IANR vice chancellor finalists named

UNL

September 19, 2016

Lincoln, Neb. — The University of Nebraska-Lincoln has announced the finalists for the position of Harlan Vice Chancellor for the Institute of Agriculture and Natural Resources and University of Nebraska Vice President for Agriculture and Natural Resources

Finalists Michael Boehm, William Brown, Gary Thompson and Ron Yoder will make campus visits and meet with the university community in the next several weeks.

The position opened when Ronnie Green became the university’s 20th chancellor earlier this year. 

Biographies of each finalist, as well as their public visit schedules, follow.

IANR vice chancellor/NU vice president finalists

Michael Boehm, professor of plant pathology and vice provost for academic and strategic planning at the Ohio State University; live-streamed state and campus town hall, 3 p.m. Sept. 26 in 107 Hardin Hall, faculty forum 2:30 p.m. Sept. 27 in Room 113, McCollum Hall. Boehm has been responsible for strategic planning for Ohio State’s six campuses; K-12 and community college partnerships; the University Libraries System, College of Public Affairs and Office of Institutional Research and Planning; dean reappointment reviews and academic unit reviews; integrated capital planning; and classroom readiness. He oversees Ohio State’s Discovery Themes initiative, a 10-year program to produce solutions to the challenges of the 21st century, and he is co-lead for the Humanities and the Arts Discovery Theme.

Boehm was previously chair of Ohio State’s Department of Plant Pathology. He is an authority on the integrated management of turf grass diseases and focuses on the biology, ecology and management of fungal diseases of turf grass. He also works on the integrated management of Fusarium head blight of wheat with a focus on the development of biological control strategies for this economically important and challenging disease. The author of 38 peer-reviewed articles and edited book chapters and nearly 100 abstracts, reviews and proceedings papers treating these issues, Boehm holds five U.S. and 15 international patents related to his work on the biocontrol of Fusarium head blight. He has secured about $2.5 million in external funding.

William F. “Bill” Brown, dean for research and director of the Agricultural Experiment Station at the Institute of Agriculture at the University of Tennessee; live-streamed state and campus town hall, 3 p.m. Sept. 28 in the East Union Arbor Suite; faculty forum, 2:30 p.m. Great Plains Room, East Union. Brown oversees research activities and coordinates with academic programs and extension across seven academic departments. He is a national leader with the Experiment Station Committee on Policy. Before his 2008 appointment as dean, Brown was assistant dean for research and assistant director of the Florida Agricultural Experiment Station with the Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences at the University of Florida. In that role he coordinated interactions with commodity groups and their support programs, facilitated the development of faculty-driven multidisciplinary centers and served as a liaison between the institute and university-level sponsored programs and technology transfer offices.

Brown’s training is in animal science with a focus in ruminant nutrition. He earned his doctorate from Nebraska. In his faculty role, his research program focused on forage quality, energy and protein supplementation, grazing systems and heifer development primarily for beef cattle but also including dairy cattle. He has published widely in refereed and clientele/public venues and is active in professional society editorship responsibilities with several academic journals.

Ron Yoder, interim vice chancellor for the Institute of Agriculture and Natural Resources at Nebraska; live-streamed state and campus town hall, 3 p.m. Oct. 3 in the East Union Great Plains Room; faculty forum, 2:30 p.m. in Room 113 of McCollum Hall. From 2011-2016, Yoder was associate vice chancellor of IANR, serving as the chief operating officer with oversight of its three mission areas and responsibility for day-to-day operations. Previously he led the Biological Systems Engineering Department at Nebraska and the Biosystems Engineering and Soil Science Department at the University of Tennessee.

Yoder has been president of the American Society of Agricultural and Biological Engineers and is a fellow of that society and of the American Institute of Medical and Biological Engineering. He is also a member of the American Society of Civil Engineers, Alpha Epsilon, Gamma Sigma Delta and Sigma Xi. His research and educational interests have been in agricultural water management, measurement and estimation of evapotranspiration, water and solute movement in the vadose zone and land use impacts on water quality. He has held positions at the University of Wyoming, the USDA ARS in Colorado and in Washington state, and at Tennessee. Yoder is a licensed professional engineer in Nebraska and Wyoming.

Gary Thompson, associate dean for Research and Graduate Education and director of the Pennsylvania Agricultural Experiment Station at Pennsylvania State University; live-streamed state and campus town hall, 3 p.m. Oct. 6, East Union Great Plains Room; faculty forum, 2:30 p.m. Oct. 7, East Union Great Plains Room. Thompson works with students, faculty, staff, university administrators, alumni and stakeholders, and is involved in organizations that provide regional, national and international leadership for land-grant institutions.

A professor of plant science, Thompson's research focuses on the molecular biology of plant vascular systems and the genomics of plant responses to phloem-feeding insects. Thompson is a fellow in the APLU-sponsored Food Systems Leadership Institute.

Before joining Penn State, Thompson led the Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology at Oklahoma State University and was the program director for plant-biotic interactions in the Directorate for Biological Sciences at the National Science Foundation. He held consecutive summer appointments as visiting research professor in the Department of Plant Biology at University of Copenhagen, was an associate professor and professor with appointments at the Little Rock campus and with the Division of Agriculture at the University of Arkansas, and was associate professor in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences at the University of Arizona. He received his bachelor from Nebraska in 1979.

For more information on the IANR vice chancellor search, click here. Information on how to access the live streams will be shared at a later date.

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