- Dyer, Frederick C.
Dyer, Frederick C. (Frederick Charles), 1918-2005 (Personal Name)
- Earlier heading: Dyer, Frederick Charles, 1918-
Executives's guide to handling people, 1960: t.p. (Frederick C. Dyer)
LC in OCLC, 1/6/94 (hdg.: Dyer, Frederick Charles, 1918-; usage: Frederick C. Dyer)
encyclopedia.com, May 14, 2018 (Dyer, Frederick C. 1981-2005; Frederick Charles Dyer; born February 17, 1918, in St. Louis, MO; died of complications from Parkinson's disease, September 14, 2005, in Guatemala City, Guatemala; Naval officer, educator, and author; Dyer worked for the Department of the Navy as a civilian for many years; he specialized in training leadership; he earned a B.A. at Holy Cross College in 1938, and in 1943 joined the U.S. Navy, serving through World War II; after leaving the regular military, he remained in the Navy Reserve until 1969, when he retired with the rank of commander; before this, he completed an M.B.A. at Dartmouth College in1948 and was hired that year by the Bureau of Naval Personnel; he worked there for the next ten years as an educational writer, with his primary duty being the editing and writing of training manuals; from 1958 to1964 he was an assistant for special publications; he then moved to the Navy's Office of Civilian Manpower Management, where he was assistant for special projects for two years; he spent his last six years as a civilian working for the Navy as director of the program analysis division for the Publications and Printing Service; honored with a 1959 Navy League writing award and a 1961 Superior Civilian Service Award, Dyer wrote or cowrote several publications, including Executive's Guide to Effective Speaking and Writing (1962) and The Enjoyment of Management (1971))



