Dr. Bennie I. Osburn, Dean, School of Veterinary
Medicine, University of California, Davis, will be honored with a
Kansas State University College of Veterinary Medicine 2004
Distinguished Alumnus Award. Dr. Osburn will be recognized at the
Heritage Evening during the Annual Conference for Veterinarians by the
College of Veterinary Medicine and its Veterinary Medical Alumni
Association the first weekend in June. The Heritage Evening reception
will take place at 6:30 p.m., Monday, June 7, at the K-State Alumni
Center, followed by special alumni recognitions.
After earning his BS in Veterinary Medicine in
1959, followed by his DVM in 1961 from Kansas State University College
of Veterinary Medicine, Dr. Bennie Osburn continued to pursue his
academic career at the University of California, Davis. In 1965 Bennie
completed his PhD in Comparative Pathology from UC, Davis. From 1964
to 1968 he served on the faculty at the College of Veterinary Medicine
at Oklahoma State University. He was a post-doctoral fellow at John
Hopkins University Medical School from 1968 to 1970, when he returned
to the Davis campus as a faculty member in the School of Veterinary
Medicine. Dr. Osburn served as head of the Infectious Disease and
Immunology Unit at the California Regional Primate and Research Center
from 1975 to 1983 and as Associate Dean for Research and Graduate
Programs from 1975 until he became dean in 1996.
In Dr. Osburn's scientific career, he has
emphasized the health and welfare of food animals, particularly cattle
and sheep. He has been involved in key discoveries about food animal
viruses—including the bluetongue and border disease
viruses—developmental immunology, congenital infections and food
safety. Dr. Osburn has produced more than 270 peer-reviewed
publications. Forty-eight graduate students earned PhD's under his
direction.
Dr. Osburn is active in many professional
organizations and currently serves as president of the Association of
American Veterinary Medical Colleges. He has earned membership in the
Johns Hopkins Society of Scholars and is a fellow in the American
Association for the Advancement of Science. He is a diplomate and past
president of both the American College of Veterinary Pathologists and
the American Association of Veterinary Immunologists, and is an
honorary diplomate of the American Veterinarian Epidemiology Society.
He served as Chair of the U. S. Department of Agriculture's
Agricultural Biotechnology Research Advisory Committee from 1988 to
1991.
Among Dr. Osburn's awards are his recognition as a
Distinguished Veterinary Immunologist of the American Association of
Veterinary Immunologists; Distinguished Pathologist of the American
College of Pathologists; and Distinguished Practitioner in the
National Academy of Practice in Veterinary Medicine. Dr. Osburn also
has received the American Feed Industry Association Award and the UC
Davis School of Veterinary Medicine's Alumni Achievement Award.
Dr. Osburn continues to broaden the School's role
of veterinary medicine in animal, human and environmental health
issues. Under his guidance, the School has established centers of
excellence in comparative medicine, vectorborne disease, ecosystem
health, equine analytical chemistry and other programs. He promotes
comprehensive veterinary training programs to support veterinary
students interested in research and academic careers. He helped
institute a DVM/PhD program for veterinary students, a Masters Degree
program in public health, and the Student Training Advanced Research
summer program. He has increased the number of DVM students and
residents and developed K-12 outreach activities to encourage the next
generation of veterinarians. Dr. Osburn was instrumental in the
establishment of the Western Institute for Food Safety and Security
and the UC Veterinary Medical Center-San Diego. He has worked to help
the School initiate $140 million in new building programs, raised more
than $100 million in private support, and increased the annual
research budget 100% to $60 million.
Dr. Osburn's role at the UC Davis School of
Veterinary Medicine is one he feels very strongly about, "academic
veterinary medicine plays a key role in preparing future graduates for
serving society," Osburn said. At UC Davis, programs have expanded to
address many non-traditional areas that are opening up new
opportunities for the profession such as off-campus programs focusing
on large livestock populations at Tulare, California, comparative
medicine and captive and free ranging wildlife in San Diego,
California, Marine Ecosystem Health in the San Juan Islands in Wash.,
as well as expanded programs in veterinary public health and public
practice. The recently opened Western Institute for Food Safety and
Security at UC Davis addresses foods of both animal and plant origin
from farm to the consumer.
When questioned about his time spent at K-State,
Dr. Osburn remarked, "Kansas State University was instrumental in
providing me with an outstanding veterinary education. The faculty
instilled confidence and served as excellent role models who were
instrumental in shaping my career." Osburn added, "Lennart Krook and
Marvin Twiehaus interested me in pathology and later steered me on to
graduate work at the University of California. Most of my classmates
were veterans, and their work ethic and focus were inspirational to
the more junior members of the class." After more than 40 years in the
profession, Dr. Osburn is as enthusiastic as ever: "The profession has
much more to offer society than ever before, and this makes being a
part of such a great profession dynamic and exciting."
Recipients of the Kansas State University College
of Veterinary Medicine Distinguished Alumnus Award must have had an
outstanding career in veterinary medicine, have made significant
contributions benefiting his or her community, state and/or nation,
and must have made humanitarian services and contributions to the
veterinary profession and society rather than material success alone.
This award provides K-State College of Veterinary Medicine with the
opportunity to reach out and thank those who have made a difference.