July 2004 • Volume 38 • Number 7

Leach and Christ Elected as New APS Officers

Congratulations to Jan E. Leach, elected vice president (to serve as president in 2006–2007), and Barbara J. Christ, elected councilor-at-large for a three-year term. Both will begin their terms at the end of the 2004 APS Annual Meeting.

Leach is currently a distinguished professor of plant pathology at Kansas State University and adjunct scientist and plant pathologist for the International Rice Research Institute. She will be moving to Colorado State University in August. Christ is a professor in the Department of Plant Pathology for The Pennsylvania State University.

Complete biographic sketches, as well as personal statements of leadership submitted by the new officers, appeared in the May 2004 issue of Phytopathology News (Vol. 38, No. 5:60-63).
 


APS Foundation Announces the
Robert W. Fulton Student Travel Award

The APS Foundation is pleased to announce the establishment of the Robert W. Fulton Student Travel Fund. The fund was established in honor of Robert W. Fulton (1914–2004) by his spouse, friends, and colleagues. The first travel award will be made for the 2004 APS Annual Meeting in Anaheim, CA.

Bob Fulton was born on January 28, 1914, in Sisterville, WV, but his family moved to Wisconsin when he was a child. He graduated from Viroqua High School in 1931 and obtained a B.A. in botany from Wabash College in 1935. His graduate studies were conducted at the University of Wisconsin, where he obtained a Ph.D. degree in 1940. His initial professional career was in the Department of Horticulture at the University of Wisconsin, where he became an expert on tobacco diseases. His career was interrupted by World War II, and he was proud to have served his country from 1942 to 1946 as a first lieutenant in the U.S. Army. He was appointed to the Department of Plant Pathology at the University of Wisconsin in 1947, where he established a world-class program on stone-fruit viruses until his retirement in 1984. He published more than 125 research papers on numerous aspects of viruses, including isolation, structure, properties, and transmission. In 1970, Professor Fulton was elected a Fellow of The American Phytopathological Society in recognition of his contributions to the field of plant virology.

Professor Fulton had a very productive career as a scientist, teacher and mentor to graduate students, and distinguished editor of scientific journals. He was a quiet, reserved man, who preferred to work alone and had no patience with ordinary chitchat or gossip. A man of few words, he was, nevertheless, a demanding, punctilious editor who had intimate knowledge of the English language. An avid sportsman, his quiet demeanor would change to excitement only when describing his fishing or hunting adventures. An expert lapidary, he cut and polished precious stones in a highly professional fashion—one of several hobbies that helped him face retirement when that dreaded day arrived.
 
Professor Fulton was a prodigious worker and rigorous scientist. He could spend endless hours in the laboratory or the greenhouse, intensely devoted to the task at hand and oblivious of the noise and activities around him. Quiet competence are words that one associates with Bob’s professional life. Many of his colleagues remember that during the early 1960s the lights in his office always seemed to be on at night, where he was continuously editing manuscripts for Phytopathology and single-handedly proof-reading and publishing that journal (Editorial Board, 1958–1960; Editor-in-Chief, 1961–1963). Nowadays, the same work is done by APS staff in St. Paul, MN, and a long list of senior and associate editors that make the job of editor-in-chief much easier. During his career, Bob was an editor of Virology (1965–1970) and a member of many editorial committees, including those involved in preparing the Golden Jubilee Volume (Plant Pathology: Problems and Progress, 1908–1958), a book that remains a landmark in our professional development. He was a contributor to numerous books on plant virology and was a frequent reviewer of this field in the Annual Review of Phytopathology. Bob also took the time to write about the life of his mentor, James Johnson, and to describe the unusual role of Wabash College, his alma mater, as a source of numerous distinguished plant scientists.

Bob taught the departmental course on plant virology for many years, but his impact as a teacher was mainly as a mentor to graduate students. That most of the graduate students who completed their Ph.D. degrees under his direction have gone on to distinguished careers is probably the best testimony of Professor Fulton’s lasting influence in the field of virology.

 


 


 
Also in this issue:(as a .PDF file, see link below)

APS Annual Meeting 96
Outreach 97
Division News 98
APS Foundation 98
People 101
Classifieds 102
APS Journal Articles 103
Calendar of Events 104

 
Advertiser's Index
 

Centerchem 97
Opti-Sciences 99

 
 



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