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Their daughter, Allison Ryder '83, is a primary trader and financial analyst at Fidelity Investments, Boston. He continues to consult part time for various Vermont businesses. Richard is partially retired from his career in internal medicine in Burlington and occupational medicine at IBM. She and her husband, Richard Ryder '56, report that they sail on Lake Champlain in the summer and spend their winters in Naples, Fla.
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She continues to host and produce a local TV interview program with Vermont leaders and is active in several Vermont cultural organizations. Kay Hatton Ryder has retired as a public relations director for home and community-based health care and as a health care lobbyist in Burlington, Vt. Buzz Williamson reports that he's retired from his orthodontics practice and living in Nicaragua, Central America. We visited Canada, Greenland, Iceland, Scotland, Wales, France, Italy, and Austria over three weeks." (see Class Acts, FLYING HIGH) Shantz is the major gifts officer at the United Methodist Homes of New Jersey Foundation, Inc.
Lou Rehr, our flight instructor and a former World War II bomber pilot, also made the journey. Clifford Evans, the pilot/owner, and Retired Lt. Margaret Stephenson Shantz writes: "In August I flew the north Atlantic in a single-engine airplane. He writes: "My wife, Astrid, is a travel agent and we have traveled much recently, most significantly two trips to Australia, and we intend to do more traveling in the future." He was president of the Washington section of the Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine in 1994, and since 1995, he has been president of the Chesapeake chapter of the National Ataxia Foundation. After his return to NIH, he continued to pursue independent studies, including travels to the Mote Marine Laboratory in Sarasota, Fla., to study protein synthesis and ectonucleotidase enzyme activity. Some highlights of his career include his work as a postgraduate research fellow and graduate research assistant studying protein synthesis at the University of Oslo, Norway, which he did while on a leave of absence from NIH. He worked in government service for more than 42 years, 41 of which were spent at NIH. Greenwood Award, the Seventh District Dental Society of the State of New York's most prestigious award.Ĭarl Lauter writes that he's been retired from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) in Bethesda, Md., since last April. Russell Cassata was the 1998 recipient of the George D. He is a retired financial executive living in Pleasantville, N.Y. While there, he conducted lectures and seminars on Generally Accepted Accounting Principles for students and company financial personnel. district court judge.Ĭurtis Messinger spent three weeks in Vladivostok, Russia, volunteering with the Far Eastern Academy of Economics. Michael Telesca was profiled in the August 21 edition of the Rochester Business Journal for his work as a U.S. He and his wife, Mary, live in western North Carolina where he writes a regular feature for Naval History magazine on the subject of everyday language with seagoing roots. Martin was captain of the Constitution for four years. More recently, the Naval Historical Center announced that the work had won the book prize in its five-year-long competition in the field of early sailing Navy history. That same year, the Naval Institute named Martin the Naval History Author of the Year. Albion/James Madison Award for Historiography. The National Maritime Historical Society awarded it the 1997 Robert G.
Tyrone Martin has received recognition for the revised edition of his book, A Most Fortunate Ship, a narrative history of the USS Constitution. She will be remembered by many who studied at Rochester in the late 1930s and early 1940s." Journey of the Wild Geese chronicles her experiences working at relief and rehabilitation in war-torn Europe after World War II. Go to: 1950s 1960s 1970s 1980s 1990s SLATER SOCIETYīertha Field Schellberg writes: "I am reading a recently published book which was written by Madeleine Yaude Stephenson, now deceased, who was a fellow classmate of mine at the University. The Rochester Review, University of Rochester, Rochester, New York, USA