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Lucy Hastings de Gutiérrez Fund
Family and friends have established a cash prize for the APS Excellence
in Teaching Award in honor and memory of Lucy Hastings de Gutiérrez for
the contributions that she has made to the science of plant pathology.
Lucy Hastings de Gutiérrez and husband Mario Gutiérrez
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In November, 1999, the Lucy Hastings de Gutiérrez Fund was established
by her family and friends in honor and memory of Lucy. The earnings will
provide a cash prize to accompany the Excellence in Teaching Award. The
teaching award was established by the APS Council in 1987 to recognize
excellence in teaching plant pathology. The award is presented to
individuals with active responsibility for one or more courses in plant
pathology and recognizes the individual's distinguished proficiency in
teaching as indicated by development and effectiveness of courses taught.
The recipient of this award is selected by the APS Awards and Honors
Committee.
Lucy Hastings de Gutiérrez was born on March 13, 1917, in Concord, NH,
the daughter of Alfred B Hastings and Helen Fellows. Her early youth was
spent in New Hampshire, Virginia, and Maryland. Her father was a forester
with the USDA, and from him she inherited a great love for trees and
plants. When she was 11 years old she developed health problems that led
to surgery and then complications from it. Her recovery from the operation
was slow and she had to spend a year out of school. She used this time to
read profusely and developed a self discipline for reading and self study
that persisted for the rest of her life.
She graduated from Central High School in Washington, DC, in 1935 and
entered Smith College, her mother's alma mater, where she majored in
economic botany, graduating in 1939. While at Smith, she was a member of
the Biological Society, the Glee Club, and the 1939 Choir. After
graduation, she worked in the Du Pont Plant Pathology Laboratory in
Wilmington, DE, mostly on seed protectants. This early experience served
to orient her toward plant pathology as the field of her future
professional activities. She left Du Pont in April 1945 to join the WACS
to help in the Second World War effort. After basic training, she was
stationed in Fort Sam Houston, TX, and assigned to the neuro-psychiatric
department of Brooke Army Medical Center, working as an engineer's aide in
electroencephalography.
In 1947, she joined the staff of the Inter-American Institute of
Agricultural Sciences (IAIAS), Turrialba, Costa Rica, to satisfy a long
time ambition of seeing the tropics. She did not realize at the time that
the rest of her life would be spent in a tropical area. At first, she
worked on seedborne pathogens and developed seed treatments that resulted
in better germination and field stands of cereal crops, then on coffee and
rice pathogens. She spent long hours in the laboratory and in the library
studying about plant pathogens in general and especially those she was
working with. She made rice her main line of work and evaluated the USDA
world rice collection for disease reaction to the major pathogens of this
crop. She also tested the agronomic performance of the most promising
entries in the world rice collection in tests carried on at two different
locations. This very promising line of work came to an abrupt end through
the myopia of the then administrator of the Turrialba Center of IAIAS.
She resigned her job and became a housewife and companion of the husband
she married in December 1952, accompanying him in successive posts in
Mexico, Guatemala, Mexico, and Brazil. They did not have any children. In
1980 both she and her husband retired to Costa Rica and established their
home in a small farm northwest of the city of Heredia where they grew
coffee and enjoyed their many hobbies; reading, listening to music,
gardening, birdwatching, etc.
After retirement, Lucy was afflicted by macular degeneration but she kept
her interest in reading through the Talking Book Service of the U.S.
Library of Congress and the use of Xerox Edge Reader. For many years she
was a Member of the APS and also of the Caribbean branch of APS. She died
an emeritus member of the APS.
In May 1999, Lucy suffered a stroke while in Baltimore, MD, for general
medical evaluation at Johns Hopkins Hospital. After 18 days in the
intensive care unit, she passed away on June 11, 1999. Her body was
deposited in a facility adjoining the Templo Votivo al Corazòn de Jesfás
in the eastern portion of San José, the capital city of Costa Rica.
Lucy was an active, optimist, unselfish, generous, artistic, and gifted
person; she had all kinds of interests, ingenuity, and a kind heart. Lucy
made friends easily and was always ready to lend a hand to whomever needed
it; she also had a fine sense of humor. She is survived by her husband of
46 years, Mario G. Gutiérrez, her brother Dwight F. Hastings and his wife
Jean of Waynesboro, PA, and four nephews and two nieces. She is greatly
missed by relatives and friends and they have established this cash prize
in her honor and memory.
A post-script to Lucy's biography is that Luis Sequeira knew Lucy very
well from the time he was a graduate student doing a part of his thesis
work at Turrialba where Lucy was a plant pathologist and assistant to
Freddie Wellman. Luis followed Lucy's husband, Mario's career with CIMMYT
and other tropical centers with great interest and attributes to Mario and
Lucy very substantial contributions to agriculture sciences in Latin
America.
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