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Manhattan The Kansas State
University College of Veterinary Medicine has appointed four of its
faculty members to chairs and professorships: Dr. James W. Carpenter,
Edwin J. Frick Professorship in Veterinary Medicine; Dr. Howard H.
Erickson, Dr. Roy Walter Upham Endowed Professorship; Dr. Gregory F.
Grauer, The Morgan K. "Al" Jarvis Chair in Veterinary Medicine; Dr.
Jan M. Sargeant, The W.S. and E.C. Jones Departmental Chair of
Clinical Epidemiology. Friends and alumni of the college established
these prestigious awards through generous gifts to the KSU Foundation.
"Professorships and chairs are a
marvelous way for us to honor many of our leading faculty members. It
gives us the opportunity to recognize their strengths within the
profession in a way that donors truly appreciate," said Dr. Ralph C.
Richardson, Dean of the College of Veterinary Medicine. "Private gifts
are so essential in today's higher education. We just cant do it all
through state funds; private funds are essential in order for us to
prosper and grow to new levels."
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Dr. James W. Carpenter |
Dr. James W. Carpenter,
professor of Exotic, Wildlife & Zoo Animal
Medicine, has been awarded the Edwin J. Frick Professorship in
Veterinary Medicine.
Dr. Carpenter joined the faculty at
K-State in 1990 as head of the Exotic Animal, Wildlife and Zoo Animal
Medicine Service. Since his appointment, the service has expanded from
one to six veterinarians, and it is viewed as one of the premier
training programs in zoological medicine. He is frequently
sought by students as a mentor and advisor. His research efforts focus
on medicine and management of captive exotic animals, pharmacokinetics
of selected antibiotics in nontraditional animals, and parasites and
diseases of exotic animals and wildlife. Dr. Carpenter earned a doctor
of veterinary medicine and a master's degree from Oklahoma State
University. He is board certified by the American College of
Zoological Medicine.
Dr. Edwin and June Frick
established the Dr. Edwin J. Frick Endowed Professorship in Veterinary
Medicine. Dr. Frick completed a doctorate in veterinary medicine from
Cornell University in 1918 and joined the faculty at K-State in 1919.
He was named head of the Department of Surgery and Medicine in 1935
and retired from that position in 1966 as an emeritus professor. Dr.
Frick passed away August 10, 1993 at the age of 97. Mrs. Frick resides
in Manhattan, Kansas.
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Dr. Howard H. Erickson |
Dr. Howard H. Erickson,
professor of Physiology, has been named to the Dr. Roy Walter Upham
Endowed Professorship.
After a full 22-year career as a veterinarian in the
U.S. Air Force, Dr. Erickson returned to his alma mater in 1981. Since
his appointment, he has taught cardiovascular and renal sections of
the veterinary curriculum. His innovation in teaching was recognized
nationally in 1993 when he received the Merck AGVET Award for
Creativity in Teaching. Dr. Erickson has received more than a quarter
million dollars, just in the last two years, from extramural agencies
to support his research program in equine sports medicine and exercise
physiology. The American Veterinary Medical Association Council on
Research recently recognized his accomplishments by awarding him the
2000 Bayer Excellence in Equine Research Award. He earned a doctorate
in veterinary medicine from K-State in 1959 and went on to earn a PhD
from Iowa State University in 1966.
The Dr. Roy Walter Upham Endowed Professorship in
Veterinary Medicine was established with a gift from the estate of Dr.
Upham. Dr. Upham graduated from the K-State College of Veterinary
Medicine in January 1943 and immediately began his career as a public
health veterinarian. Notably, he was a lieutenant colonel in the Army
Veterinary Corps in the early 1950s and director of Food, Drugs and
Dairy for the Illinois Department of Public Health from 1966-1983. He
passed away on December 25, 1999.
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Dr. Gregory F. Grauer |
Dr. Gregory F. Grauer,
department head of Clinical Sciences and professor of internal
medicine, has been appointed to the Morgan K. "Al" Jarvis Endowed
Chair in Veterinary Medicine.
A diplomate of the American College of Veterinary
Internal Medicine since 1983, Dr. Grauer is recognized for his
expertise in nephrology. Dr. Grauer's research efforts have focused on
canine kidney disease, specifically acute renal failure and
glomerulonephritis. He is just one of three North Americans serving as
members of the International Renal Interest Society, for which he
served as chairman in 2000. The Morris Animal Foundation, in
recognition of outstanding contribution to animal health for research
on canine glomerulonephritis, named him a Fellow in 1987, and he
received the SmithKline Beecham Award for Research Excellence in 1994.
Dr. Grauer earned a doctorate in veterinary medicine from Iowa State
in 1978 and a master's from Colorado State in 1982.
Mrs. Mary Jarvis established the Morgan K.
'Al' Jarvis
Chair in Veterinary Medicine in memory of her husband. Support for the
fund is provided through a bequest and annual contributions to the
college. Dr. Jarvis was originally from Minden, Nevada and graduated from
the K-State College of Veterinary Medicine in 1940. He and Mary
married in 1942. He worked as a general practitioner, an associate
professor at Colorado A&M (now Colorado State) and a supervisor of
biological production for Corn States Serum Company in Omaha, Neb. Dr.
Jarvis passed away on April 9, 1972.
Dr. Jan M. Sargeant,
professor of epidemiology, has been named as the recipient of The W.S.
and E.C. Jones Departmental Chair of Clinical Epidemiology.
Dr. Sargeant is a well-trained epidemiologist who has
attained national and international recognition for her research and
scholarly activities. A member of the International Society of
Veterinary Epidemiology and Economics, she has a well-funded,
aggressive research program in the college. Her work in pre-harvest
food safety is currently funded by three USDA grants. Dr. Sargeant and
her graduate students recently presented the results of this work at
several national and international conferences. Dr. Sargeant earned a
doctor of veterinary medicine, master's and PhD from the Ontario
Veterinary College, University of Guelph, Ontario, Canada.
The W.S. and E.C. Jones Foundation Endowed Chair in
Clinical Epidemiology was established with a trust by Walter and Evan
Jones. The two brothers and Walter's wife, Olive, turned a 200-acre
inheritance into a two state 60,000-acre cattle operation. Jones and
Jones Partnership prospered by buying pasture land in Kansas and Texas
- some for as little as $10 per acre during the Great Depression. Oil
was later discovered on some of these properties. Walter and Evan left
millions of dollars in land to various charitable organizations,
including several health and educational grants.
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