October Dear Alumni and Friends Hello to all of
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October 27, 2008
Dear Alumni and Friends,
Hello to all 4789 of you alums of the Animal Ecology and Forestry curricula that are now housed in
NREM. Hello, as well, to our many other friends! A message from those of us back here in Ames is long
overdue. Our department has recently undergone many changes that caused further delay in this
overdue update. We hope to soon reestablish a more formal, annual newsletter. For now, we hope
you agree it is the thought that counts! We do think of our former students often and we send our best
wishes for your health and happiness. We’d love to hear back from you on what you are currently
doing and your memories of your times at Iowa State. On to some news:
Many Changes
Dr. David Engle, who chaired the department from August, 2005 to June 25, 2008 returned to
Oklahoma State University to be the Director of the Center for Ag Water Research and Extension and
serve on the faculty continuing his research on range ecology. He is also continuing his research on
grassland restoration for wildlife and livestock in Iowa under the local leadership of Ryan Harr.
Fortunately, the department was already testing out a new administrative system including an
Associate Chair. Dr. Joe Morris started interim service in that position on January 1, and is continuing
to help lead the department with primary emphasis on the teaching and research programs. While we
conduct a nation‐wide search for a new chairperson, Dr. Richard B. (Rick) Hall is serving as Interim
Chair. Two other important changes at the administrative level occurred. As reported in the Winter
2007 newsletter, Brenda VanBeek left her position with the Cooperative Fish & Wildlife Research
Unit to start a family (Robert Douglas born May 6) and move to South Dakota. While we miss her
always cheerful and helpful interactions with students and faculty, we are now thankful for our new
Co‐Op Unit Administrative Assistant, Anni Magyary. Anni came to Iowa from Georgia and has enjoyed
exchanging lessons on how to speak southern for winter survival tips. The second change is Jan
Meyer moving to a new Administrative Specialist position in Food Science‐Human Nutrition, with Jodi
Hilleman moving from Landscape Architecture to NREM as our Administrative Specialist starting
August 22.
Since our last newsletter, we have had one faculty retirement and one new hire. Dr. Jim Pease,
Extension Wildlife Specialist, leader of the interpretation curriculum, and media star retired on June
30. His daily contributions to the department and the citizens of Iowa are being sorely missed.
Fortunately for us, Jim continues to live near Ames on his reconstructed ecosystem and visits us often
when he is not traveling to some exotic spot (in‐state or worldwide). He also will be continuing his
presence on the radio. Jason O’Brien is temporarily filling Jim’s position until a search for a
permanent replacement is completed. Dr. John Tyndall changed his title from Post‐doctoral Fellow to
new Assistant Professor in NREM on August 16. John has been, and continues to be involved with a
number of classes and research projects with a focus on natural resource economics.
Page 1 Alumni Newsletter - Fall 2008
In the Student Services area, we have also had one loss and one gain. As mentioned in the last
newsletter, Ann Hawkins, who worked on student recruitment/retention, assisting student groups for
Veishea and Awards Banquet, photography, and our newsletters left to take a college‐level position in
student services for the ISU College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. Her replacement is Lacy Johnson, a
2008 ISU graduate in Journalism. Lacy brings much enthusiasm and background skills in television
and print media to our recruiting and retention activities. She probably will be contacting some of you
for input that would benefit our recruiting and retention efforts.
Current Students
NREM currently has 267 Animal Ecology and 68 Forestry undergraduate majors and 48 graduate
students in Animal Ecology, Fisheries Biology, Forestry, Wildlife Biology and interdisciplinary
programs in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Sustainable Agriculture, and Environmental Science.
To simplify our graduate degrees a bit, Animal Ecology and Wildlife Biology are being condensed into
one degree title of Wildlife Ecology. Our students benefit greatly when they can learn about the
experiences of you, their predecessors. We hope you will have a chance to meet some of our current
students at state, regional, and national meetings. We hope you will keep our students in mind if you
have a role in hiring summer employees and interns. And, we hope you continue to provide us with
permanent job announcements for your organization or others you know about. We will soon have a
video display operating outside our Student Services Center that will feature current students and
their activities, job opportunities, and success stories from alumni. We hope you can supply us with
some of the latter.
We invite you to keep up with the activities of NREM and the Cooperative Fish & Wildlife Research
Unit through our respective web sites:
http://www.nrem.iastate.edu/
http://www.cfwru.iastate.edu/
On the NREM site you can find out how some of our students study UNDER a canoe, see our current
graduate students and their research areas, our diverse and popular opportunities for participating in
student clubs, what kinds of jobs we have listed for part‐time and permanent employment, plus many
more pieces of information about us. We hope to be doing some major revisions of our web site soon,
so we welcome your suggestions on how to make it even more user‐friendly. Do take a look at the
cfwru site, it was recently redesigned along lines we are likely to follow for the NREM site,
We need your help!
Please help us by directing good students our way. Relatives and acquaintances that have an interest
in pursuing a career in natural resources should check us out! We see some of the best employment
opportunities that have been available in any recent time, but we are not enrolling as many students as
it will take to fill some of those jobs.
As indicated earlier in this letter, the department has two faculty positions to be filled. Full details are
available on the web at:
https://www.iastatejobs.com/applicants/jsp/shared/frameset/Frameset.jsp
There you can “Search for Vacancies using the “Vacancy ID number” 080782 for the Department Chair
and 080976 for the Extension Wildlife Specialist positions. If you know of good candidates or would be
Page 2 Alumni Newsletter - Fall 2008
one yourself, PLEASE notify the chair of the respective search committee and provide contact
information for your suggested candidate.
In these difficult economic times, I am happy to report that the Iowa economy has remained relatively
stable and NREM does not need a financial bailout. But we always can use the stimulus that Alumni
donations provide. We are trying to build scholarship funds, support for students to attend
professional meetings, funds for purchasing specialized research and/or teaching equipment,
enrichment funding for NREM Learning Communities, and support for students to study abroad. So,
just like many students have done over the years in contacting their parents, I’ll ask “Please send us
some money if you can.” But unlike the students, we won’t ask you to do our laundry.
Alumni Receptions and Reunions
When we can, we like to get out to different venues around the country where we can hold receptions for you
and other alumni. We also appreciate it when we get invited to participate in alumni reunions. Here are three
opportunities that are coming up in the near future:
There will be an ISU alumni reception at the Society of American Forester’s National Convention in Reno on
Thursday night, November 6. We will be in the Crystal 2 room of the convention hotel with light snacks and cash
bar (first drink provided) from 7 to 9 pm. Faculty members Rick Hall, Jan Thompson, and John Tyndal will be
present. More importantly, 14 undergraduate students should be there to make your acquaintance.
NREM and faculty member Steve Dinsmore will host an alumni and friends reception as part of the annual
meeting of The Wildlife Society in Miami, Florida. The reception will be from 6‐8 p.m. on Tuesday, 11
November in the Orchid B room of the Hyatt Regency Miami Hotel. This is a great opportunity to visit with old
friends or meet other alumni in the wildlife profession.
Details of a reunion of those who have spent time at or near the Lubrect, Montana Forestry Camp are given on
the __ page 4 of this newsletter. We hope you will join us if you can. The most recent Fall Forestry Camp was
held at Lubrecht this September after a long absence. Drs. Dick Schultz and Lisa Schulte Moore led this year’s
camp and Drs. Schultz and Tyndall will be back there with our Forestry Sophomores in the fall of 2009.
Page 3 Alumni Newsletter - Fall 2008
Montana Camp Reunion
June 27, 2009
Plans are underway for a reunion of ISU forestry graduates who attended camp at the Lubrecht Forest
in Montana. Although the emphasis is on people who attended camp there, if you are an ISU forestry
graduate and will be in the Missoula area on June 27, 2009, you are welcome to attend the reunion,
regardless of where you went to camp.
We have the Lubrecht camp reserved for Saturday the 27th, and the camp cooks will be serving a noon
meal (don't worry, we won't make you do KP duty before you eat). Because there are so many things
to do in the area as well as on the way to and from Missoula, we are going to keep activities associated
with the reunion simple. Activities for the 27th will consist mostly of getting together at camp, having
lunch, renewing friendships. (There may be some other things planned, but until we have a handle on
how many people may show up, we won't know for sure.) We are also considering the possibility of a
social hour on Friday evening at a hotel in Missoula. That too will depend on how many people
express an interest.
To help us get started on more specific arrangements, we need your help. Please fill out the form
below and return it as soon as possible if you are reasonably certain you will attend the reunion. You
don't need to send money at this time. I will send updated information along with a request for
payment at a later date.
Also, please check the following web site: http://www.nrem.iastate.edu/MTCR/
We are trying to reach everyone who attended one of the Montana camps, but there are a number of
people for whom we don't have a mailing address. If you know the mailing address, email, or phone
number for one or more of the people listed on the web site, please email (or send via regular mail)
any information you have so we can contact them. My e‐mail address is sejungst@iastate.edu.
‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐‐
Name:
Email Address:
Mailing Address:
Number attending Saturday noon meal at Lubrecht ($16.00 per person)
Number attending social hour in Missoula on Friday evening
($30.00 per adult‐does not include cash bar)
($15.95 per child under 12)
Return to: Steve Jungst
Natural Resource Ecology and Management
339 Science II, Iowa State University
Ames, IA 50011
Page 4 Alumni Newsletter - Fall 2008
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