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Dr. and
Mrs. E. T. York
Dr.
E. T. York's life exemplifies the land-grant philosophy
of using knowledge for the betterment of mankind. He has
devoted a lifetime of service to the land-grant university
system and to working as an advocate for the use of
international agricultural development as a weapon against
world hunger and malnutrition.
Fittingly, his career
parallels the critical growing years of the land-grant
institution—from its youth as life support for the nation's
agricultural producers into maturity as a complex,
multifaceted university.
The Alabama native received
both his bachelor's and master's degrees from Auburn
University. He was awarded a doctorate in 1949 from Cornell
University, where he studied under the tutelage of the
internationally renowned soil scientist, Dr. Richard
Bradfield.
While at Auburn, he married
Vermelle “Vam” Cardwell of Evergreen, Alabama. Mrs. York was
a leader in women's student government at Auburn. Mrs. York
retired as a successful businesswoman and real estate
developer.
From 1949 to 1956, Dr. York
served at North Carolina State University, first as
professor and then as chairman of the Department of
Agronomy. He directed Alabama's Extension Service from 1959
to 1961 and was Administrator of the Federal Extension
Service from 1961 to 1963.
York has applied the
land-grant institution's philosophy of knowledge for public
benefit to a lifelong advocacy for international
agricultural development. In that role, he has led several
presidential missions and served on many national and
international bodies concerned with agricultural development
and world hunger.
"A world filled with hungry,
sick, and poverty-ridden people is likely to be an unstable
world. The United States has a vital stake in the outcome of
the war on hunger," York said in a 1983 speech.
Dr. York is a former chairman
of the Board for International Food and Agricultural
Development (BIFAD) of the Agency for International
Development. The board is concerned with strengthening and
mobilizing the resources of U.S. universities to help Third
World nations improve their agricultural sectors through
effective research and educational institutions. He
currently chairs the Board of the International Fertilizer
Development Center, with programs around the world.
As provost of agriculture and
vice president for agricultural, natural, and human
resources at the University of Florida from 1963 to 1973,
York effected major, far-reaching changes. In an effort to
more clearly reflect the land-grant university's unique,
tripartite mission of teaching, research, and extension,
York brought together the College of Agricultural and Life
Sciences, the Florida Cooperative Extension Service, and the
Florida Agricultural Experiment Station under the single
administrative umbrella of the present Institute of Food and
Agricultural Sciences (IFAS).
He established the Center for
Tropical Agriculture, which extended the institute's
international influence. He initiated DARE (Developing
Agricultural Resources Effectively), a long-range planning
effort. Dr. York also founded SHARE (Special Help for
Agricultural Research and Education), a UF Foundation
program that raises private funds for agriculture. Over the
years, SHARE has generated nearly $250 million through gifts
of cash and other assets from thousands of donors.
After a period as executive
vice president and interim president of UF, he served as
chancellor of the State University System of Florida from
1975 to 1980. Since 1980, he has dedicated himself full-time
to a wide range of activities related to the problems of
world hunger and malnutrition.
Well-known for his community
service, York received the Rotary International's "Service
Above Self Award," the highest honor bestowed on Rotary Club
members. Fewer than one one-hundredth of one percent (0.01%)
of Rotarians worldwide are recognized with this award.
York is the author of more
than 100 technical papers and books, and he has lectured at
more than 40 universities throughout the U.S. and around the
world. He was appointed to prominent advisory positions by
Presidents Kennedy, Johnson, Nixon, Ford, Carter, and
Reagan, by various foreign governments, and by a number of
U.S. government agencies. Among his many honors, York has
received honorary degrees from UF, Auburn, Ohio State, and
North Carolina State, and is a member of the Alabama
Agricultural Hall of Honor and the Florida Agricultural Hall
of Fame.
In 1997, York was named a
Great Floridian by the Florida Museum of History in
recognition of his notable contributions in shaping the
state of Florida as we know it today. |