
1960s
Joseph J. McInerney, E'60, of Hummelstown, Pennsylvania, retired in
January as a physicist from Knolls Atomic Power Laboratory and as an associate
professor of medicine in the Division of Cardiology at Pennsylvania State
University Medical School.
Alfred S. Weincroft, LA'60, is retired from the active practice
of law and does consulting work in the field of public contracts.
Lawrence Woodland, E'60, of Brewster, Massachusetts, reports
he's come out of retirement to work for Arthur D. Little (his co-op employer)
on the Army's Assembled Chemical Weapons Assessment program, which is mandated
by Congress to find alternatives to incineration for the disposal of the
country's chemical weapons stockpile.
Paul R. Abeles, E'61, is chief executive officer of Cavan Abrasives
Blasting, in Adelaide, South Australia.
Arnold S. Goldstein, P'61, PHD'90, of Delray Beach, Florida,
is chairman of E-2 Legal Forms, a publisher of self-help legal products
in Deerfield Beach.
John Merianos, P'61, of Middletown, New Jersey, was recently
promoted to senior science fellow at ISP. He is the inventor or co-inventor
of nearly 100 patents in quaternary ammonium compounds, industrial biocides,
and cosmetic preservatives. In 1998, he was named Microbiologist of the
Year by the New Jersey section of the Society for Industrial Microbiology.
Leroy Underwood, BA'61, of Newport, New Hampshire, says he's
"enjoying the senior golf circuit in retirement."
Jack A. Frisch, LA'62, of Brevard, North Carolina, retired in
1998 as president and chief executive officer of Archways in Fort Lauderdale,
Florida. He is the chairman of the board of governors of Florida Metropolitan
University.
Harry Hunter, E'62, of Houston, retired from Exxon Chemical in
1996 after thirty-five years of service. "Traveling, woodworking,
and golf take up most of the time now," he says. "But there's
always some time left for volunteering at United Way and the Knights of
Columbus." His e-mail address is <hlh1939@aol.com>.
Bill Orman, MEd'62, of Barnstable Village, Massachusetts, retired
from his career as a middle school principal, but writes, "I'm in
my fourth interim principalship, in the Austin Middle School in Lakeville."
Jim Bowers Jr., E'63, of Danvers, Massachusetts, works at Analogic
in Peabody. He says his elder son graduated from Harvard and Babson, is
married, and works for KPMG. His younger son graduated from MIT, is single,
and works for Seagate in Minnesota. Bowers's e-mail address is <jbowers@nii.net>.
Vince Marchese, LA'64, of Morris Plains, New Jersey, received
a master's degree in technology management from Stevens Institute of Technology
last year.
Paul T. Boghosian, LA'65, of Belmont, Massachusetts, reports
that the first two programs of his television series on international business
negotiating, The Corporate Diplomat, began production this summer. The
programs are "The Corporate Diplomat in France" and "The
Corporate Diplomat in Germany."
William Lindauer, LA'65, of New York City, won a trip for four
to Los Angeles in a drugstore sweepstakes.
Louis S. Dubois, E'66, of Highland, New York, recently retired
from the New York Department of Transportation after thirty-five years
of service.
Stanley Herman, E'66, ME'70, of Springfield, Virginia, retired
from the Naval Sea Systems Command in April after nearly thirty-eight years
of service and is now a senior ship survivability engineer at Nichols Advanced
Marine in Arlington, Virginia.
Michael Kenyon, BA'66, of Keene, New Hampshire, served as a full
delegate at the Marketing Research Society's forty-second conference in
Brighton, England, in March. Philip P. Nowers, LA'66, of Key Biscayne,
Florida, is the managing director of the Columbia Flower Council in Miami.
Susan S. Renault, LA'66, of Taylors, South Carolina, writes,
"This year I'll make my seventh annual photojournalism trip to document
work at leprosy clinics around the world. My travels for American Leprosy
Mission have taken me to Nepal, Myanmar, Ethiopia, Indonesia, and other
countries."
Gary R. Anderson, BA'67, of Concord, Massachusetts, says he was
"fortunate enough to retire in 1993 at age forty-eight." He adds
that he now "enjoys life by traveling, investing in the stock market,
collecting, and being involved in philanthropic endeavors, along with family
activities."
James Beatrice, BA'67, of Revere, Massachusetts, is vice president
of transportation for TJX Corporation. Michael J. Stedman, LA'67, of Wellesley
Hills, Massachusetts, has launched Business Intelligence Network Systems,
a competitive strategy consulting firm.
Arthur E. Gelven, BA'68, of Montgomery Village, Maryland, is
executive director of corporate procurement for Telcordia Technologies
in Morristown, New Jersey.
Charlie Rutz, BA'68, and his wife, Jan, hosted a barbecue at
their summer home in Wellfleet, Massachusetts, last October for the Phi
Sigma Kappa/Sigma Phi Alpha reunion. More than 150 brothers and guests
from the former N.U. Delta Pentathon chapter attended. The next reunion
is scheduled for October 2003. For information, contact Rutz at <Crutz@compuserve.com>.
Dorothy M. Vacca, MEd'68, AGS'80, EDD'86, of Waltham, Massachusetts,
is a school psychologist in Needham and a private therapist in Waltham.
Rick Wilcox and Brian Sullivan, both LA'68, led the joint U.S. Customs/Federal
Aviation Administration volleyball team to a first-place finish in the
annual Easter Seals tournament in Peabody, Massachusetts, in April, raising
$725 in the process. "Over fifty but still trying hard with that never-quit
N.U. spirit," they write.
Sharyn Duehring, LA'69, of Pawtucket, Rhode Island, works on
the soft-toy team at Hasbro. She and her husband, Andy, have four children,
one of whom is majoring in communications at Northeastern.
Donald H. Smith, E'69, of Milford, Michigan, retired after twenty-nine
years of service at Ford Motor Company. His eldest daughter, Elizabeth,
recently received a medical degree from Loyola College in Chicago.
Marshall "Buddy" Williamson, E'69, of Anchorage, Alaska,
traveled the furthest distance to attend last October's Phi Sigma Kappa/
Sigma Phi Alpha reunion on Cape Cod.
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