Lowell E. Baier of Potomac, Md., Honored as 2008 Budweiser Conservationist of the Year
2008年2月8日 - 12:59AM
PRニュース・ワイアー (英語)
Wildlife Conservationist to Receive $50,000 Grant from Budweiser
and the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation ST. LOUIS, Feb. 7
/PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Lowell E. Baier from Potomac, Md., an
avid outdoorsman, was named the 2008 Budweiser Conservationist of
the Year at the annual Budweiser Outdoors press conference held in
Las Vegas on Saturday, Feb. 2, during the Shooting, Hunting and
Outdoor Trade (SHOT) Show. Baier was selected in the annual program
that recognizes individuals who have made exceptional contributions
to the outdoors and conservation. Each year, a committee selects
four conservationists, 21 or older, as finalists from dozens of
outstanding nominees, and Budweiser consumers from across the
country vote for the Conservationist of the Year in an open-ballot
process on Budweiser.com. A $50,000 grant from Budweiser and the
National Fish and Wildlife Foundation (NFWF) will be made to Baier
to support conservation efforts. In addition, the grant can be
matched and the value of the award could reach as much as $200,000.
"We would like to congratulate Lowell Baier for his selection as
the 2008 Budweiser Conservationist of the Year," said Bob Fishbeck,
Budweiser product manager, Anheuser-Busch, Inc. "It is an honor for
us to recognize Lowell, our 13th Budweiser Conservationist of the
Year, and his many years of service promoting conservation
initiatives with the Boone & Crockett Club and across the
country." This marks the 13th year Budweiser and the National Fish
and Wildlife Foundation have honored a national Budweiser
Conservationist of the Year. Previous winners include: G. Richard
Mode of Morganton, N.C. (2007); Wendell Berryhill of Cochran, Ga.
(2006); Bill Crawford of Frederick, Okla. (2005); Eddie Bridges of
Greensboro, N.C. (2004); Sandi Beitzel of Manitowoc, Wis. (2003);
Dr. Tommy Thompson of Monroe City, Ind. (2002); Bruce Lewis of
Natchez, Miss. (2001); Tory Taylor of Dubois, Wyo. (2000); Gloria
Erickson of Holdrege, Neb. (1999); Christine Thomas of
Stevens-Point, Wis. (1998); Jeff Churan of Chilicothe, Mo. (1997);
and Susan Moxley of Vickery, Ohio (1996). Since Anheuser-Busch was
founded in 1852, the company has been committed to supporting the
environment and conserving natural resources. In 1995, the leading
American brewer bolstered its support by creating the "Budweiser
Outdoors" program. The program has grown to include seven partner
organizations -- the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation,
National Shooting Sports Foundation, Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation,
Ducks Unlimited, Quail Unlimited, Delta Waterfowl Foundation and
the Quality Deer Management Association -- to promote outdoor
sports and wildlife conservation. Based in St. Louis,
Anheuser-Busch is the leading American brewer, holding a 48.4
percent share of U.S. beer sales. The company brews the world's
largest-selling beers, Budweiser and Bud Light. Anheuser-Busch also
owns a 50 percent share in Grupo Modelo, Mexico's leading brewer,
and a 27 percent share in China brewer Tsingtao, whose namesake
beer brand is the country's best-selling premium beer.
Anheuser-Busch ranked No. 1 among beverage companies in FORTUNE
Magazine's Most Admired U.S. and Global Companies lists in 2007.
Anheuser-Busch is one of the largest theme park operators in the
United States, is a major manufacturer of aluminum cans and one of
the world's largest recyclers of aluminum cans. For more
information, visit http://www.anheuser-busch.com/. Addendum to
Release COMMITMENT TO WILDLIFE CONSERVATION Lowell E. Baier has
dedicated 37 years to wildlife conservation and is president of
Boone & Crockett (B&C) Club, founded in 1887. Baier
co-founded the National Capital Area Chapter of Safari Club
International. He is Founding Charter Member No.14 of the
Foundation for North American Wild Sheep, serving as an officer or
board member for 15 years and national convention chairman from
1978 to 1981. He spearheaded the rescue and preservation of the
National Collection of Head and Horns. For the last 25 years, he
has played a key role in the renaissance of the B&C Club, a
non-profit organization founded in 1887 by Theodore Roosevelt to
establish a coalition of dedicated conservationists and sportsmen
who would provide the leadership needed to address the issues that
affect hunting, wildlife and wild habitat. Baier had a principal
role in establishing a B&C post-graduate wildlife program at
the University of Montana and in establishing the National
Conservation Leadership Institute for mid-career government
wildlife managers. "It is with great humility that I accept this
award not only for myself alone, but also for the other three
nominees, for my brethren in the Boone and Crockett Club and all of
our fellow stewards who labor selflessly in noble service to
enhance our country's wildlife and natural resources," said Baier.
"This award would have made Theodore Roosevelt, the founder of the
Boone and Crockett Club, America's oldest wildlife conservation
organization, immensely proud of his progeny." Baier was the lead
in drafting President G.H.W. Bush's wildlife conservation agenda, a
delegate to the White House Conference on Cooperative Conservation
and on the U.S. Forest Service Centennial Steering Committee. He
also spearheaded preserving the birthplace of conservation in
America, Theodore Roosevelt's historic 23,550-acre Elkhorn Ranch in
North Dakota in 2007. "For almost the last three years, I've led
the charge on behalf of the Boone and Crockett Club to acquire,
preserve and protect Elkhorn Ranch, which comprises some 38 square
miles immediately adjacent to the Theodore Roosevelt National
Park," said Baier. "Proceeds from this award will go into the
habitat restoration and interpretive fund for the Elkhorn Ranch,
which Theodore Roosevelt established in 1884." Three dedicated
conservationists were selected alongside Baier as finalists for the
award: Marion Burnside (Hopkins, S.C.), Dr. Jim Hulbert (Longview,
Wash.) and Bernie Lemon (New Berlin, Wisc.). The three finalists,
with background below, will each be honored with a $5,000 grant
from Budweiser and the NFWF to be distributed to a wildlife or
conservation project chosen mutually by the honoree, Budweiser and
the NFWF: Marion Burnside Burnside has been involved in South
Carolina's conservation and wildlife management programs for two
decades, having first been appointed to the South Carolina Wildlife
and Marine Resources Commission (now the South Carolina Department
of Natural Resources Board) in 1988. His leadership on the board
has helped state wildlife managers stabilize the deer population.
Burnside was also involved in the formation of the Quality Deer
Management Association (QDMA) of South Carolina, the organization
from which today's QDMA was born. For his work in the outdoors,
Burnside has received numerous accolades, including QDMA's Joe
Hamilton Lifetime Achievement Award, Columbia Ducks Unlimited
Conservationist of the Year Award, the Quail Unlimited Havilah
Babcock Award, South Carolina's Environmental Awareness Award and
has been named to the Order of the Palmetto. Dr. Jim Hulbert
Hulbert is a 33-year volunteer for Ducks Unlimited (DU). He just
completed a two-year term as volunteer President of DU's 750,000
members. During that time, DU nearly doubled its volunteer ranks to
57,000 and started 600 new chapters. Under Hulbert's leadership, DU
launched the largest conservation fundraising effort in history,
its ambitious $1.7 billion Wetlands for Tomorrow campaign. Hulbert
also helped identify DU's most important conservation initiatives,
from the duck factories of the Prairie Pothole Region and the
Boreal Forest, to restoring pintails and educating youth about
conservation. Hulbert also led DU's efforts to increase federal
support for wetlands and waterfowl conservation through legislation
like the Farm Bill and Clean Water Restoration Act. He is a
tireless volunteer for conservation. Bernie Lemon Lemon is best
known by the Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation (RMEF)'s 150,000 members
as the man who spearheaded the reintroduction of elk in Wisconsin.
Lemon helped launch the state's first RMEF chapter in 1987, and
since its inception, the chapter has raised more than $1 million to
support national elk activity. His support includes a collaboration
with Wisconsin artist Terry Doughty that generated more than
$500,000 necessary to relocate 25 elk in 1995 from Michigan back to
the state. Lemon has served as a Wisconsin State Chair and Eastern
Regional Chair for RMEF since 1996 and was recently named RMEF's
Volunteer Ambassador, a position never before held in the
organization's 24-year history. RMEF created the position to
specifically honor Lemon's commitment and achievements. DATASOURCE:
Anheuser-Busch CONTACT: Tony Paraino of Anheuser-Busch,
+1-314-577-3453, Web site: http://www.anheuser-busch.com/
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