Event class: continued, death, retired, work, retirement, remained, active, died, age, life
normalize
de-normalize
Events with high posterior probability
Christabel Burniston | Burniston moved to Cheltenham in 1998 to write and see more of her family, continuing to promote the work of ESB with the help of Jocelyn Bell, her professional colleague and companion. |
Shimon Schwab | He continued to lecture and teach, but his health deteriorated and he died at the age of 86 on'' Purim katan'', 1995. |
Jacob Lawrence | Lawrence taught at several schools, and continued to paint until a few weeks before his death in June 2000 at the age of eighty-two. |
Kaoru Kitamura | He began his fiction writing career only after teaching for almost twenty years, and stopped teaching in 1993 to devote himself completely to writing once established as an author. |
Walter Knott | Walter remained active in the operation of Knott's Berry Farm until the death of Cordelia in 1974, at which point he turned his attention toward political causes, leaving day-to-day park operations to his children. |
David Bromige | Bromige retired early from Sonoma State University in 1993, and he continued to publish and give readings. |
Horace Henry Baxter | He was often bedridden, but continued to actively manage his investments until his death in New York City on February 17, 1884. |
Richard Koch | In 1990 he retired to write books and make private equity investments. |
Marie Bankhead Owen | She authored many texts on Alabama history for the agency, and remained in her post until her retirement in 1955. |
Robert L. Forward | He took early retirement in 1987, to focus on his fiction writing and consulting for such clients as NASA and the U. S. Air Force. |
Rosie Hardman | She taught part-time from that date but following her retirement from the music scene in 1992, this became her full-time occupation (her proudest teaching achievements in that field include teaching a blind lady to swim and having a 29 year old stroke victim win a prestigious award from the A. S. A.). |
Jim Beaver | He continued his long research for the Reeves biography, and in 2005 served as the historical/biographical consultant on the theatrical feature film about Reeves's death, Hollywoodland. |
James Krenov | He retired from the College of the Redwoods in 2002 but continued to work in wood almost to the end of his life, from a shop at his home. |
Zygmunt Mineyko | Zygmunt worked as a chief engineer of the Public Work Ministry until August 1917 when he suffered a heart attack. |
Kelsang Gyatso | He retired as General Spiritual Director of the NKT-IKBU in August 2009 but continues to write books and practice materials. |
Jenny Pitman | Following her retirement from horse training in 1998 she became a writer of novels, principally with a racing theme. |
Richard B. Fisher | Becoming Chairman Emeritus of Morgan Stanley Dean Witter & Co. in 2000, Fisher was removed from daily decision-making processes but continued to work with clients and assist with special issues, a position that allowed him to focus the majority of his energies on his longtime interests in education and the arts. |
Walter Chappell | Chappell moved to his final residence in the remote village of El Rito, New Mexico in 1987 and from there continued to exhibit, lecture, give workshops and make field trips. |
David Bohm | Bohm continued his work in quantum physics past his retirement in 1987. |
Kurt Johnson (entomologist) | Shortly before, but mainly after, his retirement from fully active scientific work in 2000, Johnson concentrated more on activities with a monastic colleague, Brother Wayne Teasdale, a Roman Catholic monk who had become an influential pioneer in interfaith and interspiritual dialogue after publication of his books The Mystic Heart : Discovering a Universal Spirituality in the World's Religions and A Monk in the World. |
O. W. Tancock | In Who's Who 1930 he gave his recreations as'' Cricket in other days, lawn tennis, chess, natural history, zoology''. |
Mian Hazrat Jamal Kakakhel | He remained actively involved in the affairs of his area till 1980, after which he retired from his political career and devoted his life for religious practices till his death. |
Florence Mary Taylor | Following her husband's sudden death, drowning in his bath associated with an epileptic fit in 1928, Florence maintained their publishing business and continued to produce town plans. |
Charles-Marie Widor | Despite his job's ostensibly'' provisional'' nature, Widor remained as organist at St-Sulpice for nearly 64 years, until the end of 1933. |
Moses Billings | He continued to paint until around 1880, when his deteriorating health no longer allowed him to do so. |
Herbert O. Fisher | He retired in 1975, but continued to be active in aviation and other interests. |
Joan Littlewood | After Raffles's death in 1975, Littlewood left Theatre Workshop and stopped directing. |
Hill Blackett | Hill Blackett ceased to participate in the management of Blackett-Sample-Hummert in 1942 when he was commissioned into the US Navy, though he remained a partner. |
Alice Ambrose | Even after her retirement she continued to teach and guest lecture at Smith and other universities around the country until her death, at the age of 94, on January 25, 2001. |
Katherine Dunham | Even in retirement Dunham continued to choreograph : one of her major works was directing Scott Joplin's opera Treemonisha in 1972 at Morehouse College in Atlanta. |
Franklin C. McLean | McLean was made Professor Emeritus in 1953, but continued his work, which included publishing. |
John Anthony Parsons | In 2001, he retired from full-time work but continued to cover major events for the paper. |
Francis Judd Cooke | Cooke suffered a stroke in 1981, hampering his organ playing and choir directing, and he turned to composing full-time during the last 14 years of his life. |
Mary Anne Atwood | She continued private correspondence with several influential Theosophists until her death in 1910. |
Flemmie Pansy Kittrell | She retired from teaching in 1972, but continued to work as a consultant and lecturer in various settings. |
Robert Hodgins | In 1983, he retired to paint full-time. |
George G. Macfarlane | After retiring from this post in 1975, he continued several major professional activities. |
Debra Hill | Despite being diagnosed with cancer in February 2004, Hill continued to work on several projects. |
David Garnett | He continued to write, made friends among the local English community of the locality, and lived there until his death in 1981. |
Charles Hershfield | Hershfield retired from teaching at the University of Toronto in 1976 after 31 years of service but continued to work closely with Morrison Hershfield almost up to the time of his death. |
George Speaight | Speaight left reference publishing in 1974, but continued with theatrical activities during a long retirement. |
June Maule | She took over the company after her husband's death and remained actively involved with the factory and its productions until her death in 2009. |
Edouard Potjes | After leaving Cornish School, Potjes spent the rest of his days teaching private classes and composing, until his death in 1931. |
Eiji Yoshikawa | At the end of the war he stopped writing for a while and settled down to enjoy a quiet retirement in Yoshino (present-day Oumeshi) on the outskirts of Tokyo, but by 1947 he had started writing again. |
Keene Fitzpatrick | In 1932, Fitzpatrick retired after 42 years in the business as an athletic trainer and coach. |
Clarence Cranford | He retired again from full-time ministry in 1989. |
Richard Dedekind | He retired in 1894, but did occasional teaching and continued to publish. |
Hawley Ades | He retired from the Waring organization in 1975, but continued to write and analyze music almost to his death. |
Allan Schnaiberg | He retired from Northwestern in 2008 but remained actively engaged in his field. |
Len Morgan | After his retirement from Braniff International in 1982, Len Morgan continued writing and publishing books. |
Shirley Ximena Hopper Russell | She continued to paint almost daily until her death in Honolulu in 1985, at the age of 98. |
Anders Lindstedt | Even after his retirement aged 70 he continued to take an active interest in actuarial activities both in Sweden and abroad, attending meetings of the Swedish Actuarial Society until shortly before his death in 1939. |
Chester Carlson | Carlson continued to work at Haloid until 1955, and he remained a consultant to the company until his death. |
Jacques Triger | This huge work was carried out by a team of geologists directed by Triger : geological sections from Paris to Brest, from Le Mans to Angers, from Paris to Rennes, Vendôme to Brest... On December 16th, 1867 Triger died from a heart attack after a meeting at the Geological Society of France, where he served for 35 years. |
Daniel McGilvary | He continued active evangelistic work, including visiting established Christian groups, up until his death on 22 August 1911, in Chiang Mai. |
Montagu Burrows | Due to increasing deafness, he retired from active lecturing in 1900, but remained active in Oxford faculty, city, and church affairs. |
Bob Lanese | He retired from the James Last Orchestra in 2002, but continues to play and teach. |
Lance Dossor | Although officially retired, Lance Dossor carried on teaching part-time and occasionally performing until 1999, when increasing deafness forced him to give up. |
Aloys Grillmeier | He retired in 1978 on his 68th birthday, but continued to write and lecture. |
John Donald Wade | In 1950 he retired from active teaching but continued to work as founding editor of The Georgia Review and was active in his local community, forming the Marshallville Foundation to foster his home town. |
Herbert L. Clarke | He resigned from Sousa's band in September 1917, as he had determined to retire from active solo work at the age of fifty after hearing Jules Levy continue to play well past his prime. |
Miriam Hyde | Her husband died in 1995 and she ceased writing music at that time. |
Lydia Moss Bradley | Despite his death in 1867 and the subsequent deaths of all their children, Bradley continued to work in business and pursued philanthropic interests, particularly in the areas of healthcare and education. |
J?rgen Aschoff | After his retirement in 1983 and return to Freiburg, Aschoff continued his scientific work in the form of further publications. |
Cactus Pete Piersanti | Piersanti remained active in the Carson City gaming community until his retirement in 1989. |
Baker Brownell | After fully retiring from academic and administrative work in 1954, Brownell spent the remaining years of his life in Fairhope, Alabama. |
Edwina Dumm | Dumm continued to write and draw Tippie until her 1966 retirement (which brought the strip to an end). |
Marilyn Hagerty | She retired from full-time newspapering in 1991, but soon came back with a part-time schedule but a full-time workload. |
Gyula K?nig | In 1905 he retired but continued to give lessons on topics of his interest. |
George Findlater | Active in a local pipe band, he continued to farm until his death in 1942, aged 70. |
Esther McCoy | After a long and varied writing and teaching career, she died in December 1989. |
Santiago Masarnau Fern?ndez | When Masarnau returned permanently to Spain in 1843 he remained active in music, teaching in his brother's school, and contributing to a number of critical and artistic journals. |
David Weber (clarinetist) | Weber continued teaching privately until June 2005, at which point he was a robust 92 years old. |
Luis Marden | Though he had officially retired in 1976, Marden continued to write occasional stories long after. |
Robert Lewis Dabney | By 1894 failing health compelled him to retire from active life, although he still lectured occasionally. |
Jean-Luc Godard | Godard has continued to work actively into his seventies. |
Misha Geller | He worked as a composer full-time and from 2003 onward he actively took part in the realization of his own musical projects. |
Ambrose Burke | He worked as a pastor and a chaplain for many decades after and remained active until shortly before his death in October 1998, at the age of 102. |
Brooke Astor | Despite liquidating the Vincent Astor Foundation in 1997, she continued to be active in charities and in New York's social life. |
George Armstrong (engineer) | Locomotive construction continued at Wolverhampton for a few years after George's retirement, but ceased in 1909. |
Julian Thomas (journalist) | Thomas continued to write articles infrequently, mostly for the Melbourne Leader, until dying in Fitzroy, Victoria on 4 September 1896. |
Paul Avery | In the mid-1980s, after working for The Sacramento Bee and writing a book about the Hearst kidnapping, he signed up with the then - Hearst-owned San Francisco Examiner, where he stayed until his retirement in August 1994. |
Arnold Leese | Captain Leese returned to England where he continued his practice, publishing A Treatise on the One-Humped Camel in Health and in Disease (1927), which would remain a standard work in India for fifty years. |
Wayne Hooper | During retirement Hooper continued actively in music until his death on February 27, 2007 in Newbury Park, California. |
Charles S. May | In 1888, May retired due to ill health and built a country home, `` Island View'', overlooking Gull Lake where he would write several newspaper and magazine articles and several books. |
Bodo-Eckehard Strauer | In February 2009, he stopped clinical work in Dusseldorf but continued his academic work there and started active collaborative research with Rostock University. |
Frank Oppenheimer | Until his death at his home in Sausalito, California, on February 3, 1985, Frank Oppenheimer served as director to the museum and was personally involved in almost every aspect of its operations. |
Arthur Brown (footballer born 1859) | He continued to keep up an interest in Villa's affairs until he died on 1 July 1909, aged 50. |
John L. Stevens | Following his forced retirement in 1893 following the overthrow of Hawaii, Stevens spent his time lecturing and writing and working in Republican Party circles. |
William G. Roll | In later years, Roll retired from teaching, though he taught a course in parapsychology at the University of West Georgia in 2007, and continued to write, speak at conferences, and conduct occasional investigations. |
Eberhard Arnold | Nevertheless, he remained active in traveling, lecturing and writing until his death in Darmstadt on November 22, 1935. |
John Swinton (journalist) | In 1899 Swinton lost his eyesight, but did his best to remain active as a writer despite this handicap. |
Roberta Bitgood | After retiring in 1976, Bitgood returned to Connecticut, where she continued to work as an organist in local churches and synagogues. |
Frederick Augustus Muhlenberg | Retiring officially from Muhlenberg Greene Architects in 1977, one week after his 90th birthday, Mr. Muhlenberg continued to appear at the office daily, in the firm's second-floor suite at the Wyomissing New Home Federal Savings building, until physical limitations prevented him from doing so about a year later.'' |
Leland Lewis Duncan | Duncan contribution to the history of Kent was between the hours of his regular occupation, and though he had planned to devote greater attention to the field he died on 26 December 1923, the year following his retirement. |
Karl Rahner | Rahner then moved to Munich and in 1981 to Innsbruck, where he remained for the next 3 years as an active writer and lecturer, also continuing his active pastoral ministry. |
Owen Vincent Coffin | Coffin left office on January 6, 1897, but stayed active in his business ventures, and in his civic and religious dealings. |
Dora Gad | Gad continued to work independently in both the public and private sectors until her death, in 2003. |
Jonathan Miller | Miller's sister Sarah (died 2006) worked in television for many years and retained an involvement with Judaism that he, an atheist, has always eschewed. |
Malayattoor Ramakrishnan | Malayattoor remained active though his later years and was working on a novel when he died in 1997 at Thiruvanathapuram. |