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Caribbean Student Travel Award
The Caribbean Division Travel Fund has been established through
the generosity of Drs. Malcolm Shurtleff, Jose Amador and the Caribbean
Division. Qualified student applications from the Caribbean Division
will be given preference for this award. The first student travel award
from this fund is to attend the 2000 APS Meeting in New Orleans.
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The Caribbean Division was establishes in 1960; it attracts members
from the Southern United States and Latin America working on common
problems of important economic significance to their respective countries.
The origins of the Caribbean Division and the name of Frederik L. Wellman
are intimately related. Dr. Wellman, whose first assignment as a new plant
pathologist from the University of Wisconsin was as principal plant
pathologist for the United Fruit Company at La Lima, Honduras, played an
important role in the creation and organization of the Caribbean Division.
At the first organizational meeting of plant pathologists in Central
America in Guatemala City and Chocolá in January, 1949, scientists from
Costa Rica, Guatemala and the U.S. decided "for the purpose of
organization and of indicating the fields of study to be presented at
future meetings, it was decided to petition the Council of the American
Phytopathological Society to allow us to form a Tropical American section
of the Society to include all pathologist of tropical America." Dr.
Wellman volunteered to write up a set of objectives for such a section and
to circulate it among pathologists in the area to gain support for a
petition to present to the Council.
It took efforts of several interested persons working in the American
tropics to bring together plant pathologists engaged in the study of
diseases of tropical crops under the aegis of the Caribbean Division. In
July of 1959, Ben Waite wrote D.H. Raddler, at the time with the United
Fruit Company, giving details of the efforts of several Central American
plant pathologists towards establishment of a section of the American
Phytopathological Society for the Caribbean area. At the time Dr. Wellman
was the chairman of the Committee on International Cooperation, and upon
receiving a copy of the letter, urged members of APS council to approve
the formation of the Caribbean Division of APS. The APS Council created
the Caribbean at their 52nd annual meeting, help in Madison, Wisconsin in
August 1960.
The first meeting of the Caribbean Division took place the following year,
when the Caribbean Division met jointly with the American Horticulture
Society in Miami, Florida. Not surprisingly, after adopting a
constitution, Dr. Wellman was elected the first president of the Division.
At this first meeting, he laid his vision of the Division by saying
"it will be made of the important core of the most active workers in
plant pathology in the Caribbean and contigous (sic) areas. It is here
where the challenge is. It is here where the future of our science is
unfolding."
At the same meeting, Dr. Wellman said: "What is it that is most
needed in our science of plant pathology in the tropics? I believe it is
communication between us at regular intervals. In the case of our exciting
race to keep plants healthy and to keep people from starving, particular
phases of the disease problem and depend on teams of workers, though, in
some cases a single mind has to do it all. Whatever develops, we, who are
the scientific workers, must know about it. The quick, the cheapest, the
most successful manner, in which the largest number get the most
successful manner, in which is the largest number get the most value from
research is through scientific meetings where contributions are heard and
discussed. These meetings are of utmost importance to the practicing plant
pathologist." Modern electronic wizardly notwithstanding , the annual
meetings of the Caribbean Division continue to fulfill this service to its
members well.
Following the first meeting, members of the Caribbean Division have met
regularly and in just about all countries in Central and South America and
many in the Caribbean. Meetings have taken place in Colombia, Venezuela,
Florida, Costa Rica, Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua, Mexico,
Guadeloupe, Puerto Rico, and the Island of San Andres (part of Colombia.)
The 2000 meeting will take place in the Dominican Republic and the
following year will bring members to Cuba.
The Caribbean Division has continued to grow and serve plant pathologists
from a large, geographic area which, because of the interest on tropical
plant pathology, also includes members from the islands of Hawaii and
Guam. The success of the Division is due in part, to the many individuals
who have volunteered to be officers of the Division and the many
additional members who have organized meetings to provide a forum for the
presentation of research findings and to facilitate communication among
the pathologists of the Division.
One of the characteristics of the Caribbean Division is its
internationality. By attending the meetings, members always enjoy the
camaraderie and great hospitality of members of diverse cultures and
customs. Many APS presidents that have attended the meetings of the
Caribbean Division feel that the meetings of the Caribbean Division are
most lively, educational, enjoyable and entertaining, affording members
experiences to which otherwise they would not be exposed. Members of the
Division come from both academic and private sectors, and because it is
open to all persons interested in plant pathology, the Caribbean Division
meetings have helped local Phytopathological societies develop and grow.
The presentation of the Frederik L. Wellman Award, created in 1995, is a
highlight of the annual meeting. The creation of the Caribbean Division
Travel Fund is intended to aid student attendance at the annual APS
meeting.
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