Ames, Iowa
February 13, 2002
Pioneer Hi-Bred International Inc. has made a gift to endow
a faculty chair in maize breeding in the College of Agriculture
at Iowa State University.
The creation of the Pioneer Hi-Bred International Endowed Chair
in Maize Breeding will support the recruitment of a world-class
faculty member to lead the university's maize breeding program.
The chair also is likely to play a significant role in or hold
the position of the director of the Raymond F. Baker Center for
Plant Breeding in the Plant Sciences Institute.
"The maize breeding chair will be a significant faculty position
at Iowa State and is of particular importance to the state of
Iowa," said Gregory Geoffroy, Iowa State University president.
"By
endowing a faculty chair dedicated to the science of maize
breeding, Pioneer has given Iowa State the opportunity to
attract and retain a truly outstanding scholar in this area."
The Pioneer Maize Breeding Chair will be expected to have
experience in multidisciplinary and field-oriented research and
the ability to develop germplasm for regional agricultural
systems. He
or she will lead a research program that emphasizes quantitative
and population genetics, selection theory and breeding
methodology.
The gift from Pioneer, given via the ISU Foundation, will create
a faculty endowment in which a percentage of the gift earnings
is used annually for the position. Excess earnings are invested
in
the endowment principal, so the value of the fund can be
expected to grow over time.
Plant breeding programs at Iowa State have contributed
significantly to the productivity and quality of crops for
farmers around the world. The university's classical plant
breeding programs have integrated basic research on breeding
methods and germplasm enhancement with the development of
improved
cultivars.
"Pioneer's gift to endow the Maize Breeding Chair addresses one
of the most critical needs for faculty support in the College of
Agriculture, and it ensures that Iowa State will retain its
status among the world's foremost programs for plant breeding
research and education," said Catherine Woteki, dean of
agriculture.
"Corn growers everywhere have long benefited from the crop
improvement teaching and research at Iowa State," said Rick
McConnell, Pioneer president. "This gift made on their behalf
will help ensure that the tremendous plant breeding tradition at
Iowa State continues to thrive."
The maize breeding program at Iowa State was initiated by
Merrill Jenkins in 1922 and came to prominence under George F.
Sprague, considered one of the fathers of modern maize breeding.
In collaboration with the U.S. Department of Agriculture,
Sprague is credited with discovering hybrid corn, and his Iowa
Stiff Stalk Synthetic (BSSS) is the germplasm foundation for
many commercial corn hybrids.
In 1959, Arnel Hallauer succeeded Sprague in directing ISU's
maize breeding program. Hallauer, who recently retired, was part
of a team of USDA and Iowa State scientists who developed the
B73 line of hybrid corn, one of six lines that are the basis for
much of the seed-parent lines of corn used in the United States
and in temperate regions worldwide.
Among the most prominent graduates of Iowa State's plant
breeding program was Raymond F. Baker, who was fascinated by
Pioneer founder Henry A. Wallace's work with corn hybrids. Baker
was Pioneer's second employee and the company's lead plant
breeder for 43 years. He developed many of Pioneer's first corn
hybrids, and is credited with establishing the scientific
groundwork in the 1930s that helped Pioneer become the world's
largest seed company.
"This gift is a wonderful celebration of the historic and
beneficial association of Iowa State and Pioneer, as well as a
great investment in the future," said Tom Mitchell, ISU
Foundation president and CEO.
The gift is part of the Iowa State's Investing in People
initiative, a two-year effort of the university and the ISU
Foundation to raise private funds for undergraduate
scholarships, graduate fellowships and faculty support.
Pioneer Hi-Bred International Inc., a subsidiary of DuPont,
provides access to advanced plant genetics, crop protection
solutions and quality crop systems to customers in nearly 70
countries.
The Iowa State University Foundation is a private, non-profit
corporation dedicated to securing and managing gifts and grants
that benefit Iowa State University.
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