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Totusek Lectureship Celebrates 25th Anniversary

By Kiera Leddy

Teacher. Mentor. Storyteller. Researcher. Livestock evaluator. Family man. Department head. Robert (Bob) Totusek was known by many different titles during his career with Oklahoma State University. Even though he is no longer with us, his legacy is alive and well on the campus. One event keeping his legacy thriving is the Totusek Lectureship. This year, the lectureship celebrated its 25th anniversary on November 2nd.

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Each year, the lectureship brings in a prominent speaker from the agricultural industry. The first speaker was Jay O’Brien, vice chair of National Cattlemen’s Beef Association in 1994. This year the lectureship hosted Anne Burkholder, Nebraska farmer and blogger.

Burkholder was introduced into the agricultural industry in an unorthodox way, she said. A native of Florida, Burkholder graduated from Dartmouth College with a degree in psychology. While at Dartmouth, she met and married her husband Matt, a Nebraska farmer. Just two days after receiving her degree from Dartmouth, she started working for the family feed yard in Nebraska.

“When I told my father-in-law I was going to work at the feed yard, he was sitting at the table drinking coffee and he literally spits his coffee all over the table,” Burkholder said. “I think he thought I would last a month. I worked for $6.85 an hour. He told me I probably was not worth that, but he probably had to pay me that.”

Burkholder’s teacher and mentor for cattle handling came from a unique background compared to her Dartmouth professors.

“One of the most prominent mentors that I had in the feed yard was an older gentleman that had worked for our family since he was 17 years old,” Burkholder said. “He never graduated from high school and I am very proud to say he taught me more than I probably learned in four years at Dartmouth. Dartmouth inspired me to go out and make a difference in the world, but Archie was the one who taught me how to live.”

She was soon driving calves, shipping fat cattle, and was involved in every other task which took place at a feed yard.

“If I think back to what I learned the most working with cattle,” Burkholder said. “It is probably how to be empathetic. When you spend your days trying to figure out how to understand an animal, like a bovine, you gain insight into how they view the world and how important your role is.”

Burkholder said she began her blog, Feedyard Foodie, 10 years ago as a way to give back to the industry.

“I became a farmer because I fell in love with one,” Burkholder said. “I became an advocate for the beef industry because when you believe in something you want to share it with others.”

In 2017, the Burkholders closed their feed yard, but her family continues to farm 2,500 acres of diversified crops and owns 600 acres of grass pasture and an alfalfa dehydration plant. Burkholder took a position with Beef Marketing Group, a Nebraska cooperative, to continue her passion with beef cattle handling.

“It is nice to work for a company that has a lot of integrity and also believes in animal welfare,” Burkholder said.

“Today, I get to touch 1.5 million cattle a year. I do not get to touch them to the extent of when they were in my own feed yard, but I still get to touch them. Through the Progressive Beef Program, I help inspire feed yard crews on proper cattle handling.”

In 2017, Burkholder was awarded the “Advocate of the Year” by the National Beef Checkoff. Additional awards and recognitions Burkholder has achieved are the 2014 Beef Magazine’s Trail Blazer Award, 2013 Vance Publishing’s 40 under 40 in Agriculture, and 2009 Beef Quality Assurance Producer of the Year Award.

“Good animal welfare matters – it is critical,” Burkholder said. “We were placed on this earth to take care of God’s creatures and we need to do a good job.”

“The Totusek Lectureship is a flagship event,” said Gerald Horn, past OSU animal science professor. “This year the lectureship became endowed and we look forward to growing the endowment and sustaining the event.”

Those interested in learning how they or an organization to which they belong can support the Totusek Lectureship should contact Heidi Griswold at the OSU Foundation by email at hgriswold@osugiving.com or by phone at 405-385-5656.

The ASGSA presented statues to the children of Bob Totusek. Pictured (left to right):
Diane Stearman, Anne Burkholder, Don Totusek, Darla Flanagan, Kelsy Bruno (ASGSA president)

The ASGSA presented statues to the children of Bob Totusek. Pictured (left to right): Diane Stearman, Anne Burkholder, Don Totusek, Darla Flanagan, Kelsy Bruno (ASGSA president)