively, served as Alabama Cooperative
Extension Service director early in his career before being named
chancellor of the State University System of Florida. At the January
lecture, York introduced the 90-year-old Borlaug, who currently serves
as distinguished professor of international agriculture and professor
of soil and crop sciences at Texas A&M University. Borlaug, noting
that all future growth in food production must come from existing
farmland, said his top "biotechnology dream" is that scientists
will discover how to transfer rice's immunity to rust diseases to
wheat, maize and other cereals. << top |
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