Dr. Samuel Richard Rod
1955 - 2001
"Ben, Jake and I miss you"
 |
am
was born and raised in Washington, D.C. He earned a B.S. (Nuclear
Engineering 1977) and an M.S. (Mechanical Engineering 1979) from
the University of Maryland, and a Ph.D. in Engineering and Public
Policy from Carnegie Mellon University in 1989. He held three
United States Patents, and was founder and President of Bristlecone
Corporation, a company specializing in firearms training systems,
and stereoscopic microscope applications for law enforcement forensic
purposes.
During his teenage years, he was a budding artist who tried hard
to support himself selling his paintings and drawings. One of
his paintings hung for quite a while in the Smithsonian Air and
Space Museum. He was a voracious reader of science fiction and
took great pride in the fact that he saw 2001: A Space Odyssey
22 times, although his favorite movie was Buckaroo Bonzai
Across the Eighth Dimension. He wrestled and ran track during
high school, and took up rock climbing and hiking while in college.
His first ten years of work in corporate engineering led him
to realize that he would be happier charting his own path and
running his own business, and in 1990 we incorporated Bristlecone.
He struck out on his own soon after and was, sadly, within weeks
of realizing his dream of selling the company he had so tirelessly
created and sustained when he died in 2001.
Sam and I married in 1977, and we had two children – Ben
and Jake. We took them everywhere – all over this country,
Guatemala, the Panama Canal, the United Kingdom and Ireland, Canada,
Mexico, Switzerland. It was very important to Sam that they see
other cultures and understand differences in people and their
lifestyles, and that maybe we weren’t the center of the
universe. He supported me as I earned a graduate degree while
also raising the children, and really pitched in once we became
a two-career couple. He was the kind of father who would purchase
liquid nitrogen to oversee and assist our sons with science projects
about flash-freezing foods, who stayed up all night generating
pairs of homonyms for an elementary school contest where families
were encouraged to participate, who ran up and down the sidelines
cheering Ben’s football team despite the fact that he never
watched football and probably wasn’t up on all the rules,
and who, after staying up practically all night working on a proposal
for our company, would have no problem driving two hours to watch
a cross country race of Jake’s. He worked very hard but
family came first.
In my mind, he was a casualty of the insanity of September 11,
2001. He was one of the millions of people stranded at airports
after air traffic ceased. He wanted to come home, so he kept his
rental car and started driving home on September 14th and was
involved in a fatal car accident on the 15th. He always spoke
of being sent into space after his death, and I want to honor
his request.
~ |