2006 Winner -
Professor DARYL B. LUND (University of WISCONSIN)
The Ohio State Food Science Faculty selected Professor Daryl B. Lund as the 2006
Harris Prize
winner. Dr. Lund accepted the award on October 3, 2006.
Daryl Lund earned a B.S. (1963) in
mathematics and a Ph.D. (1968) in food science with a minor in
chemical engineering at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. During
21 years at the University of Wisconsin, he was a professor of food
engineering in the Food Science Department serving as chair of the
department from 1984 - 1987. He has contributed over 150 scientific
papers, edited 5 books, and co-authored one major textbook in the
area of simultaneous heat and mass transfer in foods, kinetics of
reactions in foods, and food processing.
In 1988 he continued his administrative responsibilities by chairing
the Department of Food Science at Rutgers University, and from
December 1989 through July 1995 served as the Executive Dean of
Agriculture and Natural Resources with responsibilities for
teaching, research and extension at Rutgers University. In that
position, among other achievements, he initiated a rigorous
strategic planning process for Cook College and the New Jersey
Agricultural Experiment Station, streamlined administrative
services, fostered a review of the undergraduate curriculum and
encouraged the faculty to develop a "social contact" for
undergraduate instruction.
In August 1995, he joined the Cornell University faculty as The
Ronald P. Lynch Dean of Agriculture and Life Sciences. During his
tenure as dean of CALS, he initiated a strategic positioning process
for the college that guided the college through 20% downsizing,
promoted the Agriculture Initiative to gain increased state support
for the Agricultural Experiment Station and Cooperative Extension,
supported an initiative in genomics and overhaul of the biological
sciences, fostered a review of undergraduate programs that led to
major changes, and supported the adoption of electronic technologies
for undergraduate teaching and distance education. In July 2000, Dr.
Lund returned to the Department of Food Science as Professor of Food
Engineering.
In January 2001, Dr. Lund became the Executive Director of the North
Central Regional Association of State Agricultural Experiment
Station Directors. In this position he facilitates interstate
collaboration on research and a greater integration between research
and extension in the twelve-state region.
Among many awards in recognition of personal achievement, he is a
recipient of the ASAE/DFISA Food Engineering Award, the IFT
International Award and Carl R. Fellers Award, and the Irving Award
from the American Distance Education Consortium. He is an elected
Fellow of the Institute of Food Technologists, elected Fellow of the
Institute of Food Science and Technology (UK), and charter inductee
in the International Academy of Food Science and Technology.
2005 Winner -
Professor James jay (University of Nevada, Las Vegas)
The Ohio State Food Science faculty
selected Professor James Jay of UNLV as the 2005
Harris Prize winner. Dr. Jay was presented the award on September 27, 2005.
Prof. Jay’s
interest
in food microbiology dates back to his graduate student days at Ohio
State University (1952-1956) when he worked with the tetracycline
antibiotics as meat preservatives under Prof. H. H. Weiser. He
subsequently worked with the staphylococci, staphylococcal
bacteriophages and staphylococcal lysozyme; and developed eight rapid methods
for determining the microbial quality of fresh meats based on hydration
capacity methods and the Limulus amebocyte lysate assay. His more recent
studies have dealt with microbial interference in fresh meats relative
to foodborne pathogens such as Escherichia coli O157:H7, and the possible role
that quorum sensing plays in refrigerated fresh meat spoilage. Dr. Jay
will address the safety of foods relative to the background
microorganisms. His presentation included some historical data on
microbes in foods relative to the incidence/prevalence of food poisoning
outbreaks. The bottom line of his presentation was to underscore the
overall positive value that the vast majority of microbes are to humans.
2004 Winner -
Professor Stephen L. Taylor (University of Nebraska)
The recipient of the
OSU Food Science Harris Award
is Dr. Stephen L. Taylor of the University of Nebraska at
Lincoln. He was presented the award on October 28, 2004.
Dr.
Taylor’s primary research interests involve the determination of the
minimal doses for specific allergenic foods; allergenicity of
ingredients derived from allergenic sources; and allergenicity of foods
produced through agricultural biotechnology. His research generated
more than 200 scientific publications on peanut, soybean, Brazil nut,
almond, and cows’ milk allergies.
Dr. Taylor is Professor and Head of the
Dept. of Food Science & Technology and Director of the Food Processing
Center at the University of Nebraska. He received his B.S. and M.S.
degrees in food science from Oregon State University and his Ph.D. in
biochemistry from the University of California - Davis. He received
postdoctoral training in environmental toxicology and nutrition at the
University of California - Davis. Before joining the University of
Nebraska in 1987, Dr. Taylor was Chief of the Food Toxicology Laboratory
at Letterman Army Institute of Research in San Francisco and was a
faculty member with the Food Research Institute at the University of
Wisconsin. He is a member of the Food & Nutrition Board of the National
Academy of Sciences; the Adverse Reactions to Foods Committee of the
American Academy of Allergy, Asthma, & Immunology; and the Medical
Advisory Board of the Food Allergy & Anaphylaxis Network.
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