|
Home
Officers
Past Meeting
Division Affairs
Meeting Archive
 |
Distinguished Service Award
2003
Dr. Arvydas P. Grybauskas
The recipient of this award is judged GUILTY by
the committee, of Distinguished Service to the Potomac Division in
numerous capacities, AS WELL AS meritorious contributions to
teaching, research, AND extension in the discipline of plant
pathology.
If the recipient has a full middle name, it is
still a mystery to us what the P stands for. Dr. Arvydas P.
Grybauskas earned his undergraduate degree in forestry--an
inauspicious beginning--from the University of Illinois in 1976, his
M.S. degree--things start to look up--in seed pathology from the same
university in 1977, and his Ph.D. degree in--yes!--plant pathology
from Oregon State University in 1983. He joined the Department
of Botany (now Natural Resource Sciences & Landscape
Architecture) at the University of Maryland as a field crop
pathologist with responsibilities in Extension, Research, AND
Teaching. His research has centered on epidemiology, including
crop loss models, of gray leaf spot of corn, and scab and powdery
mildew of winter wheat.
Arv has a wide-ranging extension program, with
talks and workshops, fact sheets and scouting guidelines, and control
recommendation, and is well respected by his Extension clientele on
both sides of the Bay for his knowledge of field crop diseases and
control measures as well as his practical field work.
Arv also teaches a graduate level Epidemiology
class, Introductory Plant Pathology, and contributes to several other
courses. According to a colleague, "Arv is an open, personable
teacher that students enjoy and respond well to. He draws upon his
diverse background in plant pathology to provide examples not found
in books and other readings. His relaxed style around students belies
his rigor in what he expects from the students." Arv has
chaired graduate committees for 5 Ph.D and 5 MS students and has been
a member of many others.
Arv has served our parent society on several
committees, including Common Names, Extension, Phytopathology News,
and Placement where he was committee chair in 1990. He is
currently our Division Councilor to the national society. In
the Potomac division, Arv has served many times on a dizzying variety
of committees, such as the Program, Extension/Industry, Local
Arrangements, Resolutions, and fundraising committees, as well
as as a graduate student paper judge. Arv can always be counted on to
ask a good question of graduate students presenting in the student
competition, so judges can evaluate the students' performance.
The questions are vintage Arv: thoughtful, friendly, and provide the
student some scope to explain their work.
With respect to elected offices, Arv joins only 6 other people in
the history of the division who have held ALL of them, and he has
carried out the duties of all of them with dedication, energy,
endurance, and skill. To illustrate, we can cite him as the
inspiration for a new officer training program when the 1993 meeting
Resolutions stated "Whereas Arvydas Grybauskas has trouble with
plaques and certificates to the point of near panic, our
Secretary-Treasurer kept making mistakes in spelling on certificates
and generally lousing up the plaques--note the entomological
metaphor, even though it was not a joint meeting with
entomologists--be it resolved that a new training program be
established ... Anyway, since he knows that nothing came of that
training program, he is undoubtedly curious now whether his name will
be upside down on the plaque! Let us wait no longer, and please join
us in a resounding THANK YOU to Dr. Arvydas Grybauskas as we bestow
the Potomac Division Distinguished Service Award upon him!
Distinguished Service Award
2003
Dr. Nichole O'Neill
Nichole O'Neill received her M.S in botany from
the University of Maryland in 1973, and her Ph.D. in plant pathology
from Louisiana State University in 1976. After a post-doctoral
appointment with Dr. George Papavizas, she joined the USDA-ARS Field
Crops Laboratory in Beltsville as a Research Plant Pathologist.
Since then, this has morphed into a position in the Molecular Plant
Pathology Laboratory.
Nikki's research has focused on diseases of
grasses and forage legumes. She has characterized a number of
pathogens and the diseases they cause, including some that were new
to the country. A principal focus has been to find sources of
genetic resistance to diseases damaging alfalfa. In characterizing
alfalfa diseases and their races, Nikki contributed new insights in
the phylogenetic relationships of the fungal pathogens. In
another interesting area, she has advanced progress in biological
control of certain undesirable plants.
Nikki has been an active member of APS, having
served on various committees including: Placement (chair),
Biochemistry, Physiology, and Molecular Biology, Editorial Board of
Plant Disease, ad hoc committee on Women in Plant Pathology (Chair),
APS Office of International Programs, and Ornamentals and
Turfgrass.
In the Potomac Division, she has also served on or
chaired the Program Committee, Resolutions committee, Local
Arrangements committee, and Graduate Student Award committee.
From 1993 to 96, she was our admirably efficient Secretary-Treasurer,
and from 1997 to 99 she served as our energetic and conscientious
Vice President and President. In those five years, she was,
although not solely by herself, nevertheless in significant measure,
the life of the Division. It was she who organized the joint
meeting with the northeastern division in Annapolis that pioneered
the outreach symposium, and managed to evade a severe snowstorm by
just one day. If the room count at our current meeting was a
bit of a cliffhanger, Nikki went through similar nailbiting moments
at that meeting, but her dogged, tenacious, and skillful negotiating
saved the financial "posterior" of the Division.
Nikki couldn't be here today, so we are awarding
this Distinguished Service Award in absentia, but let us all join in
a round of applause for Dr. Nichole O'Neill
Back to Potomac
Division Homepage
|