|
 |
|
|
CID
RECEIVES More than $750,000
BEQUEST FROM SCHOOL ALUMNUS, EDWIN SLYE
ST.
LOUIS, Missouri, September 2006 – Central Institute for the Deaf (CID)
has received a bequest totaling more than $750,000 from the estate of Mr.
Edwin B. Slye.
Since 1914 CID has been
teaching deaf and hard-of-hearing students how to listen and talk. Mr. Edwin
B. Slye was once one of those children and a member of the class of 1942.
“Ed credited CID with helping him get started on the right path,” said his
friend and attorney, David D. Uchner. “He was a regular guy, a good
Christian man who was just like you and me, except that he was deaf.
For 39 years, Mr.
Slye worked as a plant laborer at Dairy Gold Foods in Cheyenne, Wyoming. It
was hard work and he earned a modest living; nonetheless, he made sure to
remember organizations like the First Presbyterian Church and CID in his
estate plans. By doing so, he left CID with a substantial and unexpected
gift, a legacy that will endure at the school.
“Mr. Slye’s forethought and generosity allowed him to arrange for a life
insurance policy that has paid CID more than $750,000, a sum that has had an
amazing impact on our school,” said CID executive director Robin Feder, MS,
CFRE. “We used part of this wonderful gift to fund our first technology
upgrade in five years. This put new computers in our classrooms and offices
and new laptops in our computer lab, improving our teaching capabilities. We
are also adding a portion of Mr. Slye’s gift to our endowment, which will
help ensure the future stability of our organization.”
Visitors to the CID school can tour the computer lab where a plaque
commemorates Mr. Slye’s legacy at CID. “We greatly appreciate Mr. Slye’s
generosity and encourage others to remember the organizations they care
about in their wills or estate plans," said Robin Feder.
Mr. Slye died in February 2006 at the age of 80. Ten years earlier, he had
made arrangements for CID to be the beneficiary of his life insurance. He
was a member of First Presbyterian Church, the Cheyenne Elks, the Cheyenne
Deaf Association and the Wyoming Deaf Association. He is survived by his
brother, John and numerous friends.
Founded in 1914, Central Institute for the Deaf (CID) is located at the
southern tip of the Washington University Medical Center complex within the
city of St. Louis, Missouri. CID is where deaf and hearing-impaired children
from birth to age 12 learn to listen, talk and achieve literacy without the
use of sign language. Many CID alumni have attended universities and pursued
professional careers. CID students have come from 48 states and 27
countries.
The work of the CID school is augmented by speech and language therapy,
pediatric audiology, mainstream assistance, continuing education for
teachers and professional consultation for schools. CID educational tools
have been used to help deaf children in all 50 states, all provinces of
Canada, six provinces of Australia, and 33 countries. CID teachers and
pediatric audiologists have faculty appointments and collaborate with
clinicians and researchers in childhood deafness in programs composing CID
at Washington University School of Medicine. These programs are affiliated
with, but financially separate from Central Institue for the Deaf (CID).
- 30 -
Editor’s Notes:
CID and CID at Washington University School of Medicine are located at 4560
Clayton Avenue, St.
Louis, Missouri 63110.
|
|