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Elsie J. and Robert Aycock Student Travel Award
The APS Foundation is pleased to announce the establishment of
the Elsie J. and Robert Aycock Student Travel Fund. The fund was
established by Dr. Aycock to honor his wife. The first travel award will
be made for the 2005 APS Annual Meeting in Austin, TX.
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Elsie J. Aycock and Robert Aycock
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Elsie Aycock was born in Willard, NC, May 19, 1920. She died after a
long illness on February 15, 2003. Both her parents were direct
descendants of pre-Revolution settlers of Duplin County. She graduated
from high school in Wallace, NC, attended East Carolina University and
Miss Hardbarger’s Secretarial School in Raleigh, NC. Her first
employment was with the North Carolina General Assembly.
She married Robert Aycock, then a graduate student at North Carolina
State College, in 1941. During the years of World War II, she was able
to follow him to several locations where he was stationed. For a while,
she worked for American Airlines at La Guardia Field, NY, and enjoyed
seeing the great Clipper ships land in Flushing Bay. One of her
supervisors was busily engaged in planning a new and grand post-war
airport to be called Idlewild, later JFK. She later worked for Marine
Transport Lines at 11 Broadway and often told of seeing the Queen ships
leave New York harbor laden with troops bound for Europe. She also was
employed at the laboratory of Lovell General Hospital, Fort Devens, MA,
where her husband was a laboratory technician. After the war, she
supported her husband, who was completing a Ph.D. degree in plant
pathology at North Carolina State, by working at various secretarial
jobs.
She was always a great friend of graduate students and had them
frequently in her home and often supplied them with food and treats for
travel to meetings. Her interest and participation in departmental
receptions at the annual meetings helped provide a favorable impression
for recruiting students and faculty. When her husband was president of
APS she initiated, hosted, and funded the first Past President’s
Luncheon, which has become a long-standing tradition of the society.
Elsie was noted for her warm personality, sense of humor, great culinary
skill, and the kindness and hospitality she tendered both faculty and
students.
Robert Aycock was born December 23, 1919, in Lisbon, LA. He graduated
from Louisiana State University in 1940 and continued his education at
North Carolina State College in Raleigh. His M.S. program there was
guided by Samuel G. Lehman. During the World War II years, he served in
the Army Medical Corps, first in a detachment servicing a regiment of
Coast Guard Artillery and later as a laboratory technician at Lovell
General Hospital, Fort Devens, MA.
Robert returned to North Carolina State in 1947 and undertook a Ph.D.
program under the guidance of Carlyle Clayton. After graduation in 1949,
his first employment was at Edisto Experiment Station, a branch of
Clemson College, at Blackville, SC. He returned to North Carolina in
1955 as a plant pathologist at the Horticultural Crops Research Station
at Castle Hayne, where he conducted research on diseases of field-grown
ornamental bulb crops.
Funds became available in 1963 for a part-time extension position on the
Raleigh campus, and Robert returned to assume major responsibility for
the Plant Disease Clinic, while continuing research on diseases of
ornamentals. During his professional career, he served North Carolina
State University as head of the Department of Plant Pathology
(1973–1984), was editor-in-chief of Phytopathology (1969–1972), and was
APS President (1976). He was named an APS Fellow in 1979 and was named
Outstanding Plant Pathologist by the APS Southern Division in 1984.
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