RL
Richard Lyng
Celebrity
Birth Date: 1918-06-29
Birth Time: 00:30:00
Birth City: San Francisco, California, United States
Cancer
Degree : 6º44'2.55"
Sun Sign*
Aquarius
Degree : 16º47'11.79"
Moon Sign
Shatabhishak
Pada : 4
Nakshatra
Pisces
Degree : 1º48'19.08"
Ascendant
Updated at Apr 25, 2024
Created by admin.astronidan
RL
1918-06-29
00:30:00
San Francisco, California, United States
Celebrity
Cancer
Degree : 6º44'2.55"
Sun Sign*
Aquarius
Degree : 16º47'11.79"
Moon Sign
Shatabhishak
Pada : 4
Nakshatra
Pisces
Degree : 1º48'19.08"
Ascendant
Updated at Apr 25, 2024
Created by admin.astronidan

Welcome to Richard Lyng's Kundali Profile page! This page is a hub for exploring the astrological reports, calculations, and different versions of Richard Lyng's Kundali (if available). You can also discover associated life events, attributes, and Kundalis of other persons associated with Richard Lyng.

AI-ML Pipelines

Recalculate if you notice any missing data or content.
Your report will be ready in 1-2 minutes after the calculation.
Task Name Action/Status
Astrological Calculations & Analysis

Processed

AI-ML Optimized Prediction & Refinement

Processed

AI-ML Pipelines

Recalculate if you notice any missing data or content.
Your report will be ready in 1-2 minutes after the calculation.

1. Astrological Calculations & Analysis

Processed

2. AI-ML Optimized Prediction & Refinement

Processed

3. Tajika Astrological Calculation

Ready

4. Machine Learning Astrological Calculation

Ready

5. Test Mode Astrological Calculation

Ready

Available Reports

Astrological reports assoicated with this Kundali

Life Attributes

List of attributes/tags and tag associated with this kundali.

Vocation

Military | Military service Politics | Public office

Traits

Mind | Education extensive

Family

Relationship | Marriage more than 15 Yrs Relationship | Number of Marriages Parenting | Kids 1-3

Life Story

Story of person and major life events assoicated with this Kundali

American business executive and government employee, named the 22nd U.S. secretary of agriculture by President Ronald Reagan in January 1986. He took over his duties of chief administrator of the government’s farm policy at a time when American farmers faced their severest test since the Depression. Richard Edmund Lyng is the older of the two children and the only son of Edmund John and Sarah Cecilia (McGrath) Lyng. After attending public school in Modesto, California, he attended the University of Notre Dame in Indiana. He graduated summa cum laude in 1940 with a Ph.D. Upon his return to Modesto, Lyng became a field representative for his father’s agricultural products firm, the Ed J. Lyng Company. In 1941 he entered the U.S. Army as a private and was sent to the South Pacific. He was discharged in 1945 as a second lieutenant and returned to the family business. As president of the company from 1949 to 1967, he more than doubled its earnings. Lyng was president of the California Seed Association in 1953 and of the Modesto Chamber of Commerce in 1958. In 1966 he ran as the Republican candidate for a state senate seat, but lost to the Democratic incumbent. He never sought elected office again. About a year later, California Governor Ronald Reagan asked Lyng to serve as director of the state’s department of agriculture and he agreed. After two successful years as the director of the largest state agriculture department, President Nixon’s secretary of agriculture, Clifford Hardin, offered Lyng the post of assistant secretary for marketing and consumer services. The Senate confirmed his appointment on 2/28/1969. Concurrently, from 1969 to 1973, Lyng served as a director on the board of the Commodity Credit Corporation, an agency within the agriculture department. In July 1971 Lyng announced new food stamp regulations that established a national eligibility standard. A new allocation program for the school lunch program introduced in August 1971 brought immediate criticism. Lyng claimed the program would enable schools to bring many more needy children into the program, but that it depended on funding from the Congress. In October 1971, Congress voted to increase the federal reimbursement for the school lunch program by drawing on funds from the agriculture department’s import duty fund. In 1972 he faced the Senate committee on nutrition and human needs to explain why the Nixon administration would spend $400 million less than the $2.3 million allocated the previous year on the food stamp program. In December 1972 there was a reorganization in the agriculture department and Lyng was reassigned to a less public post. He left the following year to take charge of the American Meat Institute, a powerful Washington lobbying association. During his six years as a lobbyist, he represented the interests of an industry he had once policed. When he left the American Meat Institute in 1979, he continued to serve as a part-time consultant while also working for several other organizations including the Queensland Graziers of Australia. When his old friend Ronald Reagan entered the presidential race, Lyng served the campaign as co-director of its farm and food division. When Reagan was elected, he chose Lyng to head the transition team to examine personnel and policies for the agriculture department. Even though Lyng was Reagan’s first choice for secretary of agriculture, influential Senate majority leader Bob Dole insisted that a true mid-western farmer be named. Illinois hog-farmer John R. Block got the post and Lyng had to be satisfied with deputy secretary. He took office in January 1981. Lyng reportedly kept a low-profile during Reagan’s first term. He was the chief spokesman for the department in the budget battles with David Stockman and the Office of Budget and Management staff. In 1983 Lyng headed a group of agriculture department officials on a "listening tour" to visit farmers across the U.S. and get their input on what should be included in the proposed 1985 farm bill. Feeling that some of the bill’s provisions were unrealistic, he sometimes differed with the president or with fellow officials. In 1983 he underwent triple bypass heart surgery. By 1985 he decided he was ready for a slower pace. He left the agriculture department in March to establish the Washington farm consulting firm of Lyng and Lesher, Inc. As consultants, Lyng and Lesher worked with several high-profile, multi-national companies and with dairy farmers interested in influencing dairy policy in the farm bill. On 12/18/1985 Congress passed the farm bill. Having accomplished this very important objective of his term, John Block, who was under fire for his lack of political acumen, resigned as secretary of agriculture on 1/07/1986. Lyng was considered the logical choice to succeed Block. He was viewed as more politically astute. President Reagan nominated him on 1/29/1986. This time Senator Dole endorsed him for the post. The Senate routinely confirmed Lyng’s appointment on 3/06/1986 making him, at age 67, the oldest agriculture secretary ever to take the office. He was able to fulfill his cherished ambition of serving in a cabinet position. Receiving mostly praise from the farm organizations, he continued as secretary of agriculture until 1989. Richard Lyng and his wife, Bethyl (Ball), were married on 6/25/1944. They have two daughters, Jeanette and Marilyn and four grandchildren. Lyng is tall, broad-shouldered and silver-haired. He has been described as an urbane man more comfortable in the boardroom than on the farm. His "grandfatherly" easy manner is often compared to that of Ronald Reagan. He is a Roman Catholic, a Rotarian and a member of the Washington Golf and Country Club and other clubs. David Senter, president of the American Agriculture Movement, has described Lyng as "tough as an alligator" under his deceptively easy-going exterior. Carol Tucker Foreman, a Carter administration official said that despite disagreements, he was "basically a good guy." Lyng died from complications arising from Parkinson's Disease in Modesto, California, on 1 February 2003. Link to Wikipedia biography

Life Events

List of life events assoicated with this Kundali profile
S.No. Event Type Event Date Event Description
1

New Job

1973-01-01

Work : New Job 1973 (President of American Meat Institute six years)

2

New Job

1986-01-01

Work : New Job January 1986 (Secretary of Agriculture) .

S.No. Event Type Event Date Event Description
1

Disease

2003-02-01

Death by Disease 1 February 2003 in Modesto (Parkinson's Disease, age 84) .

Calculations & Features

Calculation and analytics assoicated with this Kundali

Kundali Details

Birth details and configuration for astrological analysis

Birth Details

Gender Male
Weekday Saturday
Date 1918-06-29
Time 00:30:00
Daylight Saving Yes
City San Francisco, California, United States
Geo-location 37ºN46'29.75",
Timezone America/Los_Angeles

Residence Details

City San Francisco, California, United States
Timezone America/Los_Angeles

Time/Correction

Time (America/Los_Angeles) Jun. 29, 1918, 12:30:00 AM
Time (UTC) Jun. 29, 1918, 07:30:00 AM
Time (LMT) Jun. 28, 1918, 11:20:19 PM
Time (Julian) 2421773.8125
LMT Correction -8.1614 Hrs
Ayanmsha True Chitra - 22º42'19.76"

Birth Place

Birth location on map - Lat: 37ºN46'29.75" Lon: 122ºS25'9.91"