Biographical Sketch: Fred Gould - North Carolina State University

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Biographical Sketch: Fred Gould a. Professional Preparation ... e. University of Arizona, external reviewer Department of Entomology 2002 f. National Research  ...
Biographical Sketch: Fred Gould a. Professional Preparation Queens College, City University of New York. State University of New York at Stony Brook, N.Y.

Biology Ecology & Evolutionary Biology

BS 1971 Ph.D. 1977

b. Appointments 1977-78 Postdoctoral Fellow, National Science Foundation 1978-79 Research Associate, Dept. Entomology, N.C. State Univ., Raleigh 1979-85 Assistant Professor, Dept. Entomology, N.C. State Univ., Raleigh 1985-89 Associate Professor, Dept. Entomology, N.C. State Univ., Raleigh 1990-93 Professor, Dept. Entomology, N.C. State Univ., Raleigh 1993-Present Reynolds Professor, Dept. Entomology, N.C. State Univ., Raleigh 2002-Present Adjunct Professor, Dept. of Genetics, N.C. State Univ., Raleigh c. Publications (100+) (i) 5 publications most closely related to the proposed project: Gould, F. and P. Schliekelman (2004) Population Genetics of autocidal control and strain replacement. Annual Review of Entomology 49: 193-217. Magori, K., and F. Gould. 2006. Genetically engineered underdominance for manipulation of pest populations: A determinisitic model. Genetics 172 (4): 2613-2620. Sinkins, S. P., and F. Gould. 2006. Gene drive systems for insect disease vectors. Nature Reviews Genetics. 7:427-435.

Huang, Y., K. Magori, A. L. Lloyd, F. Gould. 2007. Introducing desirable transgenes into insect populations using Y-linked meiotic drive—a theoretical assessment. Evolution 61:717-726. Gould, F. 2008. Broadening the application of evolutionarily based genetic pest management. Evolution 62-2: 500–510 (ii) 5 other significant publications:

Groot, A. T., Bennett J., J. Hamilton, R. G. Santangelo, C. Schal, and F. Gould. (2006) Experimental evidence for interspecific directional selection on moth pheromone communication. Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci. 103: 5858-5863. Jackson, R.E., F. Gould , J. R. Bradley, J. W. Van Duyn. 2006.Genetic variation for resistance to Bacillus thuringiensis toxins in Helicoverpa zea (Lepidoptera : Noctuidae) in eastern North Carolina. J. Econ.Entomol. 99:1790-1797. Gould, F., Cohen M. B., J. S. Bentur, G. G. Kennedy, J. W. Van Duyn. 2006. Impact of small fitness costs on pest adaptation to crop varieties with multiple toxins: A heuristic model. J. Econ. Entomol. 99:2091-2099. Gould, F., K. Magori, Y. X. Huang 2006 Genetic strategies for controlling mosquito-borne diseases. American Scientist. 94 (3): 238-246. Huang,, Y., K. Magori, A. L. Lloyd, F. Gould. 2007. Introducing transgenes into insect populations using combined gene-drive strategies: Modeling and analysis. Insect biochem. Mol. Biol. 37:1054-63. d. Synergistic Activities (past 8 years) a. National Evolutionary Synthesis Center (NSF) Proposal review committee 2005-2008. b. Alexander von Humboldt award for the most significant agricultural research over a five-year period--2004

c. National Academy of Science- named National Associate in recognition of service to the National Research Council 2003 d. National Research Council NAS—Report Review Coordinator 2003 and 2006 e. University of Arizona, external reviewer Department of Entomology 2002 f. National Research Council. Chair: Committee on Environmental Effects of Commercialization of Transgenic Plants 2000-2002 g. Conference of American Catholic Bishops, Scientific Consultant on Transgenic Crops, 2000 h. National Research Council. Committee to develop recommendations on “Genetically Modified Pest Protected Crops” 1999-2000 i. US State Department, Undersecretary for Global Affairs. Briefing on scientific assessment of risks associated genetically engineered crops, 1999 j. University of Wisconsin, external reviewer of Department of Entomology, 1999 k. Journal Editorships Entomologia Experimentalis et Applicata, Journal of Insect Science (on-line). l. National Research Council. Committee to develop recommendations on “The Future Role of Pesticides in American Agriculture,” 1998-2000 m. EPA Science Advisory Subcommittee on Resistance Management, 1998-1999, 2000 e. Collaborators and Other Affiliations Adang, M. Cruz, W. T. Laster, M. Schal, C. Aguda, R. M Daly, J. C. Lee, M. K. Schliekelman, P. Anderson, A. Daniell, H. Leonard, R. Sheck, A. Arpaia, S. Dean, H. Litsinger, J. A. Simons, A. Bailey, W. D. Decock, C. Lopez, J. Sisterson, M. Barbosa, P. Gahan, L. C. Lu, W. Storer, N. Bateman, M. Garczynski, S.F. Mackay, T. Sumerford, D. Bende, N. Gelernter, W. McGaughey,W. H. Tabashnik, B. Bernays, E. Hruska, A. Micinski, C. Trowell, S. Bottrell, D. G. Hussain, A.S.-R. Onstad, D. W. Van Duyn, J. Bradley, J. R. Jr. Johnson, M. T. Oppenheim, S. White, C. Burd, T. Jones, A. Peck, S. L. Zhao, G. Carter, L. M. Kennedy, G. G. Peferoen, F. Varma, S. Chapman, R. Kleptka, B. Rajamohan, F. Ward, C. Cohen, M. B. Kota, M. Riggin-Bucci, T. Cotrill, J. A. Lambert, K.B. Roe, R. M. ii. Graduate Advisors C. Ron Carroll, Douglas J. Futuyma iii. Students: Last 7 years Schliekelman, Paul PhD. 2000. Assistant Professor, Statistics, University of Georgia Population genetic considerations in development and release of transgenic insect pests Cabrera, Juan Ph.D. 2001. Postdoctoral Fellow, USDA Tritrophic interactions of Bt-corn, Spodoptera exigua, and natural enemies Bateman, Melanie Ph.D. May 2006. NSF Predoctoral Fellowship Determinants of host use in Heliothis subflexa Bende Nicole (co-advised with Coby Schal) Ph.D. Fall 2006. NSF Predoctoral Fellowship Determinants of oviposition preference in a specialist and generalist moth Puente, Molly (co-advised with George Kennedy) Ph.D Fall 2006. NSF Predoctoral Fellowship Spatially explicit models of parasitoid/herbivore interactions when host plants are inducible (will also receive masters in Public Administration) Oppenheim, Sara Ph.D. 2008. NIH predoctoral Fellowship The genetics of larval host use in a specialist and generalist moth. Petzold, Jen Ph.D. 2008. USDA IFAFS training grant (Botany Department) Coevolved traits in a specialist herbivore and its host plants.

Biographical Sketch: Brenton D. Faber a. Professional Preparation B.A. University of Waterloo, Waterloo ON 1992 M.A. Simon Fraser University, Vancouver BC 1993 Ph.D. University of Utah, 1998 b. Academic Appointments 1998-2004 Assistant Professor Dept. Technical Comm. Clarkson U. (Potsdam, NY) 2004-2005 Associate Professor, Dept. Communication & Media, Clarkson U. (NY) 2006-2007 Chair. Dept. Communication & Media, Clarkson U. 2007Full Professor, Dept. English, N.C. State University, Raleigh c. Publications (i) 5 publications most closely related to the proposed project: Faber, B. 2007. Discourse, technology & change. 206 pgs. New York & London: Continuum. Faber, B. 2006. Representations of nanoscience and technology in popular media. Technical Communication Quarterly, 15(2),141-169. Faber, B., MacKinnon, J., & Petroccione, M.(students) 2005. Media portraits of nanotech in North American written media 1986-2000. Nanotechnology Law & Review 2(3). Faber, B. 2003. Creating rhetorical stability in corporate university discourse. Written Communication 20 (3), 391-425. Faber, B. 2002. Community action & organizational change: Image, narrative, identity. Carbondale & Edwardsville: Southern Illinois University Press. (ii) 5 other significant publications: Faber, B. 2007. The problem of extraneous text: Opposition to organizational change, dynamic & synoptic orientations. SIGDOC ACM Conference Proceedings, October. El Paso TX. Faber, B. 2007. Writing social change. In C. Bazerman (Ed.). Handbook of writing research. Mahwah NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates. Faber, B. 2007. Discourse and Regulation: Critical text analysis and workplace studies. In M. Zachry & C. Thralls (Eds.) Communicative practices in workplaces and the professions: Perspectives on the regulation of discourse and organizations. Amityville NY: Baywood, 203-218. Faber, B. 2003. Technologizing change: Rhetoric of software implementation at a campus. SIGDOC ACM Conference Proceedings, October 2003, San Francisco CA, October, pp. 171-177. d. Synergistic activities a. Member, Leadership Committee, North Carolina State University, Institute for Nanotechnology b. Co-Director, Public Communication of Science and Technology Project, North Carolina State University. e. Collaborators and other affiliations. a. Collaborators and coeditors. North Carolina State University David Berube, Professor, Communication

Michael Cobb, Associate Professor, Political Science Greg Parsons, Professor, Chemical & Biomolecular Engineering Jose Bruno-Barcena, Biomanufacturing Training & Education Center Lisbeth Borbye, Assoc. Prof, Microbiology & Asst Dean Prof. Education Christian Casper - graduate advising Heidi von Ludewig - graduate advising Clarkson University Catherine Avadikian MA student, Ian Suni, Professor, Chemical Engineering Dan Rasmussen, Professor, Chemical & Biomolecular Engineering SUNY Potsdam Mary Palidori, graduate advising Purdue University Michael Salvo, English University of Washington Mark Zachry, English Utah State University Kelli Cargile-Cook, English University of Utah Thomas Huckin, Graduate Advisor, Linguistics & English Maureen Mathison, Graduate Advisor, Communication f. Federally funded grants National Science Foundation, #0423400 Public understanding of nanoscience $35,000. 2004-06 National Science Foundation (with I. Suni & D. Rasmussen), #0407261 Societal aspects of nanoscale science and technology NUE $100,000. 2004-06.

BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH NICK M. HADDAD Department of Zoology, Box 7617 North Carolina State University Raleigh, NC 27695-7617 Phone: (919)515-4588 E-mail: [email protected] http://www4.ncsu.edu/~haddad/ A. Professional Preparation B.S., Biology with honors, Stanford University, 1991 Ph.D., Ecology, University of Georgia, 1997 Post-doc, University of Minnesota, Ecology, 1997-1999 B. Appointments 2005Associate Professor, Department of Zoology, North Carolina State University 2007Associate Faculty Member, Department of Entomology, NC State University 1999-2005 Assistant Professor, Department of Zoology, North Carolina State University C. Five Most Relevant Publications Damschen, E.I., N.M. Haddad, J.L. Orrock, J.J. Tewksbury, and D.J. Levey. 2006. Corridors increase plant species richness at large scales. Science 313:1284-1286. Levey, D.J., B.M. Bolker, J.J. Tewksbury, S. Sargent, and N.M. Haddad. 2005. Effects of landscape corridors on seed dispersal by birds. Science 309:146-148. Weldon, A.J. and N.M. Haddad. 2005. The effects of patch shape on Indigo Buntings: evidence for an ecological trap. Ecology 86:1422-1431. Haddad, N.M., D.R. Bowne, A. Cunningham, B.J. Danielson, D.J. Levey, S. Sargent, and T. Spira. 2003. Corridor use by diverse taxa. Ecology 84:609-615. Tewksbury, J.J., D.J. Levey, N.M. Haddad, S. Sargent, J.L. Orrock, A. Weldon, B.J. Danielson, J. Brinkerhoff, E.I. Damschen, and P. Townsend. 2002. Corridors affect plants, animals, and their interactions in fragmented landscapes. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 99:12923-12926. Five Other Publications: Haddad, N.M., D. Tilman, J. Haarstad, M. Ritchie, and J. Knops. 2001. Contrasting effects of plant richness and composition on insect communities: a field experiment. The American Naturalist 158:17-35. Haddad, N.M. and K. Baum. 1999. An experimental test of corridor effects on butterfly densities. Ecological Applications 9:623-633. Haddad, N.M. 1999. Corridor use predicted from behaviors at habitat boundaries. The American Naturalist 153:215-227. Haddad, N.M. 1999. Corridor and distance effects on interpatch movements: a landscape experiment with butterflies. Ecological Applications 9:612-622. Sisk, T.D., N.M. Haddad, and P.R. Ehrlich. 1997. Bird assemblages in patchy woodlands: modeling the effects of edge and matrix habitats. Ecological Applications 7:1170-1180.

D. Synergistic Activities i) Awards Leopold Leadership Fellow (2008) George and Rhoda Kris Study Leave Award, College of Ag. and Life Sciences (2007) NC State University Outstanding Teacher Award (2004) NC State, College of Ag. and Life Sciences Outstanding Faculty Adviser Award (2004) Outstanding paper award, given by the US chapter, International Association of Landscape Ecologists for an outstanding contribution in the field of landscape ecology (2002) Conference of Southern Graduate Schools Achievement Award for New Scholars (2001) National Science Foundation Predoctoral Fellowship (1993-6) ii) Service Board Member:

Board Member, Society for Conservation Biology, North America Section (2006-present) President, Sandhills Ecological Institute (2004-present) Development Committee, Society for Conservation Biology (2008) Wake County (NC) Audobon Society (2000-2004)

iv) Education and Training Since 2000, I have employed over 60 undergraduates or recent graduates (over 40 of whom were women) in my research program. I have published papers with three undergraduate students. E. Collaborators and Other Affiliations (i) Collaborators: Ben Bolker (U Florida), Kevin Crooks (Colorado St. U), Larry Crowder (Duke), Greg Crutsinger (U Tennessee), Alan Cunningham, Brent Danielson (Iowa St U), Kendi Davies (U Colorado), John Haarstad (U of Minnesota), Marcel Holyoak (UC-Davis), Jean Knops (U of Nebraska), Doug Levey (U of Florida), Jianguo Liu (Michigan St U), Svata Louda (U of Nebraska), Tom Lovejoy (Heinz Center), Tawny Mata (UC Davis), Brett Melbourne (U Colorado), Aaron Moody (U North Carolina – Chapel Hill), Bill Morris (Duke), John Orrock (Washington U), Kim Preston (UC Davis), Mark Ritchie (Syracuse), M.A. Sanjayan (The Nature Conservancy), Sarah Sargent (Allegheny College), Tom Sisk (Northern Arizona U), Tim Spira (Clemson), William Taylor (Michigan St U), Josh Tewksbury (U Washington), Jeff Walters (VA Tech) (ii) Advisors: Ron Pulliam (PhD; U Georgia), Dave Tilman (Post-doc; U Minnesota) (iii) Students (total = 9): Becky Bartel (PhD), Jory Brinkerhoff (MS 2002, student at U Colorado), Ellen Damschen (PhD 2005, Washington University), Will Fields (PhD), Brenda Johnson (MS), Daniel Kuefler (MS 2005, student at Guelph), Allison Liedner (PhD), Aimee Weldon (MS 2004, Defenders of Wildlife), Johnny Wilson (PhD) Post-docs (total = 5): Lars Brudvig, Brian Hudgens (Institute for Wildlife Studies), Josh Tewskbury (U Washington), Nicole Thurgate, Laura Vogel

Biographical Sketch: Alun L. Lloyd a. Professional Preparation University of Cambridge, UK University of Cambridge, UK University of Oxford, UK

Mathematics Mathematics Biological Sciences (Zoology)

B.A. 1988-1991 Cert. Adv. Study 1991-1992 D.Phil. 1992-1996

b. Appointments 1996-1999 1997-1999 1999-2003 2003-present 2007-present

Medical Research Council (MRC) Fellow, University of Oxford, UK Lecturer, St. Hilda’s College, University of Oxford, UK Long-Term Member, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton Associate Professor, Biomathematics Graduate Program and Mathematics Department, North Carolina State University Director, Biomathematics Graduate Program, North Carolina State University

c. Publications (35+ total) (i) 5 publications most closely related to the proposed project: LLOYD, A.L., Zhang, J. & Root, A.M. (2007). Stochasticity and heterogeneity in host-vector models. J. Roy. Soc. Interface 4: 851-863. Huang, Y., Magori, K., LLOYD, A.L. & Gould, F. (2007). Introducing transgenes into insect populations using combined gene-drive strategies: Modeling and analysis. Insect Biochem. Molecular Biol. 37: 1054-1063. Huang, Y., Magori, K., LLOYD, A.L. & Gould, F. (2007). Introducing desirable transgenes into insect populations using Y-linked meiotic drive- A theoretical assessment. Evolution 61: 717-726. LLOYD, A.L. & Wodarz, D. (2006). Drug Resistance in Acute Viral Infections: Rhinovirus as a Case Study. In: Disease evolution: Models, Concepts, and Data Analyses, Z. Feng, U. Diekmann and S. Levin (eds.), AMS/DIMACS. Wodarz, D., & LLOYD, A.L. (2004). Immune responses and the emergence of drug-resistant virus strains in vivo. Proc. R. Soc. Lond. B. 271: 1101-1109. (ii) 5 other significant publications: LLOYD, A.L. (2004). Estimating variability in models for recurrent epidemics: assessing the use of moment closure techniques. Theor. Popul. Biol. 65: 49-65. LLOYD, A.L. & Jansen, V.A.A. (2004). Spatiotemporal dynamics of epidemics: synchrony in metapopulation models. Math. Biosci. 188: 1-16. May, R.M. & LLOYD, A.L. (2001). Infection dynamics on scale-free networks. Phys. Rev. E 64: 066112. LLOYD, A.L. (2001). The dependence of viral parameter estimates on the assumed viral life cycle: limitations of studies of viral load data. Proc. R. Soc. Lond. B. 268: 847-854. LLOYD, A.L. & May, R.M. (1996). Spatial heterogeneity in epidemic models. J. Theor. Biol. 179: 1-11.

d. Synergistic Activities a. Director, Biomathematics Graduate Program, NC State University b. Developed graduate course Mathematical Modeling of Infectious Diseases (NC State Univ.) c. Co-organizer, DIMACS Workshops on Spatiotemporal and Network Dynamics in Epidemiology (April 2003, Rutgers, NJ; May 2007, Edinburgh, UK; October 2008, Tübingen, Germany) d. Faculty advisor, Research Experiences for Undergraduates (REU) programs at NC State: Minority Graduate Education (MGE) group, 2004; NC State Mathematics REU (NSF-funded),

2006; NC State Mathematics REU and REU+ (emphasis on minority students), 2007. e. Editorial Board member, Biology Letters, Royal Society, UK.

e. Collaborators and Other Affiliations H. Thomas Banks, Department of Mathematics, NC State University Fred Gould, Department of Entomology, NC State University Vincent Jansen, Department of Biology, Royal Holloway College, University of London Shalini Kulasingam, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Duke University Krisztian Magori, School of Ecology, University of Georgia Greg Rempala, Department of Statistics, University of Louisville Lisa Sattenspiel, Department of Anthropology, University of Missouri Steve Valeika, Department of Epidemiology, University of Georgia Dominik Wodarz, Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of California, Irvine Graduate and Postdoctoral Advisors Robert M. May, University of Oxford Martin A. Nowak, Harvard University Graduate Students and Postdoctoral Advisees Graduate Students (4 Masters students graduated, 2 in progress, 5 Ph.D. students in progress) Hugh Cox (M.BMA., 2004), Jianyun Zhu (M.BMA., 2004), Haojun Ouyang (M.BMA., 2005), Lisa Soberano (M.S., 2006), Miyuki Breen (M.BMA., 2007) Steve Valeika (Ph.D., expected 2008), Evan Bowles (M.BMA., expected 2008), Morgan Root (Ph.D., expected 2009), Alex Capaldi (Ph.D., expected 2009), Suzanne Harvey (M.BMA., expected 2009), Venita DePuy (Ph.D., expected 2010), Miyuki Breen (Ph.D., expected 2010) Postdoctoral advisees (four co-advisees) Krisztian Magori (January 2005-November 2006, co-advised with Fred Gould. Now at University of Georgia), Yunxin Huang (December 2005-present, co-advised with Fred Gould), Mathieu Legros (October 2006-present, co-advised with Fred Gould), Ariel Cintron-Arias (September 2006-present, co-advised with H. Thomas Banks)

Biographical Sketch: Walter Thurman a. Professional Preparation B.A., Environmental Studies, Utah State University, 1976. M.S., Economics, Montana State University, 1977. Ph.D., Economics, University of Chicago, 1984. b. Appointments Research Staff, Standard Oil of Indiana, 1980. Research Associate, RCF Inc., Chicago, 1981-1982. Instructor, Loyola University of Chicago, 1982-1983. Assistant Professor, N.C. State University, 1984-1989. Visiting Lecturer, University of Waikato in Hamilton, New Zealand, 1990. Associate Professor, N.C. State University, 1989-1994. Director of Economics Graduate Program, N.C. State University, 1996-1999 Visiting Professor, Dept. of Ag. Econ. and Econ., Montana State University, 2002. Senior Fellow of the Property and Environment Research Center, 2003 to present. Associate Director of the Kinship Conservation Institute, 2005-present. Professor of Economics, N.C. State University, 1994 to present. Professor of Agricultural & Resource Economics, 1994 to present. William Neal Reynolds Professor of Agricultural & Resource Economics, N.C. State University, 2007 to present. c. Publications (i) 5 publications most closely related to the proposed project: Thurman, Walter N. and Michael K. Wohlgenant, “Consistent Estimation of General Equilibrium Welfare Effects,” American Journal of Agricultural Economics 71 (1989): 1041-1045. Thurman, Walter N. and J.E. Easley, Jr., “Valuing Changes in Commercial Fishery Harvests: A General Equilibrium Derived Demand Analysis,” Journal of Environmental Economics and Management 22 (1992): 226-240; reprinted in Applied Welfare Economics, edited by R.E. Just, D.L. Hueth, and A. Schmitz, Edward Elgar Publishing, Ltd., 2008. Thurman, Walter N. “The Welfare Significance and Non-significance of General Equilibrium Demand and Supply Curves,” Public Finance Quarterly 21 (1993): 449-469. Thurman, Walter N., Tyler J. Fox, and Tayler H. Bingham, “Imposing Smoothness Priors in Applied Welfare Economics: An Application of the Information Contract Curve to Environmental Regulatory Analysis,” Review of Economics and Statistics 83(2000): 511-522. Brian C. Murray, Walter N. Thurman, and Andrew Keeler, “Tax Interaction Effects, Environmental Regulation, and 'Rule of Thumb' Adjustments to Social Cost,” Environmental and Resource Economics, 30(2005): 73-92. (ii) 5 other significant publications: Knoeber, Charles R. and Walter N. Thurman, “Testing the Theory of Tournaments: An Empirical Analysis of Broiler Production,” Journal of Labor Economics 12 (1994): 155-179; reprinted in Personnel Economics, edited by E.P. Lazear and R. McNabb, Edward Elgar Publishing, Ltd., 2004.

Rucker, Randal R., Walter N. Thurman, and Daniel A. Sumner, “Restricting the Market for Quota: An Analysis of Tobacco Production Rights with Corroboration from Congressional Testimony,” Journal of Political Economy 103 (1995): 142-175. Rucker, Randal R., Walter N. Thurman, and Jonathan K. Yoder, “Estimating the Speed of Market Reaction to News: Market Events and Lumber Futures Prices,” American Journal of Agricultural Economics, 87(2005): 482-500. Muth, Mary K., Randal R. Rucker, Walter N. Thurman, and Ching-Ta Chuang, “The Fable of the Bees Revisited: Causes and Consequences of the U.S. Honey Program,” Journal of Law and Economics 46(2003): 479-516. A. Blake Brown, Randal R. Rucker, and Walter N. Thurman, “The End of the Federal Tobacco Program: Economic Impacts of the Deregulation of U.S. Tobacco Production,” Review of Agricultural Economics, 29(2007): 635-655. d. Synergistic Activities (past 8 years) Editor of the American Journal of Agricultural Economics, 2006-present. External review panel member for the Department of Statistics, North Carolina State University, March 2004. Invited participant in the Technical Assistant Visit (external review) of the U.S. Forest Service Southern Research Station, November 2003 Academic Review Team member for the Department of Agricultural and Resource Economics at the University of Arizona, 2001 Editorial Board member for Choices, 1998-2002 Agricultural Policy Topic Leader for Selected Papers for the annual meetings of the American Agricultural Economics Association, 2000 Member of Awards Committee for Quality of Communication for the American Agricultural Economics Association, 1999-2001 Member of Awards Committee for Quality of Teaching for the American Agricultural Economics Association, 1999-2001 e. Collaborators and Other Affiliations Bingham, T. Easley, J.E. McFall, T. Phaneuf, D.J. Yoder, J.K.

Brown, A.B. Fox, T. Murray, B.C. Rucker, R.R.

Burgett, M.B. Karali, B. Park, H. Sung, J.K.

Chvosta, J. Knoeber, C.R. Parker, D. Wohlgenant, M.K.

ii. Graduate Advisors Lester Telser, Dennis Carlton, Arnold Zellner iii. Students: Last 7 years Maranakis, Kosmas Karali, Berna Butry, David Ferrier, Peyton Chvosta, Jan Park, Hoanjae

Ph.D. 2008. Ph.D. 2007. Ph.D. 2006. Ph.D. 2005. Ph.D. 2004. Ph.D. 2002.

Visiting Asst. Prof., Wake Forest University Asst. Prof., University of Georgia. Senior Economst, Natl. Institue of Tech. and Standards Senior Economist, USDA-Econ. Research Service Senior Economist, SAS Institute. Assoc. Prof., Catholic U. of Korea