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Press Release from Auburn University and Alabama 4-H
Temple Grandin, an animal scientist who has drawn from her experiences as a person with autism to become one of the world’s leading designers of humane livestock-handling facilities, will speak in Auburn Thursday, March 31, as the spring 2011 E.T. York Distinguished Lecturer. The lecture, which is free and open to the public, will begin at 7 p.m. in the Auburn University Student Center ballroom.
Grandin’s revolutionary designs of livestock-handling equipment and facilities for meat-processing plants as well as ranches and feedlots reflect her expertise in animal behavior and her advocacy for humane livestock management, as each is developed to reduce fear and stress in cattle and other livestock through every phase of their lives. Today, half the cattle in the U.S. and Canada are handled using a restrainer system she designed for meat processors.
The Colorado State University animal science professor and best-selling author also has developed an objective scoring system meat-processing plants can use to assess their livestock handling facilities and practices, and identify changes they can make to improve animal welfare. She often serves as a consultant to the livestock industry on facility design, livestock handling and animal welfare, and, at Colorado State, she conducts ongoing research on livestock behavior and handling systems reducing stress and losses at the packing plant.
Considered the world’s best-known and most-accomplished adult with autism, Grandin has dignified and improved the lives of millions with her message of hope and optimism for people with autism. She is an unofficial spokeswoman for autism, advocating early intervention to address autism and supportive mentors who can direct the autistic child’s fixations in fruitful directions.
Grandin was diagnosed with autism in 1950, and doctors, who then knew little about the condition, recommended the nonverbal three-year-old’s parents institutionalize her. Refusing the notion that her child would never be a fully-functioning member of society, Grandin’s mother instead devoted herself to finding special tutors and private schools with caring teachers who were willing to help her daughter overcome the social isolation characteristic of children with autism and nurture her brilliant mind to its full potential.
With the enduring support of her mother, an aunt and a high-school science teacher, Grandin had the courage to study and pursue a career as an animal scientist. She earned her bachelor’s degree from Franklin Pierce College in 1970, her master’s in animal science from Arizona State University in 1975 and her Ph.D. in animal science from the University of Illinois in 1989.
Temple Grandin was also involved with the 4-H horse project in New Hampshire for several years. She said horses and the 4-H horse project were a refuge from the teasing she experienced as an autistic child.
Her first research in animal handling was a result of her work as an assistant 4-H leader for beef and lamb projects to determine the cause for ‘dark cutters’ in 4-H market beef projects. This research project on the importance of proper animal handling procedures started her on the path to her notable career.
Last year, Grandin’s remarkable story came to light in 2010 with the HBO movie "Temple Grandin," a film that won seven Emmy awards. Also in 2010, Grandin was named one of Timemagazine’s 100 most influential people in the world, a list a Time editor said includes "people who are using their ideas, their visions and their actions to transform the world and have an effect on a multitude of people."
The E.T. York Distinguished Lecturer Series was established in the Auburn University College of Agriculture in 1981 with an endowment by E.T. York, Jr., and his wife, Vam Cardwell York, both native Alabamians and Auburn graduates. The series features internationally-known scientists speaking on a wide range of topics at public and technical lectures and seminars on the Auburn campus.
For more information on the lecture, contact Deborah Solie at (334) 844-8900 or das0002@auburn.edu .

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