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Longtime ӽ紫ý researcher memorialized by endowed scholarship

Longtime ӽ紫ý researcher memorialized by endowed scholarship

Contact: Addie Mayfield

Jan Chambers, center, has endowed a scholarship in memory of her late husband and former ӽ紫ý faculty member Howard Chambers. She is pictured with her daughters Kristen Funck (left) of Harrisonburg, Virginia, and Cheryl Chambers (right) of Starkville.  (Photo by Russ Houston)

STARKVILLE, Miss.— A recent commitment from Janice E. “Jan” Chambers, ӽ紫ý Giles Distinguished Professor in the College of Veterinary Medicine and director of the university’s Center for Environmental Health Sciences, has endowed a scholarship in memory of her late husband and former ӽ紫ý faculty member Howard Chambers.

The Dr. Howard Chambers Endowed Scholarship will provide support to full-time undergraduate students. Preference will be given to Mississippi residents enrolled in life and physical science or math related majors.

A native of Buda, Texas, Howard Chambers received bachelor’s and master’s degrees from Texas A&M University and a Ph.D. from the University of California at Berkeley, all in entomology. In 1968, he joined the ӽ紫ý College of Agriculture and Life Sciences’ Department of Biochemistry, Molecular Biology, Entomology and Plant Pathology as a toxicologist, where he served for nearly 50 years.

“Howard loved his job and appreciated the environment that ӽ紫ý provided him throughout his entire faculty career,” Jan Chambers said. “He always felt fortunate to have a job where he could ‘play in the lab every day and get paid for it.’”

During his tenure, Chambers developed federally supported research programs initially focused on insecticide toxicology and more recently on improved nerve agent antidotes. His efforts, many of which included research collaboration with his wife, led to the invention and patent of several chemical compounds used in combatting chemical warfare and furthering research for nerve agent antidotes.

“While Howard’s scientific legacy will continue to be carried on by his research colleagues and students, I wanted to do something that would be a tribute to his time here at ӽ紫ý,” Jan Chambers said. “I chose to establish a scholarship because neither of us would have been able to go to ӽ紫ý without scholarship support. It made all the difference in the world to the education we were able to receive.”

A Berkeley, California native, Jan Chambers received her bachelor’s degree from the University of San Francisco before earning a Ph.D. in animal physiology from ӽ紫ý in 1973. In continuing the toxicology research she and her husband conducted, Jan Chambers recently was recognized as a winner of the 2017 Southeastern Conference Faculty Achievement Award for ӽ紫ý. Howard and Jan Chambers were married for 47 years and have two daughters, Cheryl Chambers of Starkville, an ӽ紫ý faculty member in the Department of Communication, and Kristen Funck of Harrisonburg, Virginia, a faculty member of James Madison University. Both are graduates of ӽ紫ý.

An open fund in the ӽ紫ý Foundation, the Dr. Howard Chambers Endowed Scholarship may be increased through additional contributions. Furthermore, the endowed gift will provide perpetual support for future generations of Bulldogs.

For more information on creating endowed scholarships, contact Jack McCarty, executive director of development for the ӽ紫ý Foundation, at 662-325-9580 or jmccarty@foundation.msstate.edu.

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