August 28, 2002 - Asbury Park Press: Nigeria RPCV Richard A. Hughes retires as editor of The Home News

Peace Corps Online: Peace Corps News: Headlines: Peace Corps Headlines - 2002: 08 August 2002 Peace Corps Headlines: August 28, 2002 - Asbury Park Press: Nigeria RPCV Richard A. Hughes retires as editor of The Home News

By Admin1 (admin) on Wednesday, August 28, 2002 - 5:25 pm: Edit Post

Nigeria RPCV Richard A. Hughes retires as editor of The Home News





Read and comment on this story from the Asbury Park Press on Nigeria RPCV Richard A. Hughes who is retiring after 20 years as editor of The Home News published out of East Brunswick, NJ at:

Editor of Home News Tribune will retire early next month*

* This link was active on the date it was posted. PCOL is not responsible for broken links which may have changed.



Editor of Home News Tribune will retire early next month

Published in the Asbury Park Press 8/28/02
By RICK MALWITZ
STAFF WRITER

Richard A. Hughes, editor of The Home News since 1986 and the Home News Tribune since The Home News merged with The News Tribune of Woodbridge in 1995, will retire Sept. 6.

"I would prefer to avoid the word retirement," said the 65-year-old Hughes. "I am retiring from this job, but not retiring from work."

Hughes, who withdrew his application for a job with a weekly newspaper in Presque Isle, Me., when he was offered a job with The Home News of New Brunswick in 1980, plans to move to West Virginia and seek work with a weekly newspaper.

John Ziomek, the current president and publisher, said, "We are sorry to see Dick leave. He has been the heart and soul of our newspaper for over 20 years. During his tenure, Dick has helped lead the way to much positive change in the communities we serve."

Hughes was born and raised in Bismarck, N.D. After graduating from the University of North Dakota, and teaching high school English in Tomah, Wisc., Hughes joined the Peace Corps in 1962 and served in Nigeria.

When Hughes returned home he applied for a job at the Chicago bureau of the United Press International wire service, and he worked for UPI in Lansing, Mich.; Paris; Detroit and New York. When he decided to seek work with a newspaper he applied for a job in Maine. Then Watson S. Sims, the editor of The Home News, whom Hughes knew when the two worked in Michigan, invited him to come to the New Brunswick newspaper in 1980.

Hughes worked as a copy editor and deputy managing editor before being named editor in 1986.

He remained editor when the newspaper was sold to the parent company of the Asbury Park Press in 1993, and sold to the Gannett newspaper chain in 1997.

He and his wife Kathy live in Bedminster. Daughter Cressida, 30, is a photo editor with "Popular Science" magazine. Daughter Amy, 27, is an editor with "This Old House" magazine.



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This story has been posted in the following forums: : Headlines; What RPCVs are doing; COS - Nigeria

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By joan weiss on Saturday, January 04, 2003 - 3:28 pm: Edit Post

Nigerian doctor coming to Nashville, TN to study AIDS prevention/Treatment.
PlanetAide is a non-profit organization which exists to assist doctors who care for persons with HIV/AIDS in developing countries by conducting a training program in the United States in which doctors experienced in treating and preventing AIDS volunteer to train less experienced doctors from developing countries.
We have a doctor who is placed in Nashville for training for three months.The doctors housing is being donated ay the Panafrican Conference but he still will need help with the cost of food.If you know anyone who would be willing to: a)pick him up at the airport, b)provide any food, c)be willing to socialize with him, or d)acclimate him to his environment, I would encourage you to call Dr. Leonard Madu with the Panafrica Conferience at 615-322-5470, 615-399-7955, or contac me at joan.weiss@planet.org
Please check out our website at info@planetaide.org.

By Festus Ekuh on Thursday, September 18, 2003 - 8:47 am: Edit Post

Though I am not a Doctor I wish to be trained on how to care for a Hiv postive person or aids patients abandoned by their parents and relatives, Please I love volunteer my life for them. Please I want to be trained in the United States without contacting the disease myself.

By DANIEL OLUSOJI JAMES (212.88.97.168) on Thursday, November 20, 2003 - 5:15 am: Edit Post

i am also interested in this training.i am a medical doctor working with hiv patients in sagamu.the number of patients we see are increasing and i need more training to cope with the challenges

By Anonymous (adsl-75-45-100-2.dsl.scrm01.sbcglobal.net - 75.45.100.2) on Thursday, April 26, 2007 - 8:38 pm: Edit Post

i am interested in this training, i'm a graduate of nursing school ihala Anambra state Nigeria. i wish to be trained on how to care foa hiv positve person. pls i love to volunteer my lifefor them. pls i want to be trained in united states without contactin the disease myself.pls this is my sister's mail address. you can contact me through my sister's mail address. i'll soon open my own.
chinwe Egwuatu


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