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Research Scientist Experiments
With Post-Retirement Career

By MARIKA STONE

At a time in their lives when most people are well into retirement, former AT&T Bell Laboratories research physicist Ashley Carter launched a new career. At age 75, he became the director of the Charles A. Dana Research Institute for Scientists Emeriti (RISE) at Drew University in Madison, N.J. The groundbreaking program teams retired industrial scientists such as Mr. Carter with undergraduates on original research projects.

RISE colleagues (left to right) Ashley H. Carter and Barbara Petrack with Drew University senior, Colleen Khatiwala.

Mr. Carter is no stranger to academia. While with Bell Labs, he began his 25-year relationship with Drew as an adjunct professor of physics and mathematics. He received a bachelor’s degree from Harvard University and master’s and doctoral degrees from Brown University.

Becoming a fellow of RISE was a natural step after he retired from Bell in 1990. "I am very devoted to Drew," he says, "It’s a wonderful school and I’ll continue to participate in as many ways as I can." At the moment, this means directing and raising money for the RISE program, overseeing the work of nine fellows and the students currently enrolled, recruiting new fellows for the institute, mentoring students, completing a textbook on thermal physics and teaching upper-level physics courses. The latter would be a fulltime job, says Jim Supplee, a physics department colleague.

RISE will be part of a $30 million expansion at the Hall of Sciences at Drew University. "Science is changing so rapidly, it becomes a challenge to anticipate what kinds of facilities we’ll need in the future," Mr. Carter says. "The interest in molecular biology, genetics and neurobiology is especially high today."

Clearly, retirement is the last thing on Mr. Carter’s mind. As one who grew up in Maine, he has little affinity for the Sun Belt. He relaxes with classical music or jazz. His father, Edwin Carter, was a role model for productivity in later life. He was a congregational minister who continued to preach until he was 90. "He was always curious about the world around him, and I think that curiosity rubbed off on me and led me to become a physicist."

In 1999, Mr. Carter gave a talk on recent scientific observations that have shaken the world of astronomers and cosmologists. Researchers have been trying to decide if the universe will continue expanding or end in a big crunch. Recent observations of distant supernovae favor expansion and indicate that it is speeding up. Mr. Carter described the excitement of scientists about the planned launching of two sky-mapping satellites this decade. The hope is that the data obtained will eventually lead to a full understanding of the cosmos. He challenged Drew physics students to "seize the opportunity" to get involved. "The truth is out there," he said.

-- Ms. Stone is co-founder of 2Young2Retire.com, a web site for retirement alternatives and grown-up liberation, based in Weehawken, N.J.

 

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