Page 113 - profiles 2019 working copy containing all bios as of Feb 20 final version
P. 113

me.  I am totally committed to finding a cure for Alzheimer’s and NARFE is
            helping me with my cause.



            I am Richard Zuck and I worked 25 years for the United States Postal
            Service, beginning my career as a City Letter Carrier and concluding as

            Postmaster in the Cambridge Springs, Pa. office.  I built my career working as
            a NALC Safety Rep, Driving Instructor, Training Specialist, and Manager of
            Training in the Erie District.  Since retirement, I have gone back to work as a

            Test Administrator for the Department of Defense.  I have conducted the
            Armed Services Vocational Aptitude Battery (ASVAB) for high schools, giving
            thousands of students’ guidance to career decisions, as well as testing hundreds

            of young men and women hoping to qualify for service in our Armed Forces.




                                        U.S. SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
                                                        COMMISSION




            I am Elizabeth Anne Hall and I served as an attorney at the U.S. Securities
            and Exchange Commission (SEC) followed by my service at the National

            Labor Relations Board in Washington, D.C. At the SEC, I worked in Branch
            12, Division of Corporation Finance during the period of oil and gas roll-ups;
            securitization of assets backed securities through special purpose vehicles,
            junk bonds, deregulation of financial institutions; the banking and savings and

            loans crises; the failures of  EF Hutton and the Continental Illinois National
            Bank & Trust, the transition of private brokerage houses to public
            corporations; and a multitude of radical changes to federal regulatory and state

            corporate law, such as the “poison pill” to shareholders’ rights. Registrants
            filed mandatory documentation for initial and subsequent public offerings,
            annual meetings, proxy fights, mergers and acquisitions, a threshold change in
            ownership and routine operational disclosures, such as quarterly reports,

            which were reviewed for disclosure of requisite information using a
            “reasonable man” standard so that investors or shareholders could make a
            timely, informed decision.  At this tumultuous time, as a federal attorney, I

            helped the American public understand the situation in simple terms.

            Following my service at the SEC, I served as an attorney with the National

            Labor Relations Board (NLRB), which protects private sector employees
            against unfair labor practices, among other issues.  Assuming a market,


      109
   108   109   110   111   112   113   114   115   116   117   118