D 22—Lancaster Farming, Saturday, January 22,1983 Crop Society elects officers ANAHEIM, Cal. - William L. Colville, professor and head of the Division of Agronomy, University of Georgia, Athens, became president of the Crop Science Society of America last month at the annual CSSA lun cheon and awards program. He succeeds W. L. Brown, chairman and chief executive officer. Pioneer Hi-Bred International, Inc., Des Moines, lowa, as head of the 5,500-member scientific, educational organization. Colville’s area of specialization centers around crop ecology, production research and teaching. His research activities focus on production managem ent, ecology, growth regulation, defoliation and microclimatology of forage and row crops. His research has led to a reconsideration of the role of plant population, rwo spacing and related factors in high productivity crop ecosystems. A Fellow of the American Society of Agronomy (1968), Colville has served on numerous ASA and C SSA committees, in cluding chairing the CSSA budget and finance committee and serving on the CSSA and ASA boards of directors. A recipient of the ASA Agronomic Education Award (1969), he holds his bachelor’s degree from lowa State University, Ames, and his master’s and doc toral degrees from the University of Wisconsin, Madison. Wayne F. Keim, professor and head of the Department of Agronomy, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, is ASA’s president-elect. He will become president of the organization at the 1983 annual meeting in Washington, D.C. Keim has conducted research in the areas of genetics, breeding, physiology, cytology and seed production in perennial forage legumes with emphasis on the genera Lotus and Trifolium. He has taught introductory genetics to more than 7,000 students over a 20- year period; 125 of these students subsequently earned master’s or doctoral degrees in plant or animal breeding. Among his innovative teaching techniques, he developed a genetics laboratory course to provide "hands on” experience for un dergraduates as well as programs and visual aids to motivate young people into agronomic careers. He holds degrees from the University of Nebraska, Lincoln, and Cornell University, Ithaca. Other newly-elected CSSA officers for 1982-83 include: Ronald L. Phillips, University of Minnesota, St. Paul, chairman-elect. Crop Breeding, Genetics and Cytology: Curtis J. Nelson, University of Missouri, Columbia, chairman-elect. Crop Physiology and Metabolism; Lowell E. Moser, University of Nebraska, Lincoln. chairman-elect, Crop Watch for VIP Tractor Days At The Dealerships listed below. 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