1960s
Donald S. Pottle, E'60, of Dunstable, Massachusetts, reports that he, former senior vice president for development Gene Reppucci, E'60, MEd'65, H'95, and Mike Rauseo, E'60, and their spouses canoed in Vermont last summer. "Gene promised to buy a canoe and appears to be enjoying retirement," Pottle says.Stanley S. Baer, BA'61, of Framingham, Massachusetts, owns Custom Concepts home builders in Framingham. The business, started in 1994, performs work in Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and Maine.
John G. Murphy, E'61, of Burlington, Massachusetts, retired last August from his job as a professor of mathematics at Middlesex Community College.
Robert E. Carlson, UC'62, of Walpole, Massachusetts, began Carlson Consulting Company on December 1, 1996. The company provides design and engineering services to web-processing industries.
Joseph Lipsky, E'62, retired in June 1992 and moved with his wife, Barbara, to Boca Raton, Florida. "I enjoy my daily tennis games and writing computer programs," he says. "Would like to hear from SKP fraternity brothers and past roommates."
Ralph E. Bach Jr., ME'64, of Mountain View, California, notes that he was the first Ph.D. recipient (at least, alphabetically) and an electrical engineering faculty member for more than twenty years. He's now an aerospace engineer for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration.
Richard H. Sioui, E'64, of Hubbardston, Massachusetts, received the Outstanding Alumnus Award for 1995 from the University of Massachusetts at Amherst School of Engineering, where he earned his doctorate in 1968.
Robert A. Tillson, BA'64, is a realtor specializing in residential real estate in Naples, Florida. Alice Hirsch, LA'65, of Newark, Delaware, reports, "My husband, Jeff, is working as a platinum consultant for SAP Americas. This is my first year as a multi-age 12 teacher at West Park Elementary School in Newark. Our sons, Eric and Scott, were both married in 1995."
Lawrence L. Egel, E'66, of Barrington, Illinois, is a vice president at CCC Information Services in Chicago. His wife, Patricia Kring Egel, N'71, works as a nursing instructor at William Rainey Harper College in Palatine.
Marilyn M. Radovsky, MEd'66, of Norwood, Massachusetts, retired in 1985 as a public school principal. "I received considerable publicity when I graduated, since, apparently, I was the first grandmother to receive a master of education degree from N.U.," she states. "My fifth great-grandchild, Deanna Carlton, was born in September."
Anthony S. Curcuru, UC'67, of Gloucester, Massachusetts, retired on October 4 after thirty-two years at Teradyne in Boston.
Barbara (Kelley) Collins, LA'68, of Fountain Valley, California, received an MBA from the University of Phoenix in May 1996.
James R. Fitzgerald Jr., LA'68, of Sudbury, Massachusetts, is vice president, treasurer, and chief financial officer at ArQule in Medford. The company completed its initial public offering in October.
Alec P. Karys, LC'68, MBA'78, of Sudbury, Massachusetts, is vice president of software development and technical services at InterQual, a health-care software company in Marlboro.
Ronald F. Borelli, ME'69, is the chief executive officer and chairman of the board of Aavid Thermal Technologies in Laconia, New Hampshire. He began his career at Honeywell, was senior vice president and divisional general manager at SCI Systems in Huntsville, Alabama, and later became president and chief executive officer of Spectra in Hanover, New Hampshire. He is a member of the Northeastern Executive Forum and holds more than twenty patents in electronic design.
Ming Chang, E'69, ME'72, of Brea, California, is working in the research and development group at Advance Aircraft Systems in Long Beach. He and his wife have three children, two of whom are in college. He writes, "Two summers ago, we took the whole family back to Boston. Unfortunately, the time we stayed in Boston was short. We only visited a few buildings, one of which was the Dana Building, and talked briefly with Professor [James] Feldman in the electrical and computer engineering department."
Dyer Cornell, UC'69, UC'71, of Topsfield, Massachusetts, retired in September after thirty years at Bank of Boston. "Over the past twenty years, I have enjoyed the challenges of lecturing in finance at University College," he says. "The student body, and Northeastern as a whole, have changed dramatically since I was an undergraduate."
Robert P. D'Antonio, BA'69, of Weston, Massachusetts, reports, "After a near-death accident, my seventeen-year-old daughter now plans to apply to N.U."
Richard Gianotti, E'69, of Brookhaven, New York, is vice president of technical services for Periphonics, a supplier of interactive voice response systems.
Linda L. Harris, LA'69, LA'73, of Honolulu, teaches in the College of Business at the University of Hawaii. She has started Creativity Camps, an international company that provides opportunities to discover, practice, and develop creative thinking and innovation.