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Dr. Norman R. Schneider
received a 2004 Kansas State University College of
Veterinary Medicine Alumni Recognition Award
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Dr. Norman Schneider |
Dr. Norman R. Schneider of Ceresco,
Nebraska received a 2004 Kansas State University College of
Veterinary Medicine Alumni Recognition Award. The award is
in grateful recognition for time and effort devoted to
advancing veterinary medicine and for being an exemplary
role model for future alumni in a professional and community
setting. The award was presented at the Annual Meeting of
the Nebraska Veterinary Medical Association (NVMA), during
the banquet on Friday, January 16, 2004 at the Embassy
Suites Lincoln, Lincoln, NE.
Growing up on a cattle ranch and wheat farm near
Dorrence, KS, Dr. Schneider graduated from K-State College of
Veterinary Medicine in 1968. For the next eleven years Dr. Schneider
served the United States Air Force, (USAF) as a Base Veterinarian,
Institute of Technology Fellow (post-doctoral program leading to MSc
degree in toxicology), Veterinary Scientist/Toxicologist and
Veterinary Toxicologist. His career with the USAF took Dr. Schneider
to many different locations including: Goose Air Base, Labrador,
Canada; Columbus, Ohio; Bethesda, Maryland; and Wright Patterson Air
Force Base, Dayton, Ohio. A decorated member of the USAF, Dr.
Schneider has been honored with the following awards: a Meritorious
Service Medal, a Joint Services Commendation Medal, an Air Force
Commendation Medal, and a Distinguished Service Award, Nebraska
National Guard Association. Dr. Schneider retired from the USAF
Reserves in 1995, as a Lt. Col. with thirty years commissioned
service, the last sixteen of those with the Nebraska Air National
Guard as Chief of Public Health.
In 1979, Dr. Schneider accepted a position with
the University of Nebraska--Lincoln (UNL) as a Veterinary
Toxicologist in the Department of Veterinary and Biomedical
Sciences. In 1982, Dr. Schneider was also granted a courtesy faculty
appointment to the Department of Pharmacodynamics and
Toxicology/Pharmaceutical Sciences, College of Pharmacy, at
University of Nebraska Medical College (UNMC). Dr. Schneider
received Graduate Faculty Member status in 1980 as well as Graduate
Faculty Fellow in 1987. Although Dr. Schneider retired from
full-time status in December of 2002 with Emeritus he continues to
teach three classes at UNL this semester.
While at UNL, Dr. Schneider developed,
coordinated and implemented two new approved majors in the College
of Agricultural Sciences and Natural Resources: Veterinary Science (VBMS)
and Veterinary Technologist (VETT). He developed and taught VBMS 410
(General Pharmacology and Toxicology), one of the few such courses
for undergraduates in the United States, developed and taught VBMS
101 (Intro to Animal Health) and recitations of AGRI/NRES 103 (Intro
to Agriculture and Natural Resource Systems). In addition to
teaching, from 1990 until retirement, Dr. Schneider served as sole
Academic Adviser for 250 undergraduate students or more per academic
year with majors in VBMS, VETT, and Preveterinary Medicine Program (PVET).
He also implemented, partially funded, and directed the
Preveterinary Advising Center in the Department of Veterinary and
Biomedical Sciences. Dr. Schneider also coordinated and initiated
the University of Nebraska – Lincoln Chapter of Veterinary Scholars
Early Admission Program at Kansas State University College of
Veterinary Medicine.
Dr. Schneider has been recognized on several
occasions by UNL with such awards as: UNL Student
Foundation/Builders Award for Outstanding Academic Advising;
Lawrence KS. Crowe Outstanding Adviser, College of AgriScience and
Natural Resources; Faculty Adviser Award, Campus Activities and
Program; and Recognition Award for Contribution to Students, UBL
Parents Association and UNL Teaching Council; UNL Student Adviser of
the year (repeated two consecutive years); Brick Volunteer Spirit
Award; UNL Society of Innocents Chancellor's Senior Honor Society
Honorary Faculty Membership; UNL Mortar Board Senior Honor Society
"People Who Inspire" Award.
Throughout his career, Dr. Schneider has been
involved in numerous professional and civic organizations. He has
held memberships in the AVMA, KVMA, NVMA, AAVLD, and NACTA. Dr.
Schneider is a Diplomat of the American Board of Veterinary
Toxicology and has served as President and on the Council of Regents
of that organization. He has been a Veterinary Profession
Representative for the Nebraska State Board of Health, and an
Advisor/Consultant for the Nebraska Master Poison Control Center.
Dr. Schneider is also a Fellow in the American Academy of Veterinary
and Comp Toxicology as well as having served as councilor in
1977-78, and 1987-90. Dr. Schneider is a member of the following
honorary societies: Fraternity of Alpha Zeta (Agricultural), Society
of Phi Zeta (Veterinary Medical Fraternity), Alpha Phi Omega
(national Service Fraternity, Life Member), Gamma Sigma Delta
(Agriculture), Omicron Delta Kappa (National Leadership), and Phi
Beta Delta (International Scholars).
Dr. Schneider has been extensively involved with
Boy Scouts of America, serving as a Scoutmaster, Explorer Advisor,
on the Advancement Committee Chair, Mid-American Council Awards
Recognition Chair and on the Tribal Council (Honorary Tribe of
Nani-Ba-Zhu, Mid-America Council). He has received a Silver Beaver
Award, Goldenrod District Award of Merit, Woodbadge Beads, Explorer
Advisor’s Key, Scoutmaster's Key, and National President’s
Scoutmaster Award of Merit.
Dr. Schneider met his wife, Karen Marjorie
(Nelson) Schneider during the summer of 1967, between his junior and
senior year in veterinary school. Dr. Schneider had just started an
internship for Drs. J.D. Little and Harold Hedlund, owners of the
Green Acre Animal Clinic in Wahoo, NE. It was on an evening call
with Dr. J.D. Little, to investigate a suspected lightning-struck
cow that Dr. Schneider met his future wife: "We pulled off the
highway onto a minimum-maintenance road and roared over the crest of
a hill only to nearly have a girl riding her horse as a hood
ornament." After the near miss, J.D. asked Norman, "Hey Doc, you
want to meet a good-lookin' blonde?" Dr. Schneider nodded and was
then introduced to his future wife Karen, who repeatedly reminds him
that he was on the telephone back in Wahoo, calling to ask for a
date before she could ride the ¾ mile back to her home and put her
horse in the barn. The couple was married on July 1, 1968, a month
after he received his DVM and a week prior to when he reported for USAF active duty at Sheppard AFB, Wichita Falls, TX.
Dr. Schneider and Karen have one son, Nelson R
Schneider, who was born on August 1, 1979, one month after Dr.
Schneider started at UNL. Nelson is an Eagle Scout with 13 Palms,
and Explorer Gold Award recipient, and an accomplished musician
(alto and soprano saxophone). He received a Bachelor of Arts degree
from UNL in May 2002, graduating with Honors, having dual majors in
English and Classics and triple minors in Music, Medieval and
Renaissance Studies and Religious Studies. He was recognized by
membership in a number of honorary societies including Omicron Delta
Kappa, Sigma Tau Delta, and Phi Beta Delta. He is currently pursuing
a Master of Arts degree with a Classics major, and was selected as
the Graduate Research Assistant to the Chair of the UNL Classics
Department for the 2003-04 academic year.
Dr. Schneider fondly recalls the summer of 1966
when he worked in Dykstra Veterinary Hospital at K-State as one of
four resident interns who stayed in the sleeping quarters and were
responsible for night emergency duty. The most memorable incident
occurred on a Saturday afternoon when the Hospital was closed. Dr.
Schneider and his classmate and roommate, Mike Gangel (KSU 1968)
were on cleaning duty when Mike left to answer the after-hours door
buzzer. When Dr. Schneider heard his footsteps coming back down the
hall, he lit a firecracker that he had in his pocket and flipped it
out in front of Mike just to see his reaction. Little did he know
that a client was with Mike . . . a personal friend of Dr. Jake
Mosier. Mike told Dr. Schneider later that they both jumped straight
in the air and clapped their hands over their ears when they saw the
sizzling fuse cutting arcs across the tile floor toward them. After
the blast, the client repeatedly exclaimed, "I'm not gonna tell
Jake! I'm not gonna tell Jake!"
Today, Dr. Schneider jokes about the incident
with an appreciation for the client's good sense of humor: "Bless
his understanding soul. He probably kept me in veterinary school. I
hope there's no way I can have my DVM recalled after 35 years. That
should be beyond the statute of limitations."
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