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Noble Foundation-New Staff
News release
issued March 25, 2001, effective immediately. For media inquiries, contact Caroline Booth Lara, Communications Specialist, (580)
224-6379.
email: cblara@noble.org
Four Join Foundation Team
ARDMORE -- Increased staffing, patent
opportunities and expanded research -- as the Noble Foundation grows, so do
its needs.
Finding the right people to lead
those areas was a significant challenge for Noble Foundation management. After
months of advertising, processing applications and interviewing candidates,
the Foundation recently announced the hiring of Teal Pemberton as human resources
director, Steve Rhines as intellectual property counsel, Dr. Mary Sledge as
assistant scientist/applied legume geneticist in the Forage Biotechnology Group,
and the affiliation of Dr. Joe Bouton as acting head of the Forage Biotechnology
Group.
"We conducted a national search
for these positions with interest coming literally from all over the country,"
said Noble Foundation President Mike Cawley. "We identified the best candidates
and were fortunate to secure their commitments. Teal Pemberton, Steve Rhines,
Joe Bouton and Mary Sledge are not only extremely bright and talented, they
are also high quality people."
Teal Pemberton, a native of Tulsa,
joined the Noble Foundation staff last September. A graduate of Nathan Hale
High School, she received a bachelors degree in business administration
from Abilene Christian University specializing in management and psychology.
She held various human resources positions with Hendrick Health Systems beginning
in 1990 and was promoted to assistant human resources director in 1994.
In 1997 Pemberton left her position
with Hendrick to attend law school at the University of Oklahoma. She joined
the Foundation shortly after receiving her law degree and passing the bar. Her
husband, Raymond, is a sales manager with Blue Bell Creameries. Their son, Samuel,
attends kindergarten at Oak Hall.
"I had watched this job for
several months. From what I learned it was obvious that the Noble Foundation
was about to take off in terms of growth and expansion," Pemberton said.
"The organization was poised to do some great things. And from a human
relations perspective, that can be a lot of fun."
Pemberton said she was also attracted
and fascinated by the Foundations long history of service to mankind.
"I spent hours on the Foundation
website learning about its history," she said. "Ive been happiest
when Ive worked for nonprofit organizations. They have a real mission
and history in serving the community. I like that sort of environment."
Pemberton said she was very impressed
with the positive, professional attitude of Foundation employees beginning with
the interview process and continuing through the present. "And Im
excited about the total buy-in the Foundation employees have about what can
be achieved here," she added.
Steve Rhines, who will handle patents
and technology transfer agreements for the Foundation, hails from Antlers, Oklahoma.
He graduated from the University of Oklahoma in 1990 with a degree in mechanical
engineering. He received his law degree from Southern Methodist University in
1994.
After working for Cyrix Corporation
and Quest Medical in the Dallas area, Rhines joined the multinational law firm
of Sidley and Austin in 1997 where he specialized in patents and licensing issues.
His experience in those areas will prove valuable as Foundation researchers
develop unique scientific procedures and marketable products in the plant science
field.
Rhines decision to relocate
closer to his Oklahoma roots was simplified by the fact that his wife, Debbie,
used to live here, and by his long-time awareness of the Foundation.
"Theres no question but
that the Foundation is growing by leaps and bounds," Rhines said. "Its
a family-friendly position that offers all the professional challenges and rewards
you would get in a professional law firm. The intellectual property of the Noble
Foundation is an enormous untapped resource."
Rhines will be assisted by Allyson
Wilkins in identifying intellectual property "that can be cultivated into
something that is valuable to the outside world," he said. "Transferring
that intellectual property to private industry or other institutions can bring
in a revenue stream to help fund the expanded research efforts here."
Transferable and/or patentable "property"
could include research procedures and processes, the products of the research,
and plants with unique and desirable characteristics, such as disease resistance,
Rhines said.
Steve and Debbie have triplet sons
Andrew, Thomas and Grant, who will celebrate their second birthdays in April.
Joe Bouton, a native of Leland, Mississippi,
earned his undergraduate degree in agronomy at Mississippi State University
before transferring to the University of Florida where he received his masters
and Ph.D. He joined the faculty at the University of Georgia in 1977 as an assistant
professor.
Boutons affiliation with the
Foundation began in 1997 when he began serving in an advisory capacity as a
Forage Biotechnology Group non-resident fellow.
Although Bouton will continue to
serve as Professor in the Department of Crop and Soil Science at the University
of Georgia in Athens where he specializes in forage breeding and genetics, he
will also maintain an office at the Foundation. Bouton will be on site for several
days each month to manage and assist the Forage Biotechnology Group and interact
with other Noble Foundation personnel to ensure the continued progress of the
group.
"Joe Bouton is one of the most
highly respected forage specialists in the world," Cawley said. "His
willingness to associate with the Foundation says a lot about the quality of
the people and the quality of the ongoing work at the Foundation.
"Joe told me that having a plant
biology program, an agricultural demonstration and consultation program and
a forage biotechnology program under one roof was particularly appealing to
him because the ultimate success of the forage program will require cooperative
interaction among all three disciplines," Cawley explained.
"While we would love to have
Joe Bouton here full time now, and are hopeful that can happen when his commitments
to the University of Georgia have been fulfilled, we are extremely happy to
have been able to develop this unique arrangement for Joe to become the acting
director of our Forage Biotechnology Group," Cawley added. "Communications
technology being what it is today, our people will have immediate access to
Joe whether he is in Athens, Georgia, or in Ardmore."
"I think the potential here
is enormous for developing grass and legume varieties for use by our cooperators
as well as other producers in our region and in other areas of the world,"
Bouton explained.
The goal of the grass research is
to develop varieties that will persist without reseeding for a minimum of four
to five years and will "come back quickly in the fall for grazing,"
Bouton said. "Replanting annual grasses each year gets to be very expensive.
If we can develop grasses that dont die off in the summer and have good
growth in the fall, that will really pay off."
Bouton and his wife Mary Jeanne have
three children, Melinda, 25, Andrew, 22, and Ben, a freshman at the University
of Georgia. Geography might make Boutons job a bit more of a challenge,
but hes confident technology can help him make the arrangement a success.
Dr. Andy Hopkins will spearhead the
grass development research while Dr. Mary Sledge will work with legumes, such
as clover and alfalfa.
Sledge, who joined the Foundation
staff in January, lived in Athens, Georgia, for the past 30 years. She earned
her bachelors in botany and her Ph.D. in plant breeding from the University
of Georgia. Her work at the Foundation will focus on alfalfa, clovers and a
group of alfalfa-like plants known as "annual medics."
One of the goals of her research
group will be to develop grazing tolerant alfalfa for use in Oklahoma and northern
Texas. The research would also focus on the potential benefits of growing annual
medics alongside grasses such as wheat.
Because legumes enhance the amount
of soil nitrogen available to other plants, "double-cropping" alfalfa
or other legumes with grasses could have a direct economic impact on producers.
"One of our goals is to reduce
the amount of nitrogen you have to apply through fertilization because the legumes
produce their own nitrogen," Sledge explained.
Another area of Sledges research
will be to identify the genes in alfalfa that impact the plants ability
to tolerate high concentrations of aluminum in acidic soils.
"Aluminum is becoming more of
a problem, especially in eastern Texas and eastern Oklahoma in acid soils,"
Sledge said. "When the soil pH falls below about 5.5, aluminum could become
a problem. Alfalfa grows best in soils with a pH of 6.5 to 7.0 (neutral soils,
neither acid or alkaline). About 40 percent of arable land worldwide has an
acidity-aluminum problem."
Developing an alfalfa variety that
can grow on acidic soils with higher aluminum concentrations would reduce the
need to apply lime, thus saving money for producers, she added.
Sledge and her husband Ken, a landscape
architect, have two children: Jennifer, 14, and Jason 12, who attend Plainview
Middle School.
Legumes, Bouton noted, are also "notorious"
for not being persistent, or perennial. Diseases such as cotton root rot often
plague legumes in this area, he added.
"Alfalfa, for example, can be
a very high value crop," Bouton said. "Is there a way to overcome
cotton root rot? Conventional breeding hasnt solved that problem. If we
can come up with a solution, the potential benefits would be huge."
Still another area of forage research
will focus on enhancing nutritional quality for livestock, Bouton said.
Whatever the problem, the solution
wont be instant. The timetable involved in starting from scratch and ending
with a functional variety of grass or legume used by farmers can take up to
12 years.
"The real time-consuming part
is the testing," Bouton explained. "You want to make sure that you
have a variety that is tested in different areas under different conditions
to ensure it wont fail in the field. You need to know the geographical
limits of the variety. After testing, the process continues with dissemination
and marketing of the new varieties."
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Photos: Teal
Pemberton | Steve Rhines | Dr.
Mary Sledge | Dr. Joe Bouton
The Samuel Roberts Noble Foundation,
headquartered in Ardmore, Okla., is a non-profit organization conducting agricultural,
forage biotechnological, and plant biology research; providing grants to numerous
non-profit charitable, educational and health organizations; and assisting farmers
and ranchers through educational and consultative agricultural programs.
To learn more, check out the Noble
Foundation Web site at http://www.noble.org.
More news releases available at www.noble.org/Press_Release
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