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Board of Directors
Tom Boldt
CEO, The Boldt Company
Nina Leopold Bradley
Founder and Director, Aldo Leopold Foundation
Susan L. Flader
Professor of History, University of Missouri
Leopold Biographer
Forrest Hartmann
Boardman Law Firm, Baraboo, WI
Sylvia Hood-Washington
Visiting Faculty, DePaul University
A. Carl Leopold
Emeritus Scientist, Boyce Thompson Institute, Cornell University
Founder and Director, Aldo Leopold Foundation
Estella B. Leopold
Ecologist and Palynologist, University of Washington
Founder and Director, Aldo Leopold Foundation
Madelyn D. Leopold
Partner, Boardman Law Firm, Madison, WI
Former Trustee, 1000 Friends of Wisconsin, Inc.
David W. Orr
Chair, Environmental Studies, Oberlin College
Author, Earth in Mind
Carol Skornicka
Senior Vice President-Corporate Affairs,
Secretary and General Counsel, Midwest Airlines, Inc.
Former Secretary, Wisconsin Department of Industry, Labor and Human Relations
Trish Stevenson
Metalsmith, Black Earth, WI
Jerry Smith
President & CEO, First Business Financial Services
Legal Counsel
Anne E. Ross
Foley & Lardner
Advisors
Richard C. Bartlett
Vice Chairman, Mary Kay Inc.
Chairman, National Envirnmental Education & Training Foundation
Don Brown
President, Albion Wealth Management
Kathe Conn
Executive Director, Aldo Leopold Nature Center
Peter Dunwidde
Director of Research Programs, The Nature Conservancy
Gene Likens
Former Director & President, Institute of Ecosystem Studies
2001 National Medal of Science Laureate
Stan Temple
Professor Emeritus, Wildlife Ecology
University of Wisconsin-Madison
Jerry Smith
President & CEO, First Business Financial Services
Director Biographies
Tom Boldt is chief executive officer of The Boldt
Company.
As a fourth generation leader, Boldt is very active in
overseeing the diverse operations of The Boldt
Company and its subsidiary companies: Boldt
Consulting Services, Boldt Technical Services, and
Oscar J. Boldt Construction. Oscar J. Boldt
Construction is a family-owned firm which has been in
operation since 1889. Boldt is headquartered in
Appleton, Wisconsin, and has thirteen offices
throughout the country. The company operates
throughout the country with the heaviest concentration
of activity in the Midwest, South, and East. Boldt earned his BA degree from St. Olaf College,
Northfield, Minnesota, and studied at the L’Universite
de Paris III and Institute Catholique in France.
Dr. Nina Leopold Bradley, eldest daughter
of Aldo Leopold, has undertaken ecological research throughout her
life, established two family planning clinics (Columbia, Missouri
and Bozeman, Montana), and currently lectures widely on Leopold
and the land ethic. Nina and her husband Charles have directed
research and ecological restoration at the Leopold Memorial Reserve
since 1978. She received an honorary doctorate degree in environmental
sciences from the University of Wisconsin in 1988 and has received
many awards, including The Wilderness Society's Bob Marshall Award
in 1995.
Susan L. Flader teaches courses in U.S. Western and environmental history,
world environmental history, and the history of Missouri at the University
of Missouri - Columbia. She holds a B.A. from the University of Wisconsin -
Madison (1963), a M.A. from Stanford (1965), and a Ph.D. from Stanford (1971).
In addition to numerous articles she has authored or edited six books, among
them Thinking Like a Mountain: Aldo Leopold and the Evolution of an Ecological
Attitude Towards Deer, Wolves, and Forests (1974; 1994), The Great Lakes Forest:
An Environmental and Social History (1983); The River of the Mother of God
and Other Essays by Aldo Leopold with J.B. Callicott (1991); and Exploring
Missouri's Legacy: State Parks and Historic Sites (1992). She is past president
of the American Society for Environmental History and serves on many other
professional and environmental boards and committees.
Forrest Hartmann specializes in Trusts and Estates, Business Law, Estate Planning at Boardman Law Firm's Baraboo office. Forrest is a member of the American Bar Association, State Bar of Wisconsin and Sauk County Bar Association. He graduated from the University of Wisconsin Law School after having received a bachelor’s degree in Banking and Finance. Forrest is an old Wisconsin farm kid. Some say that he still has the smell of manure on his shoes. His father did not think that he had what it took to become a farmer — so he became a lawyer. Besides being a lawyer, he is a deeply committed environmentalist and was a co-founder of the International Crane Foundation.
Sylvia Hood-Washington is an environmental scholar, scientist, and engineer. Her diverse academic studies and interests bridge the sciences and humanities, with special interests in environmental justice, environmental health, and environmental ethics especially as related to environmental literacy and activism among African Americans, Latinos and ethnic immigrant populations. She has published two books, Packing Them In: An Archaeology of Environmental Racism in Chicago (2005) and Echoes from the Poisoned Well: Global Memories of Environmental Injustice (editor, 2006), and has several more forthcoming, including African American Struggles for a Sustainable Community in Cleveland, Ohio, 1917-1970 (2007). Sylvia sits on the University of Illinois-Chicago’s Environmental Justice board and directs the national project on Environmental Justice and Environmental Health co-sponsored by the Knights of Peter Claver, Inc. and the USCCB’s Catholic Coalition for Children and a Safe Environment (CASE). She has also produced a video documentary of land use change and environmental attitudes among African Americans in the Chicago area, including a curriculum study guide. She directs an NSF-funded study, “Engineering, Infrastructure, and Environmental Justice,” comparing African American environmental attitudes and land ethics in ex-urban communities in the Great Lakes Region. She holds a Ph.D. from Case Western Reserve University.
Dr. Carl Leopold, youngest son of Aldo
Leopold, is a plant physiologist who has published three books and over 200
research articles. Dr. Leopold
holds the William H. Crocker Scientist Emeritus position at the Boyce Thompson
Institute for Plant Research, Ithaca, New York. Leopold was Dean of the Graduate
College at the University of Nebraska, taught at Purdue University and served
as policy analyst for the National Science Foundation. He serves as Founding
President of the Finger Lakes Land Trust and as Chairman of Tropical Forestry
Initiative, two non-profit organizations. Leopold presently undertakes
ecological restoration in Costa Rica.
Dr. Estella Leopold, youngest daughter of Aldo Leopold, is Emeritus Professor
of Botany and past director of the Quaternary Research Center at the University
of Washington. Dr. Leopold was elected to the National Academy of Sciences
and American Philosophical Society. Her research interests and publications
focus on paleobotany, forest history, restoration ecology, and environmental
quality. She studies fossil pollen and seeds to reconstruct ancient vegetation
and climate in Alaska, China, and the western U.S. Her conservation activites
focus on forest management issues.
Madelyn D. Leopold is a Partner
at Boardman Law Firm in Madison, Wisconsin. Ms. Leopold focuses
her practice in the area of estate planning, with additional interest
in business and taxation, including business succession issues.
She has served as a speaker for the State Bar of Wisconsin, Continuing
Legal Education of Wisconsin and many private groups. She is a graduate
of Boston College Law School, where she published a law review article
on corporate tax. Madelyn entered the legal profession after a number
of years in college textbook publishing, including three years as
a traveling sales representative based in Ann Arbor, Michigan. Madelyn
also serves on the Board of Directors of the Friends of the Arboretum,
Inc.
David W. Orr is currently Professor and Chair of the Environmental Studies
Program at Oberlin College. He holds a B.A. from Westminster College (1965),
a M.A. from Michigan State University (1966), and a Ph.D. in International
Relations from the University of Pennsylvania (1973). He is the author of Earth
in Mind (1994) and Ecological Literacy (1992) and more than 90 articles. He
is also the coeditor of The Campus and Environmental Responsibility co-edited
with David Eagan (Jossey-Bass, 1992), and The Global Predicament co-edited
with Marvin Soroos (University of North Carolina Press, 1979). He is the Education
Editor for Conservation Biology and a member of the editorial advisory board
of Orion. He is a Trustee of the Educational Foundation of America, The Annenberg
Rural Challenge, and the JED Fund. He is a member of the Education Visiting
Committee of the New England Aquarium in Boston and a member of the Board of
the Center for Ecoliteracy in Berkeley.
Jerry Smith is president, CEO, and director
of First Business Financial Services and its subsidiaries.
Founded in 1990 by Mr. Smith, First Business Financial Services has
grown to $400 million in assets as of December, 2001. Mr.
Smith has a career spanning nearly 40 years as a commercial banker
and was recently recognized as the 2002 "Executive of the Year"
by Sales and Marketing Executives of Madison. He has also
served as a faculty member of the University of Wisconsin Graduate
and Post Graduate Schools of Banking. Additional responsibilities
include serving as a director for the Secura Insurance Companies
and CTI Paper Company.
Carol N. Skornicka is currently
Senior Vice President-Corporate Affairs, Secretary and General Counsel
at Midwest Airlines, Inc. She joined Midwest Airlines in May of
1996 as Vice President, Secretary and General Counsel. She is responsible
for the airline’s legal and Board affairs functions; corporate
security; corporate communications, media and public relations functions
as well as government affairs. Ms. Skornicka serves on numerous
boards, including Acuity (a mutual insurance company), Johnson Financial
Group, Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation, Columbia-St. Mary's-Milwaukee
Foundation, Milwaukee Riverwalk District, and the Wisconsin Center
District. She is past Chair of the Board of Trustees of the University
of Wisconsin (Madison) Memorial Union Building Association and the
Wisconsin Glass Ceiling Commission. She has previously served on
the Boards of the University of Wisconsin Foundation, Ten Chimneys
Foundation and Wisconsin Historic Sites Foundation (Circus World
Museum). Other current affiliations include: the Florentine Opera
Company's Advisory Committee and Milwaukee Women, Inc. Prior to
joining Midwest Airlines, Ms. Skornicka’s experience included
5 years of service in Governor Tommy G. Thompson's cabinet as Secretary
of the Wisconsin Department of Industry, Labor and Human Relations,
now the Department of Workforce Development. Ms. Skornicka was engaged
in the private practice of law for 14 years, including 10 years
with the firm of Michael, Best & Friedrich, where she was a
partner. She received her undergraduate degree (1963), a master's
degree (1965) and a J.D. (1977 cum laude) from the University of
Wisconsin-Madison. Ms. Skornicka has been honored as a University
of Wisconsin Distinguished Alumna, received the Sacagawea Award
for leadership and was recognized by the YWCA of Greater Milwaukee
as a 2003 Outstanding Woman of Achievement.
Trish Stevenson knew when she was 12 years old that she wanted to be a metalsmith. As a child, her nearest neighbor was a classically trained English metalsmith, and from her, Stevenson learned the true value of craftsmanship. Today, her jewelry designs subtly and almost unconsciously evoke, but do not overstate, botanical and geologic forms. Stevenson considers herself a collector of techniques and has acquired mastery of many of them: raising, forging, stone setting, and construction. Her work is defined by the evocative nature of her designs and an abiding insistence on impeccable craftsmanship.
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