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G. Tyler Miller

Ronald E. Carrier

Linwood H. Rose

World-Changer Profiles

James Madison

Carolyn Abitbol ('67)

Donna Amenta

Shawn Arnold ('76, '81M)

Andy Bacon ('00)

Carole Baldwin ('81)

John Barrick ('76)

Ken Bartee ('83)

Phil Bigler ('74, '76M)

Norlyn Bodkin

Keith Brill ('77)

Shelby Brown ('83)

Bill Buck

Tom Carr ('84)

Ginjer Norris Clarke ('94)

Cynthia Coolbaugh ('70)

Maj. Patrick Creed ('93)

Joe Damico ('76, '77M)

Kai Degner ('03, '05M)

Mark Dertzbaugh ('82)

Sue Dickson ('52)

Lt. Col. Mike Dillon ('81)

Tom Dingledine

Linia Duncan ('07)

Curt Dvonch ('08)

Katy Elmore ('01M)

Ed Estes

Karen Evans

Richard Evans

Vanessa Evans ('93, '97M)

Judith Flohr

Bruce and Lois Cardarella Forbes ('64)

Marlon Foster ('82, '95M)

Joanne Gabbin

Mark Gabriele ('95)

Chris Gatesman ('94M)

Elizabeth Gauldin ('50)

Valerie Gibbs ('11)

Joann Grayson

Oris Griffin

Jazminia Griffith ('06)

David Grimm ('74)

Debbie Grimm ('74)

Donna Sizemore Hale ('81)

Charles Haley ('87)

Barbara Hall ('82)

Sarita Hartz ('02)

Derwin Henderson ('83)

Mike Hoss ('84)

Vida Huber (1937-2005)

Dan Irwin ('90)

Eric Johnson ('95)

Pamela Johnson

Jessica Kahn ('91)

Josh Kelaher ('11)

Shannon Kennan ('97M)

Lesley Kipling ('99)

Karina Kline-Gabel ('92)

Margot Knight ('74)

Jonathan Koves ('05)

Susan E. Kruck ('94) ('95M)

David LaMotte ('90)

Emily Lewis Lee ('43)

Steve Leeolou ('78)

Gordon Leisch ('56, '65M)

Nathan Lyon ('94)

Gina MacDonald

Sonja Macys ('97)

Virginia Mann ('06)

Samier Mansur ('07)

Nate Marsh ('01)

Special Agent Charles T. May Jr. ('83)

Beth McGinnis ('00)

MeMe McKee ('99)

Amy McPherson ('83)

Challace McMillin

Matt Miller ('98)

Sushil Mittal

Roger Myers

Tracey Neale ('89)

Dee Nilsen ('00)

John B. Noftsinger Jr. ('85)

Mary Ellen Garber Otto ('58)

Ross Paterson ('90)

Michael Peretich ('06)

Joy Petway ('07)

J. Peter Pham

Janet Phillips ('88)

Robert and Frances Plecker

Ryan Powanda ('09)

Jim and Julie Riley ('99P, '05P)

Don Rhymer ('82)

Dave Rizzo ('83)

Dick and Shirley Hanson ('56) Roberts

James Robinson

Inez Graybeal Roop ('35)

John Rothenberger ('88)

W. Raymond "Buddy" Showalter Jr. ('50) (1928-2007)

Mary Slade

Charles Douglas 'Doug' Smith ('93)

Wesli Spencer ('06)

Anne Stewart

Diane Strawbridge ('80, '02M)

Debra Sutton

Elizabeth Swallow

Laura Taalman

Jason Teasley ('02)

Casey Templeton ('06)

Bruce Thayer ('84)

Kathy Thomas ('78)

Mike Thomas ('76, '77M)

Jeff Tickle ('90)

Sean Tobin ('92)

Dennis Tracz ('78)

Christina Updike ('73)

Cathy Webb

Louise Wilkins-Haug ('76)

J. Craig Williams ('79)

Grace Wyngaard

Amy Porter Zacaroli ('88)

Dave Rizzo ('83)

Forest Pathologist and Professor

Photo: Dave Rizzo

Dave Rizzo, a forest pathologist and professor at the University of California at Davis, is trying to halt an epidemic that he has helped make a national priority. For almost 20 years, much of the former Madison biology major's work has been on oak-root fungus and wood-decay fungi in labs and forests far from the public eye. His life changed, however, when he and U.C.-Berkeley colleague Matteo Garbelotto discovered the microbe - Phytophthora ramorum -- that causes sudden oak death. It's a relative of the culprit thought to have caused the Irish potato famine in the 1840s. Now Dave is in demand across the nation for conference presentations, town hall briefings and news media interviews as he and his colleague command six-figure budgets and sizeable lab teams aimed at finding a way to save California's landmark oaks and prevent sudden oak death, which already is affecting more than 100 types of plants, from spreading to East Coast forests, where red oak, beech and rhododendron might be susceptible. Today Dave attributes an eerie foreshadowing to his JMU biology class and field trips into Virginia's forests and woods. During a field trip, he recalls noticing a stump of an American chestnut tree decimated by the chestnut blight that spread across the East. "I thought that was interesting that a disease could wipe out a whole forest," he recalls. "Little did I know that I would be working on a disease that might do the same thing."

"There's pressure out there," Rizzo says. "If you get frustrated easily, you wouldn't be in this business."

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