May 2003
Deal Breakers
Throwing Sand in the Machine
Watching the Detectives
E Line
Sports
Q&A
Books
Alumni Passages
Classes
From the Field
First-Person
Letters
Huskiana
Classes

1960s


Lee E. Rogers, E’61, writes, “Barbara and I are expecting our ninth grandchild and love our new home in Delray Beach [Florida].” Contact him at <rog7057@aol.com>.

Ron Zeppieri, BA’61, says he wishes to report “to classmates, NEZ brothers, and friends that I am planning retirement this summer after twenty-one years’ active duty in the Navy, nine years with General Dynamics, Electric Boat Division, and eleven years as business manager of the Old Saybrook, Connecticut, public school district. My wife, Judy, and I will relocate to our home in St. Petersburg, Florida, and spend about half a year there and half the year cruising on our trawler.” Zeppieri can be reached by e-mail at <ron_zeppieri@juno.com>.

Carl S. Feen, BA’62, of New Haven, Connecticut, chairs the board of the Yale Cardiovascular Research Fund. He is also head of Carl S. Feen & Associates, a national financial planning company. During the Clinton presidency, Feen served on the U.S. Department of Labor’s ERISA Board and the President’s Advisory Committee on the Arts for the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington, D.C.

Kathleen Dalton Boyce, LA’64, of Derry, New Hampshire, has retired as director of special education for the Derry School District and is now a part-time consultant for the district. She notes that leaves time for travel, opera, and playing with her four grandchildren. Her e-mail address is <kathyboyce@attbi.com>.

Thomas E. Hulbert, ME’64, of Hingham, Massachusetts, contributed the appendix on value analysis and engineering to the third edition of Planning, Performing, and Controlling Projects, a text for science, engineering, and technology students. He works with Bob Angus, E’47, while directing the professional engineering seminars that have helped many engineers pass the Registered Professional Engineer test.

Ron Titlebaum, E’64, of Danvers, Massachusetts, is the president of the United Ostomy Association, a national organization of 25,000 members and 440 chapters. Titlebaum has served on the board since retiring from Black and Decker in 1995.

Paul T. Boghosian Jr., LA’65, of Belmont, Massachusetts, writes, “My company, Harborside Films, is providing three comedy specials for PBS. All will be taped at Oxford University in England to be broadcast in 2003 under the title Great Confrontations in Comedy.”

Rich Glorioso, LA’67, is the commissioner of Plant City, Florida. He led the city’s Internal Revenue Service Volunteer Income Tax Assistance Program again this year. A retired Air Force colonel, Glorioso has been training volunteers in the program since 1995. “It’s very rewarding,” he says. “For example, you’re able to help an eighty-five-year-old lady who comes in carrying a big cardboard box and says, ‘My husband used to do our tax return, but he’s gone now.’”

Donald P. Milone, BA’67, retired in April 2002 after thirty-two years with General Motors in Boston and New York. He and his wife, Connie, live in Punta Gorda, Florida. Classmates may e-mail him at <dpmvet@comcast.net>.

Thomas P. Cullinane, ME’68, of Weston, Massachusetts, is the coauthor of the third edition of Planning, Performing, and Controlling Projects, a text for science, engineering, and technology students. Cullinane teaches industrial engineering at Northeastern.

Karen Moyes, LA’69, of Santa Maria, California, writes, “After graduating with a degree in chemistry, I went on to medical school (SUNY–Downstate) in Brooklyn and did postgraduate training (residency) at Santa Barbara General and Cottage Hospitals. I am medical director for the Santa Barbara Regional Health Authority, which oversees the MediCal (Medicaid) program for Santa Barbara residents. As a plan, we’ve been recognized by the state as the most outstanding MediCal plan in terms of our HEDIS measurements (a measure of quality of the care delivered to our members) for the past three years. We also have a highly recognized disease management program for our diabetic members. I attribute a lot of my success to the outstanding education I received at NU and its unique cooperative education program. Thanks for the great first step.”