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ESF To Bestow Graduate Of Distinction Awards

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  • ESF To Bestow Graduate Of Distinction Awards

    ESF TO BESTOW GRADUATE OF DISTINCTION AWARDS
    Curtis H. Bauer, Col. Richard P. Wagenaar, Steven Anlian

    SUNY-ESF Headlines, NY
    Nov 16 2006

    SYRACUSE, N.Y. - The SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry
    (ESF) and its Alumni Association will bestow Graduate of Distinction
    honors on three of its alumni during convocation ceremonies Dec. 8.

    Being honored for contributions to their communities and ESF are
    Curtis H. Bauer, Col. Richard P. Wagenaar and Steven Anlian.

    A 1950 graduate of the forestry program at ESF, Curtis H. Bauer founded
    a consulting forestry business and built it into the largest in New
    York state.

    Three years after graduating from ESF, Bauer founded his consulting
    forestry firm. By the time he sold the Jamestown-based business in
    1991, Forecon, Inc, counted among its clients some of the largest
    industrial forest products firms in the country. Over the decades
    he employed numerous ESF alumni, giving them a start in their own
    natural resource careers.

    Bauer's list of professional honors and affiliations reflect his
    long-standing passion for, and commitment to, his field. He was
    elected a Fellow of the Society of American Foresters (SAF) in 1985,
    due to his prominence in his profession. The New York Chapter of the
    SAF recognized him with its prestigious Heiberg and "Forester of the
    Year" awards.

    Bauer has served on the college's board of trustees for 30 years,
    including several years as its chairman. He has also served on the
    ESF College Foundation and chaired or served on advisory committees
    for the Faculty of Forestry and Natural Resource Management.

    Bauer will be presented with ESF's Lifetime Achievement Award.

    Col. Richard P. Wagenaar, a 1982 forest and natural resource management
    graduate, has served his country in many capacities through the
    U.S. Army and its Corps of Engineers. In his latest position his
    work is influencing the lives of countless residents as leader of
    the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers for New Orleans.

    Wagenaar was only six weeks into his new job when Hurricane Katrina
    hit southeastern Louisiana. Now working with a massive $3 billion
    budget, he is responsible for a jurisdiction that includes 2,800
    miles of navigable waterways, 1,300 miles of levees and floodwalls,
    six major flood control structures and other projects to protect
    coastal wetlands and the city of New Orleans.

    Wagenaar uses his ESF background to bring an environmental scientist's
    point of view to the job thereby looking not only at obvious safety
    concerns, but also ensuring the protection of marshes and the
    availability of fresh water.

    A decorated military officer, he has eight meritorious service
    medals and three Army commendation medals among many other honors. He
    graduated from several elite military education programs such as the
    Industrial College of the Armed Forces and holds two master's degrees.

    Wagenaar will be presented with the Alumni of Distinction Award.

    A 1975/76 graduate of the landscape architecture program Steven Anlian
    has dedicated himself to helping rebuild homes, cities, and lives as
    an expert in disaster relief.

    Anlian took a leave of absence from his position at HOH Associates,
    a nationally recognized urban planning and landscape architecture
    firm, to volunteer with Armenia's national planning agency after
    the devastating earthquake there in 1989. He did this as a Fulbright
    scholar. For his work, he was appointed an honorary member of President
    Gorbachev's Commission on Armenian Recovery.

    In 1991, recruited by the U.S. Agency for International Development
    (USAID), he served as resident advisor to the newly independent
    Government of Armenia to assist with its rebuilding.

    In 1998, returning to Armenia, Anlian developed the "New Strategy
    for Armenia's Earthquake Zone," which presented innovative solutions
    to providing permanent shelter for the displaced families in the
    earthquake region and jump-started stalled recovery efforts. This
    guided USAID in programming $34.2 million for the recovery program.

    In July 2006, Anlian returned to Washington, D.C. as the director
    of infrastructure in the department of operations for the Millennium
    Challenge Corporation, the new federal corporation redefining American
    foreign assistance. Thus he will assist with future natural disasters.

    Anlian will be honored with the Graduate of Distinction Award.

    http://www.esf.edu/newspubs/news/2006/11.1 6.distinction.htm
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